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TRER/7/177 · Item · [15 Oct 1918?]
Part of Papers of Robert Calverley Trevelyan and Elizabeth Trevelyan

Kensington Palace Gardens, W.8. - Thinks he is returning to Edinburgh on Friday, after getting a fortnight's leave. Grettie is making 'a splendid recovery, hampered only by her abominable relations': after seeing Aunt Jane, she is going to Edinbugh and 'meeting another aunt whose daughter has gone violently off her head'. Tovey can do nothing; [Grettie's sister?] Jessie Hanson, whom Bessie met in Edinburgh and whom Tovey calls 'a bad cheap copy of Grettie', is with them all the time and encourages 'that morbid vein of insolence' which the doctors recognise as the commonest symptom. Grettie is all right after a day or two alone with him, but she cannot get that. They have been seeing things in London: [Arnold Bennett's] "The Title", which was very good, the National Gallery, and Hubert Cornish. She is 'first-rate' with his friends, as she is with her family; it is just that with her family she is 'simply horrible' to Tovey, and writes 'dangerous letters to doctors etc'.

TRER/6/178 · Item · 1 Aug 1918
Part of Papers of Robert Calverley Trevelyan and Elizabeth Trevelyan

Scotch Ed[ucatio]n Dept., Whitehall. - There has been a 'second change for the worst', and 'Mrs Donald' [Grettie Tovey] has been moved from the nursing home at Oxford to an asylum in the area; Donald is at Worplesdon. Cornish's mother has mentioned the manuscripts [of Tovey and Trevelyan's opera, "The Bride of Dionysus"] to Miss Weisse, and does not think there will be any difficulty; he is writing to Donald telling him to contact his mother at the Pantiles cottage about them.