Wednesday
Glasgow
Dearest,
There’s not a great deal of fresh news for we have done nothing in the last couple of days. I have not even been out at night. On Monday I stayed in and did some sewing – what with sewing, cooking and typing I’ll make a good wife for someone! Last night I went across the road for a bath and then did some washing, read a book and so to bed. That covers my activities since the weekend, and even I find it difficult to make a song and dance about that. Of domestic interest is the fact that Charlie’s wife has at last condescended to part and he is now the proud father of a son, to his wife’s great delight. She had set her heart on a boy. Perhaps “proud father” is scarcely the word to apply to Charlie for he is a most unemotional fellow. He heard from home on Monday night and told me on Tuesday afternoon because he had “not had a chance before”! I can’t see me doing a thing like that. Think of all the people who wet our babies’ heads. And it’s not that Charlie’s mean. Just that he doesn’t think of it and it’s not his way to make a song and dance about things.
I’m writing this before going to school. The dentist is going to have a look at my mouth this morning and he’ll probably send me to have the palate altered. I’ll tell you how I get on.
Back from dinner and the dentist. He ground the back teeth on the right side of both plates down a fraction and they seem more comfortable. When I asked what I should do about the ulcers he said to leave the bottom set out for a couple of days and then to wear them for a weekend and see how they go. So there you are. The chief snag is that I got back late for dinner and so have not much time to write today.
I have had a letter from Dot and Jack today, enclosing their usual 2/6 book of stamps. Both were very brief notes, full of apologies for the long delay and saying that they have found a new flat, but they don’t say where or when they move in. It can’t be for some time yet as Dot talks of coming home on either Sept 12 or 14 to see about her furniture. Don’t mention that to Mother! But I can see a spot of bother in the offing. Must go now, love.
All my love.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
P.S. What about them there solubles?
Thursday
Glasgow
My darling girl,
Actually I’m beginning this last night, so to speak! That’s a bit Irish, isn’t it? I have been hearing, unwillingly, that blasted Radio Padre and my blood is boiling. He says the last three years have been a happy time! I wonder how many relations he has lost in the blitzes?
But thank goodness I have your vision-producing letter to chase that vile mood away. I should think at best half a tennis ball is required to subdue my sperms! But apart from the safety side of things, I should think that destroys the whole idea of oats from your point of view, doesn’t it? What thrill could you get with a contraption like that covering the most sensitive spot – the neck of the womb? I may be wrong but I should say that is the great advantage of pessaries – that they spread only a film of oil or some such substance over that delightful little spot. Tell me what you think, but personally, I want to feel the little, oh so delightful neck of the womb nestling snugly round the very tip of John when he reaches that lovely period of rigidity which I always wish would last for five minutes instead of the all too fleeting time he does hold it. That is my opinion of these things. What do you think? Let me know what your physical and mental reactions are likely to be, darling. I can have such a lovely coma on the strength of it! And just before I leave this subject, I was thinking of the famous Rendells. What thinkest thou? Please, sweet, let me know in your next letter, because I have so few opportunities of getting to the shops while they are open and alone. You see, the shops here shut early and so far I have always been near these places to and from school, when one or the other of the lads is there. That deals with the practical side of it. On the other side is the fact that just thinking of the eventuality so closely means that I have a prize erection you’d give anything to lay hands on! Oh, sweetheart, what a moment when I sink John, naked and unashamed, in the tender, lovely, warm embraces of Mary with the full knowledge that there need be no hurried withdrawal to spoil things. Just to let him lie and soak. Oh, angel, what heaven. But I warn you now, weeks and weeks ahead of schedule, that the experience will stimulate poor old John to such an extent that he will probably foam at the mouth very early in the proceedings. Oh, angel, I can hear all your delightful gurgles now as John “plits plits” [??] right on to the neck of the womb! Angel, I’m going to wash and shave in order to cool off. Night night, sweet.
It is now dinner time on the REAL today! Many thanks for your long and informative letter – information on so many points from footballs to rings! Congratulations on your stout work on the birthday present. Nice work, love, but you will have to be careful where he plays with it or you will find a few broken windows in the road, especially if you let it out about the time the older boys are there. In these days I wouldn’t dream of suggesting football boots for him. Even in normal times I think that Michael is not the lad to have football boots at his age because the studs drive into your feet on the hard roadway. Anyway, he should be delighted. I can still remember my big thrill the first time I was given a “casey”, as we used to call them. And evidently you managed the whole day well. I’m glad, for it makes such a difference.
So Valerie’s party went off all right? Good. Wendy seems to have made a hit there as well as at school. On the latter point we will have to be careful that we don’t make her conceited. There’s nothing worse than a kid who’s a prig about its own abilities. For all that, I’m glad she is starting so well because it will give her confidence early on – a confidence she will probably carry with her all through her school life. As you say, if she can attract the attention of the teachers now it may do her good later on. Tell her I got her message and that I know she’s a clever girl and I’m sure Michael is going to be a clever boy when he goes to school. Must preserve the balance!
Contraceptives seem to form the bulk of the first part of this letter, so there’s no need – or rather, no time! – to start that subject again. But while on that subject, I’m glad that vapours are prompt. I always think it’s a sign of better health. Hope you don’t have too bad a time, love. Glad to hear you are sleeping better. I know what sleepless nights are like only too well.
I had been wondering how it was Mother had not been over to see Geo. Probably Hennion is the stumbling block for I doubt if Mother’s forced and rather unreliable humour will be Hennion’s idea of a perfect guest.
Well, love, that’s about all for now. I have had a gala day again, with letters from Mother and Frank Patterson, but as I haven’t had time to open them yet, I can’t give you any news. I must be off now.
All my love and take care of yourself for me.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
Thursday
My darling,
Here’s hoping that this will be well enough typed to be fit to send off to you. We have just had one of our weekly exams and, while it still leaves a lot to be desired, it is at least an improvement on last week’s effort. I can’t say there is a lot of fresh news today for the day is still young. We are having perfectly foul weather again and today is for all the world like the middle of November. By the time you get this you will have been to town again and I only hope that you have had better luck with Michael’s present.
That part of the letter was written before I went to dinner and I have now your letter about birthdays and have answered all the points in a letter which I have just posted to you, so I don’t think there is a great deal more to be said on that subject except that I will be interested to hear how the party goes off.
There was an interesting incident at the billet at dinner time and one which rattled a few of the lads a bit. A youngster was caught taking French leave a few days ago and today he was sentenced. For that ceremony all the ship’s crew – we are a ship for this purpose – have to be assembled and sentence promulgated while we all stand with our hats on. The Commander solemnly read out the charge – one of breaking out of a naval establishment for a period of two days and two hours. The sentence was a bit savage, we thought – 14 days cells and 16 days’ pay stopped, which in the case of a married man would mean that his wife’s allowance might also be stopped for the same period. In addition the lad is reduced to second class for leave purposes, which means that he may never go ashore while he is in Glasgow without the special permission of the Commander. The thing that made it so stiff for him actually was the fact that this was his second offence. This incident has put the wind up a lot of the lads who had it in mind to make a break for home one weekend, although I know of one fellow who has not been put off. Now I must do some serious work so I’ll finish this later on at the billet. Bye for now.
Well, that’s the end of the first lot of typing done specially for you. That was done at about 16 to 18 words a minute I should think, for in the exam I typed 80 words at 16 words a minute with only one mistake. The instructor seems satisfied with my progress and, although I hesitate to discuss courses after the Aberdeen business, I feel a good deal more confident this week and, as in so many other cases, confidence counts for a lot. I’m doing reasonably well in the other things – tape reading, plain language, code and cypher. Later, when I get on the perforator machine, I’ll do the children’s names for them as a novelty but don’t mention it yet. When Wendy can read a bit, I’ll type little things for her to see if she can read them, but that will be some distance away yet.
I don’t think there is a great deal to be said just now. There was not a lot of news in Mother’s letter. She says that Geo is asking about me, so I’d better write her soon I suppose. Beyond that, Mother didn’t have a great deal to say about Geo, at which I’m not exactly surprised in view of what you say. Frank wrote today, which was a coincidence as last night I had started a letter to him. The same thing happened last time. Our letters crossed. Frank and some of the lads from Aberdeen are coming over on Saturday, so I’m looking forward to seeing them again, especially as I think Frank may be able to help things a bit. It will be good to see the lads again. Edgar Taylor, by the way, is a real sailor now. You knew that he went back to his base and went in for R.D.F. Now he’s up here after serving in a cruiser, but we haven’t been able to contact him yet. I’d like to hear his views of things. I’ll bet they are illuminating! Edgar’s a real Yorkshire lad alright.
Well, love, that’s about all for tonight. I’ll add a bit more tomorrow but before I say “night night” I’ll just say once more how much I love you. Oh, sweet, I miss you so much these days in every possible way and there is scarcely a day goes by without me coming home to you a dozen times. I have got into the habit of seeing everything through your eyes and holding long conversations with you. We hear very little of the radio here but some of the fragments I do hear remind me of you so much. Angel, you are more and more the complement of my life. And your letters mean so much to me with all their news of home and the little doings of the children – and most of all news of you and what you are doing and feeling and thinking. I love your letters, especially those coma-ish letters and those like the recent ones full, as you say, of feminine anatomical details. Darling, never apologise for things like that. They conjure up visions which are so delightful to me and visions which I would give anything to turn into concrete facts. Fancy feeling you now in my arms. Sweetheart, every day while I’m talking to you in my letters at this time I close my eyes for a few minutes and will you into my arms. Isn’t it funny that when I was at Aberdeen these thoughts tortured me. Now they comfort me more than you will ever know. How often have I said you’ll never know how much I love you? I don’t know but I say it again. Precious, I adore you more and more and all I long for is to hold you in actuality in my arms and to murmur all those little things which mean so much to you and I. Even now I get such a thrill from feeling your hair against my face and the velvet of your neck and the tips of your ears as I caress them and feel you quiver so delightfully beneath my wandering, caressing, questing hands. When you fail to thrill to my hands I shall know that you have no love left for me – a day which shall never ever come.
Friday dinner time
Tragedy, sweetheart, stark staring naked tragedy! I could have cried my eyes out. Your parcel arrived ten minutes ago. I opened it and what do you think I found? You’re right. The jar was in pieces and of course it was quite impossible to eat any of it. I could not resist dipping my finger into it and even then I found two minute splinters of glass in my mouth! It tasted delicious, too. If ever you should be sending any more I think I’d send it in syrup tins or tins of some sort. It is a shame but I suppose it can’t be helped.
Many thanks, too, for the papers. I have just had a quick glance at the ‘B.T.’ and see there has been a big golf tourney. They did well, didn’t they, from a financial point of view, but the ‘B.T.’s report gives no description of the play. Still, I don’t suppose they have anyone there now who can play the game.
I was on duty last night and at last got a start on a letter to May and with anything like luck I’ll get it finished tonight. Incidentally, the old hen hasn’t written me yet! Mothers-in-law I’ve met ‘em – but don’t tell her I called her an old hen, will you? She may get that dirty Irish temper of hers up!
Bye for now, my love. Hope your tummy is better now. My love to the children. All my love, angel.
