Read The Love-Charm of Bombs Online
Authors: Lara Feigel
âthey could hear a bomb':
GG, diary, 23 June 1944 (GG HRC).
âWe had only':
GG,
EoA
,
book 2, ch. 5.
âmust surely have been':
GG, diary, 23 June 1944 (GG HRC).
âSix down during':
GG, diary, 27 June 1944 (GG HRC).
âAn odd thing':
ibid.
âHugh is all right':
GG, diary, 30 June 1944 (GG HRC).
âThis was one of the worst':
see Juliet Gardiner,
Wartime: Britain 1939â1945
(London: Headline, 2005),
p. 643.
âthe moment always':
GG, diary, 22 June 1944 (GG HRC).
âA bad night':
GG, diary, 3 July 1944 (GG HRC).
âa wonderful figure':
Churchill, speech , 6 and 25 July 1944 (
War Speeches
).
âwe are getting used':
CR, diary, 13 July 1944 (
The Siren Years
).
âusually to be found':
see Sherry,
The Life of Graham Greene
,
vol. 2, p. 197.
âNobody who has not':
EB, autobiographical note, 1948 (EB HRC).
âtied up, sealed up':
EB, âCalico Windows',
People, Places, Things: Essays by Elizabeth Bowen
, ed. Allan Hepburn (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2008).
âWhen we just':
EB, âOh, Madam',
Collected Stories
(London: Vintage, 1999).
âI read his letter':
EB,
B's C
,
p. 440.
âHer nerves have':
CR, diary, 20 July 1944 (
LCW
).
âa new novel':
see CR, diary, 19 September 1942 (
LCW
).
âI like to think':
CR, diary, 18 February 1944 (
LCW
).
âfairness, not quite':
EB,
HoD
,
ch. 5.
âHow proud Charles':
Rosamond Lehmann to EB, 14 February 1949 (EB HRC).
âa flash of promise':
EB,
HoD
,
ch. 5.
âhigh up in a monstrous':
CR, diary, 12 August 1944 (
LCW
).
âcalico stretched and tacked':
EB, âThe Happy Autumn Fields' (
Collected Stories
).
âAll my life':
EB to Virginia Woolf, 5 January 1941, in
The Mulberry Tree: Writings of Elizabeth Bowen