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TRER/46/295 · Item · 4 Oct 1922
Part of Papers of Robert Calverley Trevelyan and Elizabeth Trevelyan

The Shiffolds, Holmbury St. Mary, Dorking. - He and Bessie went up to London on Monday 'to see Julian off [to school]. He quite enjoyed his extra days at home', but Robert thinks this was needed, as 'he had been quite seedy'; thinks he was 'fairly all right again' when he went back. Robert's lumbago 'still linger, owing to this villainous damp weather', but there is not much left now, and Bessie is well. Had a 'glimpse of Charles in town'. Sad that Booa [Mary Prestwich] has been ill again; will write to her soon.

Nurse Godwin is here, and they are waiting for the arrival of Alice [Elms]' baby; 'She herself seems very well'. Robert found [Gordon] Bottomley 'in fairly good health, considering the horrid weather'. Robert 'arranged for the printing of... Aeschylus [his translation of the Oresteia] at Liverpool; hopes it will be out before Christmas.

TRER/15/27 · Item · 22 Oct 1922
Part of Papers of Robert Calverley Trevelyan and Elizabeth Trevelyan

Describes finding, while out composing poetry in his 'quarry', a 'cavern... hollowed out into the side of the glen' [perhaps by Julian?] with a 'sharp spear projecting through a small window' and some 'fragments of paper' on the floor. Says he know Julian is not one of these 'unwashed, ungartered savages', and neither is Robert Henry Elms, who currently has the room which used to be Julian's. He went out for his first walk today, 'in nurse Mabel Godwin's arms', and is 'quite a pretty child'. A shame that Julian has to 'pronounce Latin in the English way' [at school]. Originally enclosing a photograph from the "Manchester Guardian" showing a 'young relative' of Julian's who seems to be 'of a somewhat gluttonous disposition during the banana season'; also a photograph of a print by Utamaro 'who did the print in Mummy's bedroom here'. Went to see "Henry IV Part 1", which he and Julian read together, last week at the Old Vic; the Falstaff was quite good, but Prince Hal 'not up to much'. He and Elizabeth play "three hands of prawn-eye" (a card game) in the evenings now.

TRER/29/21 · Item · Aug-Sept 1923
Part of Papers of Robert Calverley Trevelyan and Elizabeth Trevelyan

Trevelyan has filled in the sections printed on the front: 'Written by' with 'R.C.T'; 'Commenced' with 27 August 1923 [looks like 8]; 'School' with 'Ἡ ΓΗ' ['The Earth' in Ancient Greek]. Notes in his first entry that he has been reading Ponsonby's book ["English Diaries" by Arthur Ponsonby] which has inspired him to start this diary.

Mentions of Mabel [Godwin?], Marian [?], Alice, Bert and Bobbie Elms; Bessie and Julian; his parents; Miles Malleson and his wife [Joan] and uncle [Philip Malleson]; O[liver] Simon at the "Fleuron" (who asks him to translate the "Acts of the Apostles", to be illustrated by Paul Nash); Miss Ewing [later wife of Walter Rea], Nicky Mariano; Bernard and Mary Berenson; Frances and Arthur Dakyns (visiting the Ponsonbys at Fernhurst); his brother George (who has written to the "Times" saying the matter between Greece and Italy should be referred to the Powers not the League of Nations); Margaret and Ralph Vaughan Williams and their mother; Mrs [Jane] Russell Rea; Irene [Cooper Willis or Noel-Baker]; 'Miss [blank left], with whom Rennier had an affair. She is now private secretary to [Henry?] Hamilton Fyfe'; Francis Birrell; Clifford and Joan Allen; 'an Italian-French lady' whom Trevelyan had met at I Tatti; Barbara Strachey; [Simon] Bussy [paintings by]; John Rodker 'and his child [Joan] by Sonia [Cohen]'; a 'nice rather muddle-headed young man.. Labour candidate for Petersfield' [Dudley Aman]; Bertrand Russell.

Works on: translations of Theocritus; his 'Flood poem' ["The Deluge"]; possible continuation of "Pterodamozels"; review of books on metre by Lascelles Abercrombie and E[gerton Smith] (Smith is the first person he has 'attacked' in a review; wonders if Desmond MacCarthy will think his comments 'too strong); review of Sturge Morre's "Judas" for Leonard Woolf at the "Nation"; his 'Pandora play'.

Reads (as well as Ponsonby, and sometimes with Julian): the "Manchester Guardian", Spenser's "Mother Hubbard ['s Tale]", Epicharmus, "Henry IV pt 1", Phaedrus, Macaulay, Aristophanes, the 'Summer number' of Julian's "Hurtenham Magazine", Lucian, the "Mikado"; Ssuma Ch'ien [Sima Qian]; Hastings' "Dictionary of the Bible" [at the London Library]; a "Classical Review" with Duff and Bailey on Lucretius; Molly MacCarthy's autobiography ["A Nineteenth-Century Childhood", 'Very charming']