Ever your
Arthur X
Saturday
Glasgow
My darling,
I’m on my own again this weekend. Charlie has taken a chance and beat it home to see his wife and youngster and I don’t blame him. John Gray has his wife and daughter staying at Rothesay. They came last weekend and leave for home tomorrow afternoon, so he’ll probably head back for tea tomorrow. I’m not worried very much about being on my own this week because I have had a chance to plan for it. Frank said he might be able to manage to get here and spend the evening with me, but I’ve had a wire this morning to say he can’t manage it. Still, I won’t mind because I’m going to see Celtic and Rangers play. That probably means nothing in your sweet life, but they are two of the biggest teams in Glasgow – one Protestant and the other R.C. As you will guess from that, there’s usually skin and hair flying, free fights among the spectators and bottles thrown at the referee, so I’m going along to see the fun. Then for this evening I have a free ticket for a YMCA concert which one of the fellows who is on duty today had given to him at a dance.
Sunday
The match did not come up to expectation from the point of view of fights among the spectators. Shame! On the field, however, there was a good deal of dirty play and a few of the lads in the services – all non-Scots – joined in a body to boo the dirty players! We got a bit of fun out of it, and no trouble. Another discovery I made is that service men can travel any distance on the tubes here for 1d for they are run, like the trams, by the Corporation. I was in the arcade here and saw some Tam o’Shanters for 2/6 and when I saw that they did not need coupons, I got one for Wendy. I have also got a couple of cardboard models of aeroplanes – they have to be cut out with scissors and glued together – for Michael. Then I suddenly remembered that I didn’t send anything from Aberdeen for Wendy’s birthday so thought I’d better treat them both alike. Perhaps, on due reflection, I had better put them away. They will come in useful for extras for Xmas. If I post them on to you, will you “plant” them until then? I’ll have them a few days yet.
Last night I went to the concert after having a single pint in solitary state. It was just an average show. Neither good nor bad, but it passed the evening away very pleasantly. John Gray came in soon after divisions this morning, having seen his wife off home, so I’m going out with him to visit some relations this afternoon in the hope of getting civvy tea! Then we will pick Charlie up at Central Station on his return somewhere about 7 o’clock. That will complete the day and put us well on towards the start of the sixth week of the course. Time is flying past now. Yesterday I asked the instructor what speed we should be doing and he said 18 words a minute at the halfway stage. My last results, as I think I told you, were 16 words with one mistake, so it looks as if we might be up to scratch on this course, for a change. I did half an hour on the perforator machine yesterday. It is quite a different touch and one snag is that you cannot see anything you are typing so you can’t tell when you make mistakes. That is the reason for their insitence on accuracy rather than speed at the beginning.
Now to answer your letter. Yes, another year gone, but I still try to be honest with myself, even though the boot nips badly now. Darling, you know how it hurts to say this, but don’t let us delude ourselves. Can you honestly see any likelihood of me being out of uniform in less than 5 to 8 years? I’m damned if I can. Your point about the difference between 1942 and 1917 is a good one. We have one army fighting and that is in the Middle East. Their successes(?) have been few and costly. Elsewhere we seem to make little if any progress, although soon after the Dieppe raid things began to look more hopeful. Russian successes on the central sector; Japs being hammered in the Solomons and New Guinea, as well as in China; and, best of all, the feeling that Dieppe was just the beginning of bigger things. Sometimes a feeling of despair and almost of shame at what Russia is doing by comparison overcomes me. That is the reason I stifle all serious thought before it can begin to take shape.
It is literally impossible to hear a programme through completely but I heard fleeting fragments of the ‘Marching On’ programme you spoke of. I heard what was possibly the best and most dramatic six sentences in the whole thing. They were the last sentences of all. The best bit of oratory I have heard on the radio for a long time. Was Liverpool mentioned as one of the most-bombed places? I didn’t hear it, but I heard Manchester!
I’m glad you have started on those pills. Tell me how you feel and PLEASE try to go through without missing a single day. The secret of them, as I have said before, is continuity in the prescribed period and to make sure that you take them all in that time.
Many thanks for all the news about Wendy’s schooling experiences. They seem to have some good ideas there, don’t they? Apart from the religious side, that is! Did you hear the Radio Padre telling the troops that three years of war had been a glorious happy time? I hope you can get Michael into school before he is five. It will do him good and will help you.
Now, sweetheart, I must be off – or rather I must write a note to Michael and one to Wendy, just to enclose with the Tam o’Shanter and some chocolate I’m sending for the party. There’s not a lot but it might help. Hope so, anyway.
Bye for now, sweetheart. All my love.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
P.S. Managed to get letters to Mother and May in the post yesterday, so I’ve done well in letter writing this weekend.
Sunday
Glasgow
Dear Michael,
I am sending this parcel to you and Wendy. The hat is for Wendy and the chocolate is for you to give to the boys who come to your party – and some to Wendy as well, of course. I can’t get as much as I used to do but this is a little bit extra for you and your friends. I hope you will like it. Mummy will like the chocolate with the cream in it, so will you give her some of that kind? I do hope you have a nice party and that this parcel arrives in time. Did you get a lot of surprises for your birthday? I hope you like your football, but be careful not to play in the street or the big boys may kick it through the window and then Mummy would have to pay for the window to be mended.
Now I must hurry to ask the postman to bring this to you. Once again, many happy returns, son.
Lots of love from
Daddy
Dear Wendy,
I was in a shop on Saturday and I saw this little hat and the lady said I didn’t need any coupons to buy it so I got it for you because I thought you might like it. I hope you will.
Mummy tells me you are learning such a lot of things at school, and that you are learning how to play, as well as how to do sums and how to spell. I’m so glad you are happy at school. You will have made a lot of friends by now. Did Michael like his football, and what did you buy for him for a surprise? I hope you have a nice time at his party.
Bye for now, love.
Lots of love from
Daddy
Monday
Glasgow
Dearest,
It’s dinner time and I’m fighting hard against a deep coma feeling induced by your lovely letter. Some day will you write me a twelve-page letter on nothing but oats? Starting, say, from the moment I walk into the house on leave and finishing when, with a sweet con sigh, I kiss you for the last time the next morning, turn my back reluctantly on you, tuck my bottom against Mary, take your hand in mine and, with your bare breasts caressing my back, drop off into a lovely dreamless sleep. Will you, darling? All you have to do is imagine that four months oats stored away waiting to descend on you like an avalanche. Happy thought. I wonder what Mary will think about it when she wraps all her lovely warm arms around John and kisses him gently and lovingly when she first draws him to her tender embrace and more and more firmly as her passion mounts, until poor John wilts and sinks exhausted beneath the ardour of her love. Oh, sweet, what visions. Like you, I’m wriggling my bottom on a very hard and uncomfortable bed now! Now that’s all on that subject except this – I’ll get some sort of solubles. Don’t worry, love, bareheaded it will be this time and we’ll wallow in it while we can.
On the other points in your letter. I’m glad some other people in the road are taking up cudgels against those youngsters, especially some of the men. They seem to be developing into a gang of little toughs. I’m glad you have got in touch with Norah and Ivor again. As you say, it will make a break and the children will enjoy the change, too. I wonder if you’ll get the religious business there, too? I was interested to hear of your unexpected ally. Mrs Jarvis, of course, is only to be expected to be the genuine article on smug religious beliefs. Mrs Winter has adopted the right attitude toward Sunday School so far as John is concerned. By the way, if Mrs Winter hasn’t actually used it for oats, what has she used it for? Seems a bit queer to me.
Well, sweet, that’s all for today. Sorry this is so short a note, but we’ve had our dinner hour cut down a bit.
All my love, sweet.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
Tuesday
Glasgow
Darling,
The days are slipping past. Each day seems shorter than the last and we are slowly moving towards the halfway mark in the course, which is just as it should be. There’s not a great deal of news to tell you. Last night we had 9d worth of the gods at the Empire and I was surprised at the good seats you get, especially as they can be booked free of charge. The greater portion of the crowd up there were from the services, as you may well imagine. The show was not too hot. Carroll Levis and his Discoveries, most of whom were punk but we could not grumble for ninepence! I can see me refusing to take you anywhere but the cheapest seats when this war is over!
Dinner time
Many thanks indeed for your very long and newsy letter. It was good to have such a treat. Thanks again, darling. Although it was such a long letter, I don’t think there are many points in it for me to answer. One important thing is that question of leave. Charlie went home to Manchester and came back, all at a cost of half a crown, the price of a ticket he bought from a fellow here. I’ll tell you the full story some other time. Anyway, if I do decide to slip home for a weekend at any time, believe me, I’ll take no chances, but will have a good chance of getting away with it.
There was an interval while, amid great excitement, we examined our new suits. You will remember that we ordered them while we were at Aberdeen, on June 19 to be exact, and after chasing us round they have at last caught up with us, nearly three months after being measured for them!
I’m glad you had such a nice time at Nora’s, although I could quite understand what you say about the children being strange with each other. Trust Nora and Mrs Ashley for getting hold of pre-war supplies, and they’d be the first to moan about anyone else who did it! I’ve got beyond all hope of Ivor taking a strong stand ever.
I’m sorry you have had another do with Mother about the children’s party. It seems she will never learn.
What nice things you do say, darling. It’s so comforting to feel that you are conscious of my presence in the house so much. Don’t worry, love, your breasts will have that ache assuaged one of these fine days – or nights!
Now, darling, I must go. Those suits have upset things a lot today and it’s impossible to settle down to writing. I’ll have another try tonight.
All my love, pet. Always your
Arthur X
Wednesday
Glasgow
Dearest,
I’m looking forward to your letter telling of the birthday doings. It should arrive sometime today, dinner time or tea time. Poor old Stelly-well. Did she get tied up with the new ball and pump? A new ball can be the very devil sometimes when they are new, even when you are used to them. I know how you feel about it. But while it is new, it is probably better not too hard – unlike John – because it might be a bit too hard for his feet. Actually, of course, it would probably feel lighter to him if blown hard, but that doesn’t matter a great deal. I’ll have a whale of a time with that when I come home.
Tiger seems to have given you a real run for your money. I can just imagine the excitement of the children when you rescued the mouse and I’ll bet that Wendy was nearly in tears! If this was peacetime, we would be flooded out with white mice and things like that in the next year or so.
I have received your letter and what a nice letter it was. I’m being spoiled this week with two long letters. Many thanks, love, for all the details about the party. No wonder the kids had such a good time with the spread you put up for them. I’m glad you go to so much trouble on these occasions because I hate the idea of children always having war conditions forced on them. You are an angel, love, the way you combat all those difficulties and it makes such a difference to the children.
I am sorry you have had two nasty jolts like that. These things make me feel guilty that I had not made better provision myself, particularly in regard to the mangle and the curtains, but when we already had those and there was no immediate sign of Dot going into a place of her own I just drifted along and now you are in the soup. The Hoover is a bad blow for you but it has done well, for it was never really intended for half of the jobs it has done. You’ll miss it but I wouldn’t part with it if I were you, love. Try to hang on and if I can find any way of raking a few bob together it might help you later on to get it repaired. You are quite right not to trust to the judgement of these fellows. They are probably making a good thing out of stunts like that these days. It’s damnable when they do these things while fellows are away because the snag is so many women would fall for it. Hang on for a bit, love, and perhaps when I get out of this trainee period I may be able to send you a few more bob a week to help you meet these unexpected things.
I’m so glad that the ball was a success and that the chocolate and Wendy’s hat arrived in time. What did you think of the hat? I thought it a real find. I had no difficulty in picturing Noni’s tactics from your description of what happened. No matter how you try to keep these parties down it’s very difficult and sometimes you just have to bow to the inevitable.
