Tuesday November 17th

Library was unbearable this morning owing to washing and scrubbing preparatory to Commem. Consequently we were chivvied into the Coin Room last hour with Forbes

After Hall I had a happy time up-Library arranging the cases and writing explanatory cards for the Manuscript cases etc. My industry as rewarded for I overheard people laboriously reading out my cards i.e. ÔÇ£Two Letters from the late Lord Ebury, Old WestminsterÔÇØ etc. I simply roared with laughter owing to a bust of Julius Caesar in the Library which was covered with dirt and which I told Neill must be cleaned. Accordingly Sargeaunt got it down and laid it flat on the floor…and was ignominiously dusting it with a duster. Neil and myself were much amused. I also made Neill get down the Black Jacks and put them on the tables.

Commemoration

Rawson, Hobson, Tunnecliffe and myself got into the Abbey about 10 minutes to 8 and had a long wait till the service began at 8.30. ‘Amongst others we noticed in the Choir’ as the papers say, the Dean of Christ Church, the Archdeacon of Leicester, Sir Robert Hudson, Sir Gilbert Scott etc. It really had a very fine effect, the Abbey more or less in darkness except for the Choir and everyone in evening dress. The singing on the whole was good, hardly perhaps the ‘passionate ecstasy’ the Standard talked about, but quite adequate. The Dean is so blind he got badly lost once in the lesson and there was a pause till he found it again. Gow read the benefactors, an illustrious and noble list. We got out about 9 and Reed joined Boult and myself as we came out. and we proceeded up School which was crammed. Only the VII and VI and House Monitors might go down to refreshments, so, of course, I went but there was too much of a squash to get anything.

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Monday November 16th

. That wretched Hobson this evening persisted in saying that it was my turn to take Prep, of course it wasn’t but as the quarter had gone I hurriedly seized some books and took it, but he was manifestly in the wrong!

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Sunday November 15th

. I have been reading with some pleasure Ellen Terry’s autobiography, which, I think, is charmingly written and in admirable good taste. Two things have specifically interested me today in it, one when, as the girl-wife of G. F. Watts the painter, she heard Tennyson read aloud Browning’s ‘How we brought the good news to Ghent’. ÔÇ£He used to preserve the monotonous rhythm of the galloping horses. and made the words come out sharply like hoofs upon a road. It was a little comic, until one got used to it, but that fault lay in the ear of the hearer. It was the right way and the fine way to read that particular poemÔÇØ.

The other is a link with Sheridan, Charles Reade told Ellen Terry that his mother sat on stage with Sheridan during a rehearsal of ‘The School for Scandal’ with Mrs Abingdon the original Lady Teazle in the part. Mrs Abingdon, according to Charles Reade, who told the story, had just delivered the line ÔÇ£How dare you abuse my relations?ÔÇØ when Sheridan stopped the rehearsal ÔÇ£No, no that won’t do at all! It mustn’t be peltish — That’s shallow — shallow. You must go up the stage with ‘You are just what my cousin Sophy said you would be’, then turn and sweep down on him like a volcano ‘You are a great bear to abuse my relations! How dare you abuse my relations!’ÔÇØ

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Saturday November 14th

It really is a pleasure to write to old men, they are so charming. Two days ago I wrote to Major GH Courtenay the oldest living old Westminster who was at Westminster in 1826 and now (aged 94) lives near Powderham. I had a superlative letter so exquisitely written that it deserves to be framed from Waterfield, who knows him, saying I might perhaps get some information from him so I wrote. Maj. Courtenay not being a Grantite however couldn’t help me at all but ends his letter ‘I am always ready to give any recollections in my power to any who seek them it is one of privileges of extreme age.’ This bears out what I always maintain: the older the man, the more delighted he is to give away any help in his power.

I shall never forget when I stayed a weekend with Sir Clements Markham. I had not known him before and one of the first things he said to me when I arrived was ‘all my life I have always regretted that I didn’t ask questions when I was young, I might have preserved so much’, this was sufficient to put me at once at one’s ease.

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Friday November 13th

Benvenisti and Wood said they would be very pleased to come to my little tea-party. Hobson says he is afraid he can’t for which I am sorry. He is going to play in a match with or against Stallards School. This is the second morning running that I have been five minutes late for Prep! JS came out with a queer JSism remark this morning — Lutyens had not been attending and JS suddenly fired out at him ‘why aren’t you alive instead of walking about and saving your burial fees?!’ Nobody but JS could say a thing like that, he was in great form this morning pouring out delightful things which I vainly tried to take down.

