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СКАЧАТЬ design (to be repeated somewhere in the book; but do as you please about that.)

      My brother once more joins me in all good wishes.

      Yours sincerely,

      C. S. Lewis

      

      You didn’t keep me a bit too long and I shd. have been v. glad if you’d stayed longer. I was hurried (I hope, not rudely so) only because I didn’t want to be left with a long vacancy between your departure and the next train).

      

       TO SHELDON VANAUKEN (BOD):

      Magdalen College

      Oxford 8/1/51

      Dear Mr. Van Auken

      When I spoke of danger to your academic career on a change of subject I was thinking chiefly of time. If you can get an extra year, it wd. be another matter. I was not at all meaning that ‘intellectual history’ involving Theology wd. in itself he academically a bad field of research.

      I shall at any time be glad to see, or hear from you.

      Yours

      C. S. Lewis

      

      C4/HT/PHN

      Magdalen College

      Oxford 11/1/51

      Dear Mr. Newby

      Yours sincerely,

      C. S. Lewis

      

      Magdalen College

      Oxford 14/1/51

      Dear Mr. (or Professor?) Kinter

      With many thanks & good wishes. Be sure and look me up if you’re ever rash enough to visit this conquered island.

      Yours sincerely

      C. S. Lewis

      

       TO EDWARD A. ALLEN (W): TS

      REF.25/51.

      Magdalen College,

      Oxford. 18th January 1951.

      My dear Mr. Allen,

      If when you first began to keep us afloat I had known that your kindness was going to continue over a number of years, I would have kept a record of your parcels; the number must now run into scores, and the weight into hundredweights! How do you do it? As I said once before, it is not so much your generosity as your hard work which impressed me; if the case was reversed, I hope I should try to behave to you and Mrs. Allen as you have done to me. But I should draw the line at coming home from my job and settling down to packing! (Anyway, I could’nt do it, being one of those whose fingers are all thumbs). Both the 11th and 12th December parcels have come in, and we are both very grateful for them.

      They have I’m afraid been here a few days, but it is the beginning of the term, and my brother has only just got up after an attack of ‘flu, which has put us all behindhand. This is one of the worst influenza years we have had for a long time, and is in fact a battle on two fronts; one ‘wave’ of the disease coming over from Norway, and the other working north across France from the Mediterranean. Different types too, which is not making the doctor’s work any easier. In the north it is so bad that work at the port of Liverpool is held up, and they are burying people by night, as in the plague days. This does nothing to dissipate the gloom with which we, and no doubt you too, regard the prospects for 1951.

      A small letter is a mighty poor return for two large parcels: but pupils are already knocking at the СКАЧАТЬ