Well, love, I think that’s all there is to my today and I think I have answered all the points you have raised. To revert to Dot’s list. If I were you I should be inclined to make up the things she wants and ask Dave to drop them at Litherland for you if he is going that way at all. If you ask him early he may be going in that direction before the weekend. Don’t include the curtains, but if you want to have a clear conscience you could mention it to her very carefully. Very, very carefully!
Now I really must go. I’ll try to write a longer letter tomorrow.
Bye for now, angel. Take care of yourself. All my love.
Always your own,
Arthur X
Thursday
Glasgow
Darling,
Pay day today, thank God! It’s always a popular day, as you may well imagine, and for the next few days some of the lads will be kings of creation – say until Sunday, but from then onwards there will be 10 days of grumbling, grousing and scrounging! They are a funny lot the way they will walk round for days on end without a penny in their pockets after spending 30/- or more in quite a few days. We have a couple of lads who came up from Devonport with us and they have sold so much of their gear that their kit-bags are now half empty and they are now swearing that somebody has swiped half of their stuff! You get all the extremes. Fellows like those two, for instance, will be bad neighbours of a fellow who hoards everything – money, tobacco, chocolate, soap etc and then the couple who have blown all their stuff complain that it isn’t right the way some fellows seem to have all the stuff. They even intimate the other bloke must have pinched the things he has!
Yesterday, Cliff, a fellow who used to be a Monotype operator in civvy street, heard that he is to get a move this week. The keyboard on these perforating machines is so like the board he has been used to that in the first two days he was doing 40 w.p.m. and now he is doing 60’s. He is not supposed to know but as soon as they can fix all the little details he is going to get posted to a station where they are waiting for a man. If they haven’t anyone already trained, but have to take a man from the middle of a course, it looks as if they are short of operators, in which case we can expect leave about as soon as we have finished the course, then back to depot and a quick draft.
The latest story is that the Navy have taken over Borstal as a signal school – I’ve heard that from several sources – and that instead of going to Chatham we will go there. I won’t mind that as I believe that from a purely scenic point of view it is far better than Chatham. Indeed, I’ve heard very good reports of Borstal, even in peacetime.
Dinner time and I’ve just had another good day for mail. A long letter from Hughie and a registered parcel from Mother containing plums in a wet condition, tomatoes all squashed and a packet of cigarettes soaked in the juice of both of them! Did she, by the way, come to the party after all? She says she did. Hughie’s letter was full of news of the office and he tells me that Harold Tudor, after having his medical, wangled himself a job as public relations officer to the British Council, which has headquarters at Harrogate, so he is automatically exempt! A typical ‘Echo’ wangle.
Well, love, that is about all the news. We had another exam today, the half way one and I got 18 words a minute, which, while not brilliant, is evidently considered reasonable enough. I can do better, I know, and I’m not greatly worried about it. The general opinion among the lads seems to be that the course will be extended a bit and I think it rather likely for there are about a dozen on my speed and below, and that is more than half the class. I should imagine that as they seem so anxious to get operators they will make more of pushing us all through the course.
I’ll try to write you a longer letter tomorrow, love. At the moment all I need say is that I’ll fill you to overflowing, alright, so don’t worry about that. I can’t guarantee any definite fluid quantity, but what I do want to make sure of is that our first union shall be perfect. Last leave, as at Aberdeen, the first one or two harvests of oats were, perhaps not spoiled, but rather marred by our overwhelming eagerness. This time let me make sure that you are really ready before John snuggles his way in, because once he does find himself in Mary’s embrace he is likely to lose all sense of balance. We really must try to achieve perfect timing for that occasion. Oh darling, I’m going all gooey at the thought of the splash John will make! My only hope is that, having anticipated that treat for so long, we are not disappointed. Now I must be off and try to concentrate on typing with that lovely dream in my head. What a hope!!
Bye for now, angel. I’ll write you tomorrow. All my love, angel.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
Friday
Glasgow
Angel girl,
Many happy returns of our day, sweetheart. We never thought in 1936 that on our sixth anniversary half of our married life would have been spent in war conditions. But enough of that side of things because, apart from the last seven months, wartime has not been too bad for us, with all the air raids we have had. If anything we will probably remember the early years of the war as a period in which we grew closely together and the later period of the war as a time in which we came, through separation, to put a deeper and wider and finer interpretation on our love for each other. And all this in spite of the fact that we have wanted each other physically in a way we have never really needed each other since we have known each other. In comparison with our present purely physical needs, our early essays were very very childish, weren’t they? And yet they were very dear to us and it is only now that I realise that part of the joy of our early adventures was the anticipation and the certain realisation that one day we would have really satisfactory oats, clasped naked in each others’ arms, as we should do. Hence my importuning you to spend a weekend with me – a temptation you resisted, thank God. But we did get very near to heaven, didn’t we, at Freshfield when we did hold each other close in unashamed joy. That blessed day will always be one of the highlights for me. And then, of course, there was our first night at Wrexham when, you forward hussy, you took full toll of your poor husband’s body. I can see you now in those pink pyjamas and can feel the smoothness of your silk clad bottom and breasts beneath my hands even now. And such a dear delightful feeling it is too, familiar yet never palling. I’ll never lose the delight and thrill of the touch of any little portion of your body, from the tips of your fingers and the light brushing of your hair right down to the tips of your toes. Oh my darling, I get very close to idolatry where you are concerned and I can think of no more adorable idol. And talking of worshipping, one of the things I love is to see you go down on your knees and press your beloved head close against the pride of my life – none other than little tiny John. Just now I have a vision of you with your eyes, lightly clouded as if near to tears, but with love shining through as you look at me and while I stroke your hair ever so lightly I eventually find my tongue to tell you in little broken expressions just now much I do adore you. Oh, darling, this is one of the visions I have kept for the day I come home to stay home for ever. Like you I wish it could be soon, but whenever it does come let us hope we will not have changed so much that we will consider those things undignified or belonging to a past age of our life.
I wonder what you will be doing when you get this little package? Let’s see, it should be fairly early in the morning so I presume you will be up and doing, even though it is not a school day. You will have just got out of bed – a lonely couch and oh such a quiet couch as compared with the one at Wynnstay on 12 Sept 1936, blessed date. My mind keeps going back to that night. What a night, love. There was no rest for poor little Arfa Parfa that night and none for poor little overworked John, either. Such willing toll you took of me that night. I wonder could you repeat the performance if by any miracle I was suddenly transported to bed beside you tonight? You know, I doubt it. I think that if you were fully satisfied you’d be off to sleep just as I would be. The more I think of it, the more I come to the conclusion that I never really satisfied you that night. I wonder if I should fail again? Darling, I’m revelling quite sensuously and unashamedly in the mental and physical dream of what you will do to me and for me when I do see you again. We can’t always hope that I will find you already abed and waiting for me. You know there may be other people about for some hours after I arrive. Say I got home in the afternoon at 5 or 6 o’clock and you had someone in – Peggy, or Mrs Gardiner or someone like that. What would you do then, until we could be alone? You have to keep a tight hand on yourself but I’m very much afraid you’d be giving someone the bird before very long had gone by. I lie on this old hammock of mine often and conjure up all sorts of circumstances in which I might conceivably – terrible word – arrive home and I get a lot of pleasure from it. I see myself coming home in the very early hours when you couldn’t possibly know I was coming. Then I’d undress downstairs – cunning move that – fit on the evidence, creep into bed and shag you brutally as you say you want to be shagged. Even then you’d probably play hell because I hadn’t warned you first. But think of the surprise to waken and find John stealing in! I do believe that even in your sleep you’d know John and greet him enthusiastically.
Now darling I’m going to close because I want to catch an early post to make sure you get this very first thing. I’m not going to spoil this letter with any ordinary news. I hope you will like the bracelet which is not as much as I should like to send you, but it is something of mine to wear when you feel you want me close to you. I’d like you to use it for everyday wear for it’s not meant to be “dressy”. God knows its small enough but at least it is something that can always be touching you as I should like to be doing right now and small as it is perhaps it will help to say “I love you” sometimes when I’m not there to say it for myself. Anyway, I’m going to say it now. I love you angel girl, now more than ever and more and more in the future for my love grows deeper and deeper for you every day.
Now angel, sweet as it is to talk to you I really must go or I’ll never get this into the post. Take care of yourself for me until I come to do my best to make some of your dreams come true. All my love, angel.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
Morningside, Liverpool
[first pages missing]
Wendy’s rash had practically disappeared this morning, so I told her to tell Miss Ellis that I thought it was a fruit rash. Miss Ellis evidently said that “your mother’s probably right” or words to that effect.
This singing business amazes me. It seems we have been raising a prima donna! I thought yesterday’s grand success was a fluke of some sort, but today three classes had singing together in the hall. The ‘champs’ of each class sang solo and then our Wendy was brought to the front and according to her “the teachers said I sang nicer than any of them and some of them were awfully big!” So there must be something to it, though I still can’t see it myself. Perhaps it is that all children of this age ‘sing’ in this same monotonous way, and the teachers are able to pick out the ones that might develop something like a voice. Well, it just beats me.
Despite your soulful rendering of ‘Danny Boy’ and less respectable ditties, singing was about the last talent I expected to find in one of our children. It’s the Breen coming out in her, that’s what it is!! But seriously, love, I’d give anything to see Wendy singing in front of a hallful of children! I still can’t believe it’s true.
Now that’s all the news of the children and the only other news of me is that I’ve finished making the marrow jam and it seems very nice. I didn’t make last year’s mistake of overcooking it. Shall I risk sending you some in a tin? That last experience has scared me. This lot produced about four and three quarter pounds. Next time I’m going to experiment by adding a pound of apples. That should make it set much more quickly and there won’t be so much loss of weight. I should be able to scrape up enough sugar in about another three weeks. Unfortunately it’s not a very economical jam from the sugar point of view.
By the time you’ve got this far in the letter you’ll be thinking that I’ve forgotten on what day it will arrive. No, I haven’t forgotten, darling, only I wanted to be rid of the more mundane matters before I mentioned it. That being done I’ll say many happier returns, darling. I’ve always been glad that no one seems aware of our anniversary except ourselves. That’s how it should be, for it doesn’t mean a thing to anyone else but us. It’s our own day, precious, and in future years we’ll have a whale of a time every anniversary to make up for the ones we’ve missed. Through your peculiar work hours and my habit of child-bearing we’ve never had a chance to do this day justice, have we? Still, it’s always meant a lot to us for I think we’ve both been aware that each passing anniversary has brought us closer to each other.
From the time you cast your evil eye upon me at Marjorie Smith’s party, my life with you has fallen into definite sections, each one drawing us closer together than the last one. First there was the ‘courting’ period – days when you used to drag me away down dark passages in Bootle Town Hall and have your will of me; or walk me for miles while you laid down the law; or just find a sheltered spot in the sandhills in the dear dead days when they weren’t bristling with barbed wire and A.A. guns – an ‘Echo’ to lie on, your glasses in my hat, one more evidence buried in the sand – dear love, if I shut my eyes I can recapture the whole atmosphere of those nights. I can hear the river and feel the sand running through my fingers as we lay smoking the post-coital cigarette! How difficult it was to have to remember mundane things like last buses. But there was always tomorrow when we would meet on business footing – “Will you see to this Miss Gregson?” “Certainly, Mr. Johnson!” Not a flicker of the eyelid to reveal that we had lain in the sand the previous night and would do so again at the first opportunity. We were pretty hot, weren’t we, although I say it myself.