After Hall I went up College with Barrington-Ward who showed me the Captain’s Books which have come back from the binder and have been very nicely done.

We had another Commem practice at 4.15 going through the whole service. Gow had the trebles up to the front standing on the step facing the Monitorial. I think and hope the singing will be alright, as it is much too high for me and all I can do is make a sort of growl…

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Thursday November 12th

…I am suffering from indigestion today…consequently I did not go in School first and second hours, but went in third. Over a quarter of the house was away ‘fighting their countries[sic] bullets’ on Epsom Downs. They were indulging in a whole day Field day; consequently we had but a small number comparatively to lunch. Graham and myself had a solitary tea as for as Chiswickites were concerned. I worked like a horse to keep conversation going rehearsed football with what I hope was keen interest! At lunch Rawson was actually able to hear what I said which must have pleased him. It is a standing (though to talk of as irritating) joke that Rawson just can’t hear from where he usually sits at lunch what I am saying. He sits with his head level with the table, munching bread, and leaves the last word and is up like a flash with ‘What’s that? What’s that? What did you say?’ and often it is rather a nuisance to have to repeat one’s remarks!

I cut the Commem Singing practice for I had quite a tea-party, J.S. and Liddell came because there was a Master’s Rehearsal at 5.15, then Uncle Charles Sneffer arrived, the two parents Mrs. Graham and Mrs. Smurthwaite who had to be seen hastily in the Stall as they came to see their sons. Mrs. Smurthwaite remarked that her son had a great admiration for me! Poor Smurthwaite is doing double work as Sorley is out of School, for anyone else I should have provided a substitute but it seems such a pleasure to Smurthwaite to do everything that I only remarked I hoped that the fact of his having to do double work did not press on him unduly. But he merely beamed with pleasure…
Barrington-Ward showed me a disquieting letter from the Speaker’s Secretary saying that he was directed by the Speaker to say that he was afraid he could make no exception in the case of the School to occupy seats in the Strangers Gallery while the latter is temporally closed but J.S. remarked that the speaker was absolute and it would be no good trying to influence him, I am so afraid that it may be the thin end of the wedge, you can never tell with a Liberal Government and it was the last Liberal Government which abolished the seats. [the Scholars at Westminster have a historic right to be allowed to view proceedings in Parliament without prior arrangement or having to queue with the public for tickets]

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Wednesday November 11th

After tea I drifted round to the public library at the back and at last found my way into the old curiosity shop at the corner of Marsham Street. I had heard so much about it, how a pony used to walk into the shop and such like eccentricities etc. etc. and also how the owner had relics of the Inquisition. So this evening I went in ostensibly to ask about some jars and we got into conversation.

The owner is a funny hunch-backed little man with a queer smile and I pointed to some leather figures and he told me they came from the Inquisition Chamber at Lisbon and pointed to a fearsome devil hanging from the ceiling, which with four others used to hang from the ceiling of the Chamber. The Devil was horrid to look at with grinning and diabolical jaws and clasping a ‘stone’ of leather in which was a leather snake with long fangs which could drop out (like a concertina) four feet or so, he told me he had the whole collection, a large number of figures all made of leather because, it almost made me shudder as he said it, ‘leather deadens all sound!’ Can one conceive of anything more gruesome?

He said he had the two door keepers larger than human beings one holding a sword which could descend on an unfortunate wretches head and the other a pistol which could be fired by pulling a string. But the way he came into the possession of these things is as mysterious as anything in their history. The former owner having made up his mind to sell them sent two men with two figures to see what they could get for them, one came to this shop and the owner seeing they were something quite out of the common offered to buy it and gave the money for it. The other man sold his figure but the money was not paid down nor was it as much as my hunchback acquaintance was willing to give. Therefore for 10 years he steadily bought the lot not knowing who was selling them to him and moreover these figures used to arrive often at midnight and when he asked the man who brought them why he came at such extraordinary times all he would say was that he had to bring them 40 miles in from the country and go back again.

