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TRER/6/166 · Item · 10 June 1917
Part of Papers of Robert Calverley Trevelyan and Elizabeth Trevelyan

14 Napier Road, Edinburgh. - Apologises for not replying sooner; the month of concerts [by the Reid Orchestra] was 'a time apart'. The concerts were a great success, but in future they will be arranged for once a fortnight. The question of payment then became a concern, but the 'financial member of the [University] Court... a kind, interested friend' solved their problems and persuaded a private individual to pay the hundred pounds lacking; everything Mr Walker could do to relieve them was done cheerfully. Don's programmes, over which he took great trouble, sold well. They have not yet moved house; her aunt Maggie Anderson has invited them to stay at her house by the sea at Elie, which will provide beneficial rest, then they will organise the move. They do not expect to go south this summer, and have taken a house at Yetholm for September; her Aunt Jane will come with them. They all admire Robert Trevelyan's poem about Krishna; she and Don have also been reading 'Tom Sawyer' and 'Huckleberry Finn' aloud. Bessie has asked her to explain 'Sir Walter's "Dutchman"': she can only suggest that 'Dutchman' may be used to mean 'foreigner'. The Toveys went to Glasgow on Friday, as Don presided over the prize-giving at the Athenaeum school of music; Grettie describes the experience of being photographed at Lafayette's in the afternoon. Don is 'resuscitating' Kirkhope's Choir: a circular was originally enclosed with this letter. Hopes to be able to take up Bessie's kind invitation to come to the Shiffolds, and that they will also see the Trevelyans at 'The Wabe', as Don jokingly refers to the new house.

TRER/6/167 · Item · 15 Oct 1917
Part of Papers of Robert Calverley Trevelyan and Elizabeth Trevelyan

2 St. Margaret's Road, Edinburgh. - Don is well and busy with University work again; the first meeting of the revived Kirkhope Choir takes place tonight under his direction and Mr Kirkhope will be there to introduce him; it is a 'great trial' to her to be absent. They like their house very much: it is 'countrified' and sunny. She is very grateful to be home: Don had a 'dreadful time of it' and she would have been even more anxious if he had not been staying with her Aunt Jane [Anderson]. Her father is very well: by a 'big effort' she went to see him yesterday, for the first time in three months, though he had been to see her. It was 'truly terrible' in the nursing home.