But I’m rambling – I do love to linger over those first days when we were learning to know each other and I was learning to love you and trying so hard not to! It seemed to me at first the ideal relationship. We suited each other sexually, we enjoyed each other’s company. Neither of us wanted to sentimentalise it, neither of us wanted marriage. But after a while I was dissatisfied. I suppose a woman always is when she finds a man isn’t falling for her! Do you remember when I said “I’m not just a body to you, am I?” I had begun to feel that anyone could have filled my position with you, only I happened to be obliging. There were times when I could have choked you for your refusal to fall in love with me. But there were good days too, when I was thoroughly happy with you, content that you only wanted me, and that you did like to be with me quite apart from shagging me. And as we began to know each other better I began to think that perhaps some day you might love me a little bit! And then in a little gnat-infested lane in West Kirby you leaned me against a wall and said “Have you ever thought about marrying me?” I didn’t take it too seriously but it was pleasant to turn the notion over in my mind.
After that came black days. You left the ‘B.T.’ I saw you but rarely and when I saw you, you shagged me with a sort of bitterness and promptly left me again, like a man eating his dinner and rushing off to his business. Then one night you told me you weren’t going to see me again for six months. And the same night you raved about Dr. Somebody’s daughter and when I looked at you a trifle suspiciously you said “Lord, you don’t think I shagged her, do you? You couldn’t touch a girl like that.” Wow! Not very tactful, love! You hadn’t worried about touching me! That gave me to think. It seemed the virtuous ones were right. I had made myself “cheap” and here I was being cast off for six months for “business reasons”. But it seemed funny that business reasons should crop up at the same time as another girl. I came home and cried a bit and painted my bedroom and tried to stop loving you. Six months seemed a long time and I hadn’t much faith that you’d want me at the end of that time. But I was wrong. The six months lasted exactly two weeks when you popped up at a dance in Litherland and bore me away from Norman to his great annoyance and my huge delight!
But you weren’t very nice to me in the days after that. You were bitter with the world and you seemed to vent it all on me. How often I wished for the strength of mind to break away from you! At last after a night when you’d been particularly abominable I made up my mind that I’d have to finish it and get over it as well as I could. The next date you made with me I came to meet you with every intention that it would be the last time. And, just as if you knew, you were angelic to me. For the first time you spoke about marrying me seriously. I’ve always been glad of that – that you did think about marrying me long before you had to! That night settled it. I was happy after that. You still didn’t admit you loved me but I stopped worrying about it. I just knew that I was in love with you for always and would have to make the best of whatever you felt for me.
Some time after that the “courting” period ended and the “crisis” stage began. Poor old Wendy! Sometimes I look at her, so sure of herself, and think of the days when her life was in peril.
Queer days those – planning for Shrewsbury and planning for a hurried marriage at the same time. I remember one night at a pub in Woolton – we settled all our crises in pubs! – when you were making a layout of a Shrewsbury’s Children’s page, and a list of the first essentials for finding a house, all on the same piece of paper! How I relied on you in those days. You were an angel. You were the one sure thing then.
The next stage was the Alexander Road period. I’ve never pretended that was a particularly happy time. There were too many things to get used to – house keeping, new relations, complications with my own relations, religious persecutions – and you. That last remark sounds nasty but I don’t mean it like that. All I mean is that when you start living with anyone, even when you love them as I loved you, you have to start getting to know them all over again. And then there were things that you couldn’t appreciate – like having no money of my own, and being lonely for the first time in my life. I used to stand in the evening watching the lighted buses go past, thinking of nights when I had to rush round to those dances and of the friendly noise at Limedale. I suppose all these things seemed worse because I was ill all the time before and after Wendy was born. Sweetheart, I’d love to write “Our first home – how happy I was!” But it’s no use pretending – I was just damned miserable.
But I loved you, darling. I had that though I think it was the one time since I’ve known you when I might conceivably have stopped loving you – not through any fault of yours, but just that it is harder to love when you’re conscious of nothing but your own misery. I think I let you down then. I mean that I kept too much unhappiness shut in. I didn’t tell you about it and so didn’t give you a chance to make things better. I was so scared that if I started moaning you might stop loving me, for I thought that at last you did love me and it was such a new and tremendous delight that I was frightened to breathe on it.
Then for the second time our life was turned by your putting me in the family way. The Morningside phase began and still goes on, for the fact of your going away hasn’t somehow started a new stage in our lives. Four years we’ve been here and three of them have been war years and yet I’ve been so happy darling. It seemed that when we came here we came together at last, with no reservations.
We’ve travelled a long way in our eight years, haven’t we, sweet? Yes, I know it’s only six years today, but our marriage only marked another stage in our relationship. We started off as two young people so sure of themselves and their world, and here we are sure of nothing except each other – but so terribly sure about that.
After six years in most marriages I think the gilt’s worn off. Not for us, love. I love you a thousand times more than the day I married you and am a thousand times more sure of your love. And we haven’t just grown used to each other. The longer we have lived together the more we have seemed to gain of that romance which we so haughtily cast aside when we first started to know each other.
I don’t know what I’ve been trying to tell you in all this long rigmarole – unless it is that I have loved you more deeply as each anniversary has come along.
My darling it is past midnight. I had no idea it was so late. I must stop telling you how much I adore you or I’ll be here all night. Oh, sweetheart, I do love you.
The enclosed is to get a couple of extra pints to celebrate this auspicious occasion! I know you don’t want me to send you money, but please don’t be cross just for this once! It’s only to make the day a little bit different for you. I’ll be all cut up if you tell me off about it. I love you, angel, I love you.
Always your own,
Stella
Monday
Glasgow
Dearest,
As Freddie Swift used to say, “Back, like a giant refreshed”. And I really am. What a nice weekend it is – sorry, was. I got back into Glasgow at 8.20 and went and had a cup of tea in one of the canteens. Then back to the billet before 9.30 so there was no question of there being any trouble. Charlie wanted to do my fire watch for me as he was technically on duty for me, but as he had been on his own duty turn on Saturday night I didn’t think it was good enough, so I climbed out of bed in the early hours and did my spell. Charlie was tickled pink when he heard how I had got away with things and all the lads were anxious to know if I had had a good time. They all had a naughty twinkle in their eyes as they asked me – the implication was there with all of them but I did not mind what they were thinking. I have envied too many married fellows myself when they have been going home or have had their wives up here, as so many of them have.
By now of course you will have seen Mother and Dot and will know that we must have passed them on the road to Litherland in the first place as they walked along Sandy Road on their way to the house they wanted to see. Wasn’t that annoying? I was glad to see Dot again although I did not think she was looking as well as I have seen her. There is no doubt she is worried about what is going to flare up while she is home. It is crazy that people cannot come home for their own things without there being a lot of bad blood. By the way, she mentioned that she is short of cupboard space and was asking if you used that little cupboard in the children’s room, so I told her to take anything that she wanted and that it was silly of her to feel guilty about asking for her own stuff back – in other words I did my best to back you up in this line you have taken and which after all is the only possible line to adopt. If she has not already mentioned it to you will you put it to her so that she won’t feel at all funny about it? Let me know how things go and what things go, won’t you? I will bet that Mother tries to put her oar in and get things really confused, so if you can have a word with Dot on your own I most certainly should do so. I made one or two attempts to talk to Dot about those things, but each time Mother made some remark to drag the conversation away in some other direction. In any case, there was so little time to get down to things like that properly, especially on trains and stations.
Many thanks for your long and very welcome letter, which was waiting for me when I got back last night. I don’t know how you can manage to send this much love and I only hope it is not leaving you short because I know you will have a number of things to worry over. I don’t think there are very many points to answer in your letter, nice as it was and you are an angel to love me so much. I did enjoy your excursion into the past and it was lovely, having just lived to the full in the present, to take a trip back to the days of Bootle Town Hall, County Hall, the sandhills and West Kirby, to mention just a few of the phases. Looking back, I agree with you that Alexandra Road was our most critical period, although I never guessed you were so utterly miserable there. Probably I was pretty selfish the way I used to go out for a drink in the few hours I had free to spend with you in those days. You should have “spilled the beans” more, love, and not hugged your secret sorrows to your breast. Perhaps because I didn’t realise how unhappy you were, and therefore there was no sorrow “aura” about the place for me, I’ll always have a soft spot for those top rooms, and especially for the top bedroom where I first learned to take the cramp out of your leg and to rub your tummy when Wendy was getting a little troublesome. I got quite a shock at your almost brutal but only too true assertion that poor old Wendy was in hourly peril. Quite conveniently I had forgotten that side of it – at least in terms of personal relationships. Our Wendy seems an utterly different little person than the embryo which “threatened” our peace of mind in those far off days.
And here is an interruption in the shape of a summons to school, so I must be off. I’ll write you tonight. All my love, sweet, and many thanks once again for Saturday! It was very precious to me.
All my love, angel. Take care of yourself.
Always your own,
Arthur X
Tuesday
Glasgow
Darling,
The days still seem to be flying past, and the impression is growing here that the course will have to be lengthened. Most of the lads are quite satisfied that it should be so and particularly the married fellows, who see in it a possibility of being home for Xmas. So far as I can see, however, it is impossible to look as far ahead as that.
There’s not a lot that is new. I didn’t go out until late last night as I had some dhobying to do. John and Charlie went straight to the pictures from school and discovered that ‘Fantasia’ is showing here so I’m going to do my best to see it later in the week. Tonight is the night of the dance run by the lads here so I think I’ll go along and have a look at it for a time, but I doubt if I will stay very long. I have lost a good deal of enthusiasm for dancing and I think the dance a few weeks ago was just a flash in the pan. The only reason I’m going is that I feel everyone ought to support their own affairs. Anyway, I’ll tell you what it’s like.
There’s no news from school, either. We are going on much the same except that we are now going back at 1.30 instead of 2.
How are things at home? Has Michael’s ankle improved? I thought afterwards about the clinic. Can the children be treated for things like that there? If so, you might save a few bob doctor’s fees, if you think it worthwhile.
What did Mother and Dot have to say? I hope there was no real dust-up. Anyway, these points are probably answered in the letter which I expect I will get tonight.
What have you been doing with yourself? And how does the body feel now that you have had your wants satisfied for a time? At least I hope they were satisfied! They seemed to be on the second occasion, anyway, for I counted about six ejaculations! It was good, sweetheart. We achieved the object of coinciding alright, didn’t we? Having rid myself of the first full enthusiasm on Saturday I’m sure that by Sunday night I could have kept you going for an hour and a half – or almost! Anway, it’s good to know that when I do come home again we will be able to leave John in Mary’s embrace as long as we like. Oh, angel, it does make all the difference to feel the warm unadorned embrace of Mary, and all I hope is that you were as fully satisfied as I was.
Now, sweetheart, it’s almost time to go to school so I’ll have to leave you. Take care of yourself and don’t forget your pills. If I were you I should store the solubles somewhere where they will be kept cool until I come home to warm them up!
Bye for now, love. My love to the children. All my love.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
P.S. Did you get the 10/-? I forgot to tell you yesterday that Dave gave me 10/- towards the fare and Dot gave me 4/- or 5/- as well, so I did fairly well, didn’t I?
