Shorncliff, August 30th, 1916.
My DEARESTS:
I have just returned from sending
you a cable to let you know that I’m off to
France. The word came out in orders yesterday,
and I shall leave before the end of the week with
a draft of officers I have been in England
just a day over four weeks. My only regret is
that I shall miss the boys who should be travelling
up to London about the same time as I am setting out
for the Front. After I have been there for three
months I am supposed to get a leave this
should be due to me about the beginning of December,
and you can judge how I shall count on it. Think
of the meeting with R. and E., and the immensity of
the joy.
Selfishly I wish that you were here
at this moment actually I’m glad
that you are away. Everybody goes out quite unemotionally
and with very few good-byes we made far
more fuss in the old days about a week-end visit.
Now that at last it has come this
privileged moment for which I have worked and waited my
heart is very quiet. It’s the test of a
character which I have often doubted. I shall
be glad not to have to doubt it again. Whatever
happens, I know you will be glad to remember that at
a great crisis I tried to play the man, however small
my qualifications. We have always lived so near
to one another’s affections that this going
out alone is more lonely to me than to most men.
I have always had some one near at hand with love-blinded
eyes to see my faults as springing from higher motives.
Now I reach out my hands across six thousand miles
and only touch yours with my imagination to say good-bye.
What queer sights these eyes, which have been almost
your eyes, will witness! If my hands do anything
respectable, remember that it is your hands that are
doing it. It is your influence as a family that
has made me ready for the part I have to play, and
where I go, you follow me.
Poor little circle of three loving
persons, please be tremendously brave. Don’t
let anything turn you into cowards we’ve
all got to be worthy of each other’s sacrifice;
the greater the sacrifice may prove to be for the
one the greater the nobility demanded of the remainder.
How idle the words sound, and yet they will take deep
meanings when time has given them graver sanctions.
I think gallant is the word I’ve been trying
to find we must be gallant English women
and gentlemen.
It’s been raining all day and
I got very wet this morning. Don’t you
wish I had caught some quite harmless sickness?
When I didn’t want to go back to school, I used
to wet my socks purposely in order to catch cold,
but the cold always avoided me when I wanted it badly.
How far away the childish past seems almost
as though it never happened. And was I really
the budding novelist in New York? Life has become
so stern and scarlet and so brave.
From my window I look out on the English Channel,
a cold, grey-green sea, with rain driving across it
and a fleet of small craft taking shelter. Over
there beyond the curtain of mist lies France and
everything that awaits me.
News has just come that I have to
start. Will continue from France.
Yours ever lovingly,
Con.