And that is all the present owner knows, nor has he the slightest idea who he bought them from and all he knows is that they are genuine and were stolen from Lisbon 300 years ago by Don Sebastian (I think he said) a seaman who brought them to England. What they have been doing in the meanwhile no-one knows. I said I should like to see them. He has them in a house at Kennington or Kensington and didn’t say much, as I said it was purely a matter of interest on my part, but as I was going out he said that if I really cared to come in a fortnight hence he would arrange to show them to me.

If I go I shall insist on having a companion, they are too gruesome without and the owner has an unfathomable smile which I vaguely mistrust. He seems in keeping with them and might do a little ÔÇ£inquisitioningÔÇØ on me on his own account. He added he couldn’t show them to me till about a fortnight hence as he had some other people going and ‘we mustn’t get muddled up’, whatever that ungrammatical sentence may mean. He wants, he told me, ┬ú25,000 for the lost, but he will only sell them altogether. I must say it was an extraordinarily interesting story as he unfolded it to me.

I forgot to say that I had a slight shock (still in keeping with the Inquisition!) when I found he had locked the door behind me and had to unlock it before I went out. It was an incident and I fancy he always keeps his door locked, it was so when I came, but it gave me rather a surprise! I don’t know why but I feel that I shall never trust my precious bones to him alone, it’s too creepy.

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Tuesday November 10th

Exeat ended consequently we had a roll-call ‘up– School’ after Abbey. Forbes this morning got on two very pet subjects of his Milton and Hobbes. I am bare- faced enough not to care overmuch for Milton, at least, he does not move me in the same way some other poets do. Mind you, I appreciate his poetry, for instance I think the impression left on one’s mind after reading Lycidas is a very fine one but I cannot recall a single passage not even ‘and let my due feet never fail etc.’ which as it were appeals to one’s inmost soul in the same way as parts of Shakespeare and even perhaps the odes of Keats and Gray’s Elegy. There always seems to me to be an atmosphere of unreality in it and therefore when ‘Dr F’ raves about it and so on, it doesn’t make the slightest impression on me.

This afternoon I went up fields with Tunnecliffe and watched our juniors play Rigaud’s who I am glad to say were defeated 2-1. Tunnecliffe tells me he may be leaving at the end of this term I tried to put in a judicious oar and said what a grievous pity I thought it would be. He seemed pleased. If worse comes to worse, as father said when I told him tonight, we can do with only three monitors.

We had a Commem singing practice ‘up-School’ this evening at 4.30. Gow made me give out papers in the middle, he made one remarks at the end to Ranalow which was very true and that was that the hey of the psalms was too deep for the boys whose voices had just broken and all they could do was to growl. I am in this position I can’t sing it high and if I sing low I make a mumbling noise which is upsetting.

I had to ‘have upEyre tonight, talking in prep. Hobson caught him but we extricated ourselves by dealing with him under the First Offenders Act(!) and let him off. As I remarked to him instead of asking a monitor he preferred to take the risk and forced us to take action. It is disgusting if people won’t keep simple rules, their blood be on their own head, I can’t always manage to let people off on ‘technical grounds’. Eyre upset me by saying ‘thank you’ when I said we had decided to let him off. It appeared to lift a weight from his mind but he ought, I think, to have been tanned, and would have been if we had not had such a disgusting number lately.1

1 He certainly ought to have been for he has told me since that instead of this being his first offence he had been had up by Gordon Reed and let off the term before and consequently was not unnaturally pleased at getting off again in this unexpected manner!! L.E.T. 15/7/1912

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Monday November 9th

. This evening we went to Barrie’s play ‘What Every Woman Knows’, a most charming piece and very well acted especially Hilda Trevelyan and Gerald du Maurier. Theatre crammed with well-dressed people and very enthusiastic. I have simply lived in taxis these last few days. We had one up from Victoria tonight and one for both going and coming back from the theatre. Coming back we had an Argyll, far and away the nicest I have been in yet, very large and beautifully smooth going.

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Sunday November 8th

We had the John’s (the only two [who] have not gone away) in to breakfast this morning. They are queer and everything has to be said in the plainest English before they understand, also if Father speaks they both listen and calmly disregard whatever anyone else may be saying to them. The first time I think we had them in. Father wishing to be pleasant asked on if they ‘had a pony to drive?’ ‘No, we have a coachman’ was the squashing reply. I burst, I couldn’t help it. Heaven knows what they thought he meant. ‘I dunno’ — this I may say is their usual remark to any question. ‘I dunno’! though now Father has teased them out of it.

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