Wednesday
Glasgow
Dearest,
Many thanks indeed for your letter, which did arrive by the evening post. Dearest, it was a very sweet letter, one of the nicest you have ever written – which is saying a lot. As I have often told you, it is impossible to save all your letters but that is one which I am keeping. I don’t deserve one quarter of the things you say, but it is so nice to be loved so deeply and enduringly. I feel guilty in not having written you a long coherent letter but it is about impossible here to think for ten consecutive minutes. Your letter was to me the very satisfying climax to a wonderful weekend and, my sweet, you should never feel humble about having taught me to love you for you have given me the greatest thing that ever came into my life. That is not just you, or your body, but something fuller, deeper, finer. Something far transcending mere physical love. Something, as you say, granted to so few people. Sweetheart, thank you.
And now it’s dinner time so thank you, again, for another letter! And another of your own very nice letters – for you do write such lovely letters when you are just talking to me. I’m so glad you feel as pleased about the weekend. Some time ago I made up my mind that I would make the effort if it was at all possible, and a good deal of my pleasure was gained from scheming for it and in imagining, in my self-conceit, your surprise and delight but, you cunning bitch, you had it all worked out! Still, it’s nice to feel that, even if I had not been able to make it, you would have known that I had made every possible effort. Apparently I did not satisfy your lustful desires after all, if you are wanting me badly already. I can see me ending up in a nursing home within three or four days of coming home for good! Oh death, where is thy sting?
About Michael. This is where I feel so helpless being away from home. To begin with, while I agree that it is not a nice trait in any child – it smacks too much of the John Winters outlook for my liking – there is no point in exaggerating the incident. He is still a child with few moral values. I do wish I was at home for, with all due respect, I think he takes more notice of me than he does of you – as nearly all boys do. As you say, deliberate lying is bad enough but to blame someone else is wicked, but don’t let it get you down like that, love. I don’t know just what line is best to take for it is so difficult to judge from this distance. You can, of course, give him a real hammering, but that sounds too obvious and I don’t know that it is the best way. If you like, I’ll write to him myself. But the snag in that line is that it sounds as if you have been “telling tales” or that you can’t handle him, either explanation not being too good to the child-mind. Anyway, will you let me know if you think I should write him. One way to cure him might be to point out that if someone told lies about him he would get into trouble because you wouldn’t believe him when he was telling the truth. The moral side of lying is a bit complicated to go into here, especially as it is impossible to find any quietness in which to concentrate. Don’t forget that when I come home I must get hold of Michael and give him a real heart-to-heart talk – just the two of us, with no third party. If you can stick it out until I do come home, that might be the best way because I think I may be able to make an impression on him. Now don’t forget to remind me when I do come home because I’m apt to forget everything but you when I’m near you.
And now, my sweet, I must leave you. Don’t worry too much until I come home and I’ll do all I can then.
All my love, sweetheart, and once again many thanks for two lovely letters. Bye for now. I do love you.
Always your
Arthur X
Thursday
Glasgow
Dearest,
We are late today because dinner was late and there were big bugs in the way of officers crawling all over the building – as a matter of fact they are still crawling. I don’t know whether the dinner was put on to impress them, but they gave us soup, nice meat pie in huge dishes, and lashings of milk pudding. The food here is always good but there was just that extra touch that makes all the difference. Unfortunately we had rather strong kippers for breakfast and the smell still clung to the utensils! Still, it was good.
I’m sorry about the letter, love. What happened was that I went a different way back to school and did not pass a post box so I slipped in to the Lion Club where they have a letter box. That was a full two hours before the normal time of collection so it should have reached you, but I found in Aberdeen, I realise now, that you cannot rely on the people in these clubs clearing the boxes. I’m sorry that it should have happened on that day of all days, but you should have had two letters on Wednesday, just to make up for it.
Charlie has been very sceptical about his chances of getting “passionate” leave because of the baby and was loath to apply for it. I badgered him and he saw the Chief about it and is getting off from Friday noon until Monday morning. Charlie, knowing his oats and having had the tip from the Chief, put in as his grounds that he wanted to be home for the christening! That is funny if you know Charlie. Anyway, the main thing is that he has got it and he’s like a dog with two tails today, especially as his wife will have just got up by the time he gets home.
I didn’t tell you that I went to the dance on Tuesday night, did I? As you know, the affair was an official “do” from here and was held in the Astoria; a nice hall with quite a nice band. The charge was only 1/6 and for that you got two tickets, one being marked “guest” so I gave my ticket to the class leader to be given to some of the the people who have invited our lads to their dances. I was surprised to see many more women than fellows. Usually it is the other way round at affairs like that because several fellows, like myself, went without partners. Three fellows out of our crowd have their wives up here and brought them along. Altogether quite a nice night although you would have been amused to hear one of our Wrens tell me that I did quite well – “better than some of the young ones”. What my grey hairs have brought me to!
Well that’s about all the news, love. We heard that there were bombs on Liverpool on Monday or Tuesday. Have you had a raid? If so, when was it?
We didn’t go out last night so opened the jam for supper and Charlie and I made a good meal out of what is usually a dull affair. Very welcome, love, and very nice, too.
Now I must go, sweet. Take care of yourself. Hope you are feeling a bit more cheerful now. All my love, darling.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
Friday
Glasgow
Dearest,
You say the week has gone slowly. For me it has flown to such an extent that I did not realise today was Friday, and that despite the fact that Charlie has just started his weekend leave. I have just sent a wire off to his wife for him. Learning by my experience in Devonport, he wouldn’t send a wire until he was actually out of the building! And I don’t blame him. This weekend his wife will be on her own for the first time, so this will make a nice break for them.
Many thanks for your letter. You may be right about writing to Michael, especially as you have prepared him, so I’ll write him some time over the weekend. It will take too much thought to dash off in a dinner hour. Bottoms smacked in moderation are an excellent corrective. While you are smacking him, lay it on properly – don’t just tickle him. We’ll see what result there is from my letter.
We went to see ‘Fantasia’ last night at one of the nicest little cinemas I have ever been in. Although small, it is really comfy. The cheapest seat is 1/6 and we found ourselves on the front row, but we had only been seated a couple of minutes when the attendant came and shepherded us into good 2/- seats! It’s my personality what does it – even in the dark. It’s a great show and if you get a chance of seeing it, don’t miss it. Some of the scenes are really beautiful and some of them rather depressing, especially one of the two final scenes which is based on a Russian piece and is really macabre with skeletons of men rising from their graves. There was also a good news film showing the difference between Sept 15, 1940 (the time of the Battle of Britain) and Sept this year. Quite good if only we were doing something to justify it.
Some of the lads here are making a bolt for home this weekend for the fever seems to have spread! One thing I don’t like is the arrival of more P.O.s who have just come today. That means more supervision and I’m afraid some of the lads may find themselves in the cart.
Sorry this is such a short and scrappy letter, love, I’ll try to get a better one written during the weekend.
Must go now. All my love, sweetheart. I do adore you. We are one week nearer! Take care of yourself.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
Saturday
Glasgow
My darling,
Now the weekend is here there seems to be a bit of time to breathe, and perhaps time to get down to a rather longer letter which will, in all probability, be done in stages.
I have just been re-reading your very sweet letter which I didn’t get until I got back on Sunday night. That, too, has gone on one side to be saved and read and re-read in the future when I want to get a taste of the atmosphere of “the dear dead days” as you call them. I have to pick and choose your letters so carefully because of the little space I have for keeping anything in any real privacy. Thank you once again for that letter and, too, for the 10/- which I know must represent very real sacrifice by you and which, as you know now, I put to the best use in the world for it helped me to come back to you, if only for an all-too short time. But, oh sweet, it was so nice to hold you in my arms again. I meant to say so many things to you which somehow I never managed to say, although there were some things I did remember to tell you. Perhaps one day, or rather evening, we will sit down and do together what you did in your letter – go back over the milestones of the last eight years. One of the things I’m looking forward to is coming home for good and having an unbroken stretch of nights before us when we can sit down and natter together over all sorts of things – the little things which lie half-forgotten in our minds, the various milestones in our lives, the children, how they are progressing and our hopes and fears for them. And by then you will laugh at Michael’s fits of naughtiness and the way we have worried about him. Ah well, those days have to come but they are nice to look forward to. Let’s hope that they really will come and come more quickly than either of us think just now and, too, let’s hope they will bring with them a far greater sense of real security for ourselves and for the children than we have ever known yet. If only we can be sure of their future not containing a repetition of all this nonsense.
Now to answer some of the points in your letters which I don’t seem to have had time to deal with. By all means wear the stockings. There’s no point in leaving them. It’s my fault, not yours, that they were never sent. If you think they are worth all that much, why not (a) save them for gala occasions when I can appreciate your silken calf and thigh, or (b) do a deal with someone and get two pairs of more serviceable stockings of your own size? Anyway, make use of them. Don’t just leave them there.
Now there is one thing I have not said in my letters and a thing which I meant to say in my first letter after coming back. That is how much I appreciated the fact that you had not cried after I had gone. I know, without conceit, that it hurts you for me to have to leave you, but the thought of you in tears upsets me beyond words and I’m so glad to think you are gradually hardening your heart, as I am mine, to these inevitable separations. For the first couple of days at Skegness I went miserable through and through when I thought of how hardly you were taking our separation. That is not a censure, love, but no man likes to think of his wife all miserable at home while he is caught up in all the clanging whirl of the transformations into a “number in line”. As you know, I wouldn’t expect you to jump with joy at the idea of being rid of me for some weeks or months, but no one can ever escape the feeling of being personally responsible for the misery of their women folk. You were marvellous, love, and I felt proud of you, especially when I came back the second time and caught you on the hop. I had the wild idea of carrying you off to bed and slipping a quick one across you, but I thought that would be anti-climax and I’m more than glad now that I didn’t for it would have spoiled a marvellous day. Just wait till I get that 7 days. I’m not changing into civvies and catching cold this time – or ever again! What a pity, angel, that you did not stay awake all night last Saturday. If you had wakened me again about 4 or 5 my quiver might have been full again!
Rees seems to have charged you fairly reasonably, although if you work it out it comes to nearly 5/- a visit. Which isn’t bad going when all is said and done. Medicine you can discount. The whole eight bottles wouldn’t cost 1/- and that is on doctors’ own arguments at a private meeting I was once at in Arthur Jones’s office! I hope your claim is granted. Let me know how you go on.
Yes, I know about Morris [??] going. Dave told me on the way down and added that he had – or was going to, I’m not sure which – applied for the house. With all due respects, I hope he doesn’t get it! Anyway, if Mother does cut up rough, there’s an answer ready made. If Dave gets it, he was in first. If he doesn’t, even he has no influence. It’s in the bag!
Glad to hear of all your discoveries in the drawers. And talking of drawers, I’ve got an order in with one of the lads to try to get some shorts for me. If I get them I’ll send them on for you and you can sew them up to keep the draught out!
It’s now Sunday morning and I have been unfaithful to the Methodist J.C. by going and worshipping(!) the C. of E. J.C. because that gives me more leisure. Isn’t it nonsense? And I have been using that leisure in a very satisfactory way. I have been reading a very delightful letter you wrote me – the last I ever got from you at Skegness. How long ago that seems, my love. But what a lovely letter that was and I can remember now, oh so clearly, how I revelled in that letter. In it you recalled the days at the ‘B.T.’ and how formal we were to each other in the first days. I was never really conscious of an air of formality, for my first memories of that time concern the way Ronnie and Norman and Philip used to pull your leg about being Freddie’s lady now; and then there were also life-like imitations of Pluto! Remember? And remember the way we used to curse you for being a lazy beggar and not helping with making the tea? Even the mention of tea at the ‘B.T.’ brings back a lot of memories: you fastened in with Freddie, Arthur Smith always coming in in the middle of tea, the inevitable rolls with Heinz sandwich spread and the particular kind of meat pie I used to have every week. There was, too, the peculiar spirit smell from the Primus under the table. That is one side of life at the ‘B.T.’ which has its own particular delights, but best of all I like the other side – the memories of the later days and nights. Particularly the nights when perhaps I was working late after the Council and you would come in and we would have a few minutes together. Or the Thursday nights when everyone but Freddie had gone and with him safely(?) on one side of the partition we would be on the other, with Mary welcoming John for an all-too brief meeting! I can even now feel the touch of the lace on the edge of those French knickers so ruthlessly pushed aside. And, as you said recently, what a row if you wanted to wear anything other than French knickers! There were, too, the nights when, after I had left or been thrown out of the ‘B.T.’, I used to prowl from dance to dance looking for you. This period, of course, includes the famous night to which you have referred. The night I came up to that Litherland dance and carried you off from Norman Jones. Wasn’t that the night that we went to Joe Benson’s after hours?
You know, I have never been conscious of being bitter towards you, even in those days of deep disappointment. You were, even then, my one comfort and I’m sorry if you thought I was treating you as filling a daily physical need. I wonder what would have happened to me if you had gone through with your intention of giving me up. That would have been the last straw just at that time but, jolt that it would have been, I doubt if you would have been allowed to get away with it. I would have pestered the life out of you, even if I had had to forget my dignity so far as to make love to you! Oh, sweetheart, just think what might have happened that night if I hadn’t had the sense to talk sensibly to you. Never mind, I did do the right thing, even not knowing how close to the brink I was. I’m sorry I caused you so much unhappiness then, but I have never wilfully hurt you, have I? Even when you were really miserable at Alexandra Road, I never realised how unhappy you were or I would have done something about it, as you know.
Oh, angel, I do love you, and even to think of you having been unhappy in the past hurts me. Perhaps because of that time and our present period of separation we will be able to settle down to years of smug “sweet con” when this war is over. It won’t be my fault if we cannot.
Now, precious, much as I love you, I will have to leave you to write to that confounded child of yours! Tell Wendy why there is only one letter. I think it would be unwise to write telling Michael off and, at the same time, to write a chatty letter to Wendy. The distinction would be too sharp-drawn. I don’t think I will suggest it to Michael, but you can if you like, that if he really means to mend his ways he can write and tell me so.
So the little red box is in the right-hand side of the middle drawer? OK, I’ll bet I can put my hand right on it when the time comes, as come it will, and so will I! Wow! And will I make your muscles stiff again? Just you wait, young woman. I hope, by the way, that the solubles did sol! Let me know if vapours are late, won’t you? I’ll be looking a bit anxiously for that V sign after that experiment. Some of the married men, by the way, swear on the reliability of Rendells, so we might try them next time if I can get them. Still, we have enough in hand for the moment.
Now I really must leave you, pet. Bye for now. All my love, angel, and take care of yourself. I do love you so much and am full of impatience now for the end of October.
All my love, sweetheart.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
P.S. I have finished Michael’s homily. Read it first and see if you think it is the right line to take. If there are any points you want to interpolate, do so by all means. I only hope it is simple enough for him to follow. Let me know what his reactions are and, if you get a chance of reading it to him without an audience in the form of Wendy, so much the better. I don’t like the idea of a third party being present at a telling off. It might ruin the whole atmosphere.
Monday
Glasgow
Dearest,
Back to the days of hurried notes again! Still, you should have had a decent letter by now. Yesterday, after I had written you and Michael, I had an orgy of letter writing as it was the foulest day we have ever had. I went out for a break at night to the Naval Centre, got lost in the blackout and wandered for about 10 minutes before jumping on a tram. In that short time the rain soaked through the uppers of my boots and I got my feet wringing wet. I feel very light hearted as a result of this weekend letter-writing frenzy for I have written Hughie Ross and Jack Patterson (to acknowledge 5/- from the office comfort fund), Fred Stephens, Geo, Bert, Eric and Mother which, in addition to yours and Michael’s is not bad going as I wrote about 9 pages to Fred and 7 to Bert and his family. It is always difficult writing Bert for one never hears anything from his family and yet you cannot just ignore them, especially as he signed the letter on behalf of them all. I sometimes wonder if that’s why he writes so seldom. In addition to all those letters I still have eight or nine to write and that figure doesn’t include anyone in the office except Algie!
Mrs Gardiner seems to have had a run of bad luck all right. What I cannot understand is that, as she and her mother hit it off so badly, why she ever came to live in Morningside. So you are having a spot of trouble over the allotment? I’m surprised that Maron [??] didn’t give you the pick of his allotment, especially as you gave him the plants, but do you think it may be because he hasn’t seen you lately? Or do you think Mrs Bradley has been hinting.
Thanks for the news about the letter. I won’t risk posting any more there. Charlie got away on Friday afternoon and arrived in the middle of lessons this morning having been held up on the train, so he had a good alibi. Another lad tried to fiddle his way to Manchester, made a mess of it, had no liberty ticket, had his name and number taken and so we are all waiting to hear what is going to happen. There is still a chance of him getting away with it for his father, dreadfully worried, bought him a return ticket and he has gone to the station here to try to square it. If he was only taking a risk for himself it wouldn’t be so bad, but there is always the danger that he will shop everyone and the class leader might very easily drop in the soup over it, even yet. These clever lads annoy me intensely with their utter selfishness and lack of consideration for other people.
No, I didn’t hear the announcement about wives’ allowances. If you can do something that would bring in a quid or so a week it might be very useful to you. What are the chances of you writing odd things for the ‘Echo’? You should, you know. I hate you not to keep your hand in. And talking about allowances, I hope you get the doctor’s bill paid.
Miss Rollo is a very tall woman with a long horse face and she is a big shout in the Girl Guide movement and a County Magistrate. She is a sister of Col. Rollo of Grayson Rollo Clover Docks. She gets a name for being very human. I’m sorry to hear about Mrs Johnson’s continued worry. That husband of hers should be kicked to death for leaving her to worry about all this.
Now I will have to go. The start of the eighth week, sweet. Only another five with a bit of luck. We have not heard anything official but the instructor who is on this week seems to doubt whether we will get an extension. In any case it can only be a few weeks now. Take care of yourself, love, and, please, do have vapours punctually this month!
Bye, precious, I love you.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
Monday
Glasgow
Dearest,
I’m actually starting this letter on Monday night as I’m on duty watch, but I won’t spend too long on it if you don’t mind because I have done a fair amount of writing already tonight, to Dot and Frank Patterson, and I have to be up at one o’clock to do my fire-watching.
I had a letter from Frank today and we are hoping that we may see each other on Saturday. It will be worth my while to go over because I’ll probably touch for some tobacco. Frank tells me that Don Thompson, whom you will possibly remember as one of the fellows in the Gilcomston crowd, has touched for a tels job at Liverpool! What’s more, his home is at Wallasey. Lucky beggar. I wonder if he will look you up? Another news item from Gilcomston is that Flo, mother of the fatherless child, has thrown the fireman over and married a sailor. She’s a fast worker and if I know Flo this lad will have a fair amount of money.
This week looks like being booked up. On Tuesday (that’s tonight) we are going to another free dance and on Thursday I’m going to see Alex Brown. On Friday I’m on duty and on Saturday I’m going to Ayr. Which only leaves Wednesday open. With a programme like that the week is as good as over, so I have only four weeks to go! I have looked up the calendar, by the way, and if this is only a 12-week course we should be away about Oct 24.
I had an hour on the perforating machine on Monday and it went fairly well, despite the fact that the machine to which I have been allocated is about the worst in the room and half of the keys stick down when you hit them. With a few weeks on that there should be a real improvement. You can certainly get a better rhythm on them than on the typewriter.
Love, my eyes are closing. Night night, pet. I love you still.
Tuesday
By now Michael should have had my letter and I’m looking forward to hearing what his reaction was. I’m hoping it will have some effect on him. How did he last the week out on his punishment of being kept in for the week? And how is his foot now? I hope it is showing some improvement. If there is any hope of getting your doctor’s bills over £2 paid, tip Rees off to save them until they reach decent proportions!
I have just had your letter. Many thanks, love. I’ll miss your daily letter if we do go any distance more than anything else. It’s good to hear that you have had another break at Limedale, but I’m not surprised to hear of the nark between Harold and May. There is nothing unusual in him not speaking to people in the house though, is there, for he is fairly taciturn at the best of times. Mind you, I’m no champion of May. As I told you before, the old hen owes me letters and doesn’t write them. To hell with mothers-in-law like that. And how long is it since she bought me a pint? Years and years! Now, go on, tell your mother that if you dare and I’ll shag you to death when I come home for your pains. That’s a promise, love, whether you tell her or not! Oh boy! Will I shag you! And talking of that, I’m surprised to hear that Maisie and Dick are so keen on having a youngster.
The habit of swallowing almost any odd item from a pint to a button or a ha’penny seems to run in the Johnson family, doesn’t it? Hope he parts with it without any trouble. And the word trouble reminds me. Careful how you go on your raiding expeditions! I’d hate to have to bail you out – although it would make a good excuse for a weekend leave.
I am sure you are wrong about the children never having seen a rainbow because – and I’m not usually very good on the memory stunt – I distinctly remember showing them one from the top of the bus when we were passing the gun-site one day. They have also seen them in the garden.
Well, sweet, I’m off to school again. By the time you get this we will be half way through the eighth week! Nice work, for it means we are nearer to seeing each other again. Oh darling, I do love you so much that I can hardly wait. You will get no rest when I come home for I’ll haunt you wherever you go in the house and my hands will never leave you. They will be all over your breasts and thighs and bottom all day so that you won’t even get a chance to wash the dishes.
Darling, midday comas are hopeless. Bye, my sweet. I love you terribly so look after yourself for me.
All my love, sweetheart.
Always your own,
Arthur X
Wednesday
Glasgow
Dearest,
We had a whale of a time at the dance last night, as is so often the case when one is in two minds whether to go to a place or not. The tickets were marked “social and dance” and that first word rather put me off. Actually, the social side of it consisted of big eats at the opening of the night. Before we went in we went looking for a pub and consequently were later arriving. When we got there each fellow was given a ticket bearing the name of a film star whom he was supposed to represent and also the name of another star with whom he had to pair off. My ticket, for instance, read “Charles Butterworth looks for Una Merkel”. I found Una, a girl of about 20, making a good job of filling her face so dragged her off to another table which was groaning with eats. As her mother was “waiting on” we had lashings of stuff – far more than I could eat. Una, by the way, was a typical quiet suburban girl who was just learning to dance and she was desperately keen to do the honours in correct style. You could see her looking round for something more you might like. I always wish at these things that you could be there in a detached sort of way to see how all the lads behave. If you were there in person, of course, not all the suburban girls in creation could keep us apart.
Anyway, at tea we were given some cigarettes and as soon as eats were finished we cleared the tables and dishes away for dancing. Una, whose real name I don’t know, was quite a nice dancer so we had a good time but didn’t win any of the spot or novelty prizes, to her great annoyance. The high spot of the evening was when we found that we could get a bottle of beer in exchange for our name tickets. What a search there was for teetotallers! But we were unlucky.
This do was given by the girls from a shadow factory. There are 80 of them in the place and only about 8 didn’t turn up. They invited 80 servicemen – Yanks (who are not so hot as dancers), Canadians, Air Force, Army and, of course, the Navy. These girls foot the whole bill but were given the free use of the hall. Still, it must cost them something. Now, that’s the whole story, except that we had to run like hell to catch a tram or we would have had an hour’s walk home!
I have told you all this in detail because I thought you would be interested to know the trouble some of these people go to, to entertain the lads, and there is no doubt it is appreciated. We have come across many different ideas for entertaining troops. For instance, the other day I met a fellow at the football match. He and his four brothers, all married, are all in good work. Every Friday they have a night off the chain, as they call it. They go into Glasgow and have a meal, a frame of snooker, and then into a pub where they make a practice of picking up a serviceman who is on his own. They seem to be a tactful crowd, but they buy him a couple of drinks, take him to the Empire and then have a bit to eat. “It costs each of us 1/- or 1/6 at the most and it gives some fellow, perhaps miles from home, a pleasant night – at least we hope it’s a pleasant night,” was the way it was explained to me. Isn’t it a good stunt?
Well, love, it’s dinner time, or it was, and I’ll have to go to school in a few minutes. How are the children? How is Michael behaving? And what are Wendy’s latest exploits? How is she going on at school? One of these days I can see you in the role of proud parent at a school concert while Wendy performs to the excruciating agony of hundreds of other people. After all the school concerts you have been to, you can’t even pretend that children’s efforts are anything other than agony to the great majority of people. Still, we will wait and see. I was surprised the way she piped up when I asked her to sing for me in the bathroom. I quite expected her to go all shy, even with me, but she doesn’t seem to suffer from stage shyness at all, does she?
I haven’t had your letter yet but I’m pretty sure it is lying in the mail office right now. What happens is this: there is a morning delivery, a dinner-time delivery and another at tea time. There are two set times when we can collect our mail – 12 to 12.15 and 6 to 6.15 . Very often the dinner-time delivery comes five minutes after we have got our mail, which means that we have to wait for those letters until night if there is an awkward P.O. on duty as there is today. But it is annoying, isn’t it? Such pig-headed displays of authority get my goat, although to be fair to the P.O.s here, this is the only one who is so stupid. He’s got no mentality at all.
Now, angel girl, I really must leave you. I do love you, sweet, and am already impatient to hear some official news as to how long this course is to go. Just to think I may be on my way home, or even at home, five weeks after you get this letter. I’m only afraid it may clash with vapours. What a tragedy that would be! Darling, I’d go mad if that happened because, say what you like, it would spoil things. Still, it is too early to worry about such variable factors as vapours and leave. I’m really off to school now. All my love, sweetheart, and do look after yourself. Have you been taking three of those pills EVERY day? If not, you know what I’ll do! Bye, precious. I love you and love you. Lie down, John! Yes, it’s like that today, for you see, I love you, pet.
Always your own,
Arthur X
From Arthur to Stella: ‘I nearly got pneumonia walking through the pouring rain to post that letter’
Thursday
Glasgow
Dearest,
I’m jumping wild about Monday’s letter not arriving because I nearly got pneumonia walking through the pouring rain for a quarter of an hour to post that letter at the G.P.O. and it was by far the worst night we have had yet. It’s disappointing that it should have been held up this weekend after me going to so much trouble. Funnily enough, a letter from Frank posted at Ayr on Thursday night didn’t reach here until Monday night. They blame the war for all sorts of things.
You certainly seem to be getting a good stock of things in for the winter and it is a good idea because you save in two ways – in money during the winter and in points at the same time. I’m interested to hear how the apple rings go on. So far as I can remember, pears are halved or quartered but to dry them I should think you would want racks with a meshing made from cotton or some similar fine non-rusting material. You might be able to rig something in Michael’s room from some laths with cotton stretched tightly between them.
I was interested to hear of your good impressions of Florence Rollo who has always struck me as being a good type, but I don’t like your hint of compulsion for mothers of two young school children. There will be a good deal of trouble if they try to enforce that while there are still women who have no children and don’t even do their own housework! Still, against the possibility I should like to see your doing a few things off your own bat as you used to do. Does the ‘Echo’ still make use of short articles and “Echoes and Gossip”?
So far there has been no sign of Dave. How is he coming? By train or by car? How will he manage for petrol and what are his chances of being picked up? I should have thought he would have to be at home for the invasion exercises, both from a work point of view and also because of the Home Guards. Now I’m off to school – morning session as I’m writing this after breakfast. What a man. Ta-ta for now.
Dinner time
Many thanks for your letter, love, but there’s no need to worry about Michael’s reaction to my letter. Your description was so good that I chuckled over it for a long time. Actually, it is probably a good sign for I think it really means that he is unaware of the gravity of the offence. In his moral code he may place lying in a similar category to going out when you are told to stay in. I don’t think a child who was conscious of wrongdoing could really dismiss the affair as lightly as he evidently does. When his moral sense is anchored he’ll probably be a lot better. In the meantime, I’m glad you have had a better week with him.
I don’t think there are many other points to answer in your letter except about the plot. I think there may be time to decide what is going where when I come home, except that you will want to get your spring cabbage in early unless they are already in winter quarters. If they are not already settled, put them down in the roots plot as soon as you get it cleaned up. Providing you don’t get a lot of really heavy rain you could leave the main crop until I come home and I’ll lift them for you and enjoy doing it. Until then just use them as you want them but try to make sure you have all the small ones up.
Now I must dash off to school. All my love, sweetheart. As you say, we can’t worry about October vapours yet. It’s far too early because you haven’t had September’s yet! Take care of yourself, angel. It won’t be long now. We have our second Admiralty exam today. I’ll let you know how I get on. All my love, angel. I adore you.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
Friday
Glasgow
Dearest,
Another week finished and it looks as if this is going to be a 12-week course, for I was asking one of the instructors what the chances of an extension were and he said there was very little chance indeed. Apparently the last class got their extension because either there was a hold up at Chatham and no accommodation for them (it was just about the time they were changing over to Borstal) or else they didn’t want possible smallpox contacts in barracks. It may have been a combination of both reasons. So it looks as if we will be away about the end of next month! Seriously, though, if we are going to be held up in barracks, I’d sooner be here where we could get more experience and less discipline, for when we go back as trained operators we will have a lot more discipline to face in barracks and a lot more to do in the way of duties. And while we are on this subject of school, I got to the dazzling speed of 23 words a minute for 5 minutes with only four mistakes, which wasn’t too bad although there are a few lads doing higher speeds. At the same time some are worse and I should say I’m about average. We have more tests today and tomorrow on code and cypher and then on tape reading, but I’m not very worried about the latter. Well, love, that’s about all on the subject of school.
Last night I saw Alex Brown again and had a trot round the town – the pubs were shut, it being Thursday – and then went back to the ‘Daily Express’ for some chips. It passed quite a pleasant evening and I had a look over the building. The subs, reporters, artists, library and telephone are all on one big floor and after our rabbit warren of an office there seemed lashings of room for everyone. There were dozens and dozens of phones in that room – one on every desk and two on some – and altogether it looked a good place to work in, but the place is almost empty now. Half a dozen subs at the most and about three reporters. Several of the subs, incidentally, are Irishmen and seem to be only tolerated by some of the older fellows who are left.
Well, there is not a great deal of news. Time is fairly flying past and all the lads have got to that “end of term” feeling which we have experienced before and gradually the spirits of everyone are rising. You can feel the difference in the atmosphere in the mess. We have had a really amusing morning before we went to school. One of the lads went down for a shower just after 6.30. While he was under the shower, and just as he had covered himself in a thick lather, the hot water went off and there he was with nothing but icy water to swill the soap off. And believe me, it is icy today; as cold as a December day. The result was this lad came up brimming with energy and promptly went round the mess emptying all the regular “lie-abeds” out. He pulled two out and there was just a chance of a scrap with one lad – a lazy good-for-nothing type who is never really conscious before dinner time – but in the end he crept quietly back to bed. Tom, the energetic one, was told off for not picking on someone who would stand up to him so he immediately set on the bloke who said it and got him out of bed by rocking one of those big double bunks until he eventually slid out under the head of the top tier!
We have just heard from a fellow who left us about a week ago to return to Chatham for a draft. He is on leave now. He says that from Chatham he went, after the first day, to a place called Cookham about four miles away and then he got his leave, about 48 hours after arriving. Which means I should arrive home about Oct 27!
Thanks for your letter, love, and the stamps from Mother. A word of warning about the mangle – have you told Litherland yourself that you will not go above £2-10? Don’t leave it to anyone else to bid for you. Try to get there yourself or you might find it will go up to £3. We’ve had these experiences before, you know. Leave the curtains question alone altogether and don’t mention it any further to Dot. If Mother will go buying these things on spec she’ll have to learn her lesson. If you send those others to Dot and then take these off Mother you will only encourage her. Don’t have anything further to do with it.
I’m sorry you are worried about £sd and sorrier that I’m so helpless to assist you. I don’t like to think of you being so hard pushed. You did quite right about Will. Don’t have him or anyone else there. If you do, you may open the way for compulsory billeting at some future date. That’s a point you can put to Mother. I’m glad to hear the good news of Michael’s foot.
All this is in haste. I still adore you, sweetheart. Take care of yourself for another four or five weeks. Won’t be long now.
All my love, angel.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
Sunday
Glasgow
Dearest,
This is being written in the home of one of Charlie’s aunts who, after giving us tea, has gone out, leaving us in charge of the house! We have washed up and have set the table for supper. Charlie and Jack have had baths, and I’m hoping the water will last out for me. You’ve got to admit that when we start things we do them well.
I didn’t get a chance to write any of this letter yesterday because I went straight from school to Ayr. Yes, I did make it at long last and met Don Gibson and Frank Patterson, both of whom send their best wishes to you, and several other fellows from Aberdeen including one of the fellows who was staying with Mrs Smith – Allan, the very quiet fellow. He’s a nice boy. There were about six of us together and we had a meal at one of the few service canteens then had a wander round the place until the pubs opened at 5 o’clock and stayed there until they closed at 8! However, this suited me down to the ground as I had to catch a train at 8.30 or wait until midnight. The whole day – meal, fare and beer – cost about 10/-. Of that amount I should have spent about 3/- or 4/- had I stayed in Glasgow and as I got some stuff from the lads for which they wouldn’t take a penny, I consider I got good value for my money. Then when I got back I found your letter waiting for me – the end of a perfect day. I also had a letter and 100 Capstans from Fred Stephens! So I sold most of them at canteen prices, making 6/9 on that deal, which meant I finished up about level on the day. Wasn’t it decent of Fred?
I’m sorry I haven’t brought your letter with me so if there are any points in it which I should have answered, will you mind if I leave them until tomorrow because I’ll post this at the G.P.O. on the way home. Oh, sweetheart, there’s only another month now. We will probably have a good idea as to what is going to happen about this course by the end of the week because that will give them time to have received some acknowledgment from the Admiralty on the progress reports which were sent up to them this weekend. In the tape-reading tests, at which we are expected to reach 20 w.p.m., I got to 19 on plain language and 20 on code and cypher, so that side of the business looks OK. I think I told you I got 23 w.p.m. on the perforator. I think that I will be able to push that up to 30 by the end of the course. At least, that is what I’m hoping to do and I think I will be able to do it for it is largely a matter of confidence and that is coming slowly. I was telling the lads at Ayr what a cushy job it is and Don Gibson is greatly intrigued. He is going to try to transfer to it but I doubt if they will let him now that he has gone so far and especially as he is apparently doing well at it.
Well, sweetheart, there’s not a great deal of news. We have had a quiet day today. Church, a stroll for a cup of coffee at one of the canteens, back for dinner and then out for a short walk through the park on our way here. We are going to see ‘Maid Of The Mountains’ tomorrow night from the 1/6 gods of the Royal Theatre, but we are very annoyed because the tels in our place have all got tomorrow off as it is a Glasgow holiday, while we have to go to school because the Post Office doesn’t recognise local holidays! Isn’t it daft that, although they are off school from Saturday noon until Thursday morning, they have not got a weekend leave and travelling warrant? Makes me sick because the lads at Ayr get the long weekend and, what is more, are allowed to fly home if there are service planes going near their homes! What a chance.
Well, angel girl, I’m just going to help to get our own supper ready! Be a good girl for the next few weeks and do your best to contrive vapours so that they don’t interfere with leave, or there will be murder in the house, after which I’ll go and sleep with Mrs Reid. She should be fairly safe! Precious, I still love you, in case you should doubt it.
All my love, darling, and take care of yourself for me. Night night, pet, until tomorrow.
Always your own,
Arthur X
Monday
Glasgow
Dearest,
This will, I’m afraid, be another rushed letter as I have only about 20 minutes before I have to leave for school. As all the tels had a holiday today and they outnumber us by about 8 to 1, there has been Sunday routine today which means we got up three-quarters of an hour late and had breakfast late. All the meal hours are different and we seem to be all upside down. Anyway, we are late. Oh, I must leave you for a minute to take my laundry.
That’s better. I’m puffed with running up and down 60 steps.
Now, while I remember, humble apologies for the second successive Monday without a letter, but it was only after I had written that one at Charlie’s aunt’s that I learned there was no hope of it reaching you on Monday. Apparently the 6.30 Sunday collection is the last I can get for that but I’ll not do it again, love, so don’t shout.
Many thanks for your letter, which I got this morning, and for the long financial statement. I worry about this money problem for you, love, and I do wish I could do something about it. Perhaps when I get out of this trainee stage I might be able to send you an extra bob or two, but that’s no help now, is it?
Audrey seems to have succeeded in getting under your skin, as usual. One of the objects of taking her sister and her friend to Aberdeen may be to see if she can get one or both of them off with some of Stanley’s pals in Aberdeen. I wonder where he is staying? Wouldn’t it be funny if he was at Gilcomston or Mrs Smith’s? I can’t understand Norman because he was such a confirmed bachelor and I thought he was too fond of his mother to allow her to be bandied about like that. I feel sorry for her but Audrey loves stage-managing people’s affairs. She will age very rapidly and, if she is drinking heavily, will crack up quickly. God help Stanley then.
How are the children’s colds? I’m sorry they have started their winter ills so early in the autumn, for it will make the real winter seem so long. I do hope you can get through the winter without too much trouble. Yes, love, I’ll look over the mangle when I come home. I’ll get some rough sandpaper and go over the rollers for you. If there are many splinters they will ruin your finer things for you.
Now I’m afraid I must leave you, sweetheart. Do take care of yourself until I come home. I’m getting restless again for a leave of some sort and will be glad when this course is over.
Goodbye until tomorrow, love. I still love you. All my love, angel.
Always your own,
Arthur X
Tuesday
Glasgow
My darling,
Now we are back to normal again and I have a sneaking idea that the tels yesterday would sooner have been at school, for they discovered that their day off meant they had to do ordinary Sunday duties which, for some of them, meant doing 3 hours sentry. Not much of a holiday! Seeing that they were giving a holiday I don’t see why they couldn’t have given the lads a proper weekend leave from Friday night to Monday night. They weren’t at school on Saturday anyway, so they might as well have given them the travel vouchers and made a proper job of it. As it rained almost all of yesterday it made no real break, for most of the lads were fastened indoors until evening.
As a change we went to see ‘Maid Of The Mountains’, the pleasure of much of the first act being ruined by people coming in late. That meant that it was almost the end of the first act before there was anything like silence in the theatre. Sonnie Hale was in the right part with a very vivacious girl named Marjorie Sandford and another good part was taken by Davy Burnaby. Altogether a good show if you like that kind of thing. While I was not thrilled to bits, it passed a very pleasant evening.
Many thanks for your letter, love. By the same post I got a p.c. from Eric who is spending a few days in the Isle of Man on business. Now to answer your letter. I am glad about Thursday’s whist drive and, as you say, it will make a very pleasant change for you. What a good way of raising a present.
So the “invasion” was a flop? I’m not surprised because from what I can see the Home Guard is used as a dodge hole by a big number of people while the sincere ones don’t seem to be very well trained. In modern warfare drilling in sheds is no good. They need really hard training out in the open in all kinds of weather and I doubt very much if they get it. An occasional hour or so on a Sunday morning, always finishing in time to get into the pubs, seems to be the general routine. As you know, I’ve always argued that we should be rigidly trained in the use of arms. In this war there is no such thing as non-combatant branches of the forces. I have been in uniform about nine months and never fired a rifle! The mere fact that I prefer things as they are is neither here nor there.
I’m sorry to hear Michael’s foot has let him down again. If it doesn’t improve soon, why not take him to the clinic or the hospital if it looks like being a big job. It will save you a good deal of money, possibly. Michael’s feet have never been good and if there is any corrective treatment this is the time to get it done, before he starts school. Let me know what you think, love, and get something done as soon as you can, will you? If there is any question of hospital treatment, I’ll make an inquiry at the office because I may be in benefit in our hospital scheme still! But I think that under that stunt we have to pay the first £5 ourselves. It may never get to that stage, of course, but I’m just anticipating possible developments. The children would be disappointed about the invasion but it is as well that you kept them close to the house for you can never tell what is going to happen on these stunts. In any case they are just a damn nuisance to people who are anxious to see they are not hurt.
Yes, I did know the Barrie story. He is not the only good man to be turned down by the ‘D.P.’ and the ‘Echo’. I think it was Tom Webster who applied for a job at our place just after the last war but he wanted 10/- a week more than our people would give!
Now, about this business of sweating on the top line that this course will only last 12 weeks! I know how you feel but we learned our lesson at Aberdeen, didn’t we? I thought we decided then never to bank on anything. Even at the last minute we might get an extension here and I am fighting strongly against this rising elation at the approach of the end of the course. I’m trying to tell myself that we have another three MONTHS to go yet as I feel that is by far the best way. Everyone here is hoping that there will be no extension now for they are beginning to crack the whip a bit and the instructors are beginning to take themselves seriously!
Anyway, let’s hope there’s no change now. I’m getting a bit browned off.
Sweetheart, I must love you. Take care of yourself and store your love up for me until I come home again when I’ll do all the things I have promised – and some more! Keep the little red box cool. We don’t want them spoiled by getting warm until I decide the time has come to warm them up! And then I’ll see they are properly warmed up. Angel, I do adore you and John does, too, as he is demonstrating just now! It’s such a lovely feeling when John stirs at the thought of you. Darling, I must go. This is no time for comas. Bye for now, angel. All my love to you.
Ever your own,
Arthur X
Wednesday
Glasgow
My darling,
The 30th of the month! This is the last day of September. Tomorrow is October the oneth – in other words the beginning of the month we finish this course, we hope! Talk about 11 more months and 10 more days! I feel in a real whoopee mood this morning, probably because we have had some really nice days this week and it promises well again today. Just now it is perfect autumn weather and I feel guilty that we have not made better use of it for walking round the hills around here, but none of the others feels energetic at the weekend and there is no fun in walking on your own. In fairness I have to admit that it would be quite an effort on my part to get out, but it would be worth it in the end. The trees began to lose their leaves a couple of weeks ago while they were still green, but now they are beginning to turn colour and they do look lovely in the parks. It would be pleasant to get some really good walks in with someone who really knows the district.
I’m doing my best to remember a point I wanted to mention to you. Now Andy – the alleged comic in the next bunk – knows this and is talking to me deliberately and pointedly in an effort to put me off and, damn him, he has succeeded! It’s all right, love, I have told him all the things you are thinking of and a lot more. Maybe I will think of it later on.
I wrote Mother last night and perhaps I had better warn you that I said I would be home in “five or six weeks at best” so if she starts working out dates and then announces to you that I will be home on a particular date you will know what the basis for it is. And talking of mothers – I still haven’t heard from May. Mothers! Bah! I’ve met ‘em! I can see her writing to me three weeks after the armistice is signed – if she is sober by then because I’m sure I won’t be.
I’m jealous of some of the lads out of the tels classes here for they are going back to their bases today, which means that they will be home on leave by the weekend. Lucky devils. Wouldn’t it be nice to be home at the weekend – vapours or no vapours! Just to be able to hold you and tell some of the things that I have in my mind now. Oh, angel, I had such a nice dream last night and it went the full distance! Sweetheart, did you say things to me. You were all over the bed with your bottom but you couldn’t escape John! As if you tried! And as if you could even if you did try. If you think you have any chance of success, just try in a short time when I’ll have time to devote to the experiment. When you know the result, can you really call it an experiment? Anyway, take it from me, you had a lovely time last night and said and did the most delightful things before and during the “operation” and I only hope you will remember to repeat the performance in the flesh.
I’ve just had your letter. Thank you, love. By now of course you will have had my second letter explaining what happened. So the family cold has reached you? Bad luck, love, but get it in hand as soon as you can and I hope it postpones vapours for a full week or 10 days! It might make more difference to us than you realise now.
And while on the subject of health, it will be interesting to see what the vet says about Wendy. I hope he gives her a real overhauling, because he might be able to do something about that cough of hers. I don’t think it is at all serious, but it is bound to be worrying and annoying to you when it means continually broken sleep in the winter months. There’s no need to go into details about Michael’s foot. I think I dealt fully with that in my last letter.
It’s hard lines about Mason’s plot but I shouldn’t worry a great deal. My own attitude to it would be one of faint amusement, I think, at the sight of grown people scrambling for things like kids in the orchard of an empty house. I’m glad you have such a good stock of spring cabbage. You’re quite right. There always seems to be a high mortality rate among them during the winter but they did better in the garden than in the plot. I think the whole plot could do with a couple of tons of manure on it. Are you still building up your stock? This is the time to do it if you can. Does Michael still bring his widow’s mite in for you? Encourage him at it, for it gives him a real interest in the household affairs. It’s about the only thing he can do yet.
As you say, the Masons never seemed to “belong” did they? And I can see him talking about the cold northerners with their crude manners. Still, he was a decent old cock when you got to know him.
Well, love, this is about all for today. Another weekly test begins tomorrow. I’ll tell you how I get on. Bye until tomorrow. Take care of yourself and try to kill that cold.
All my love, angel. I still adore you.
Ever your own,
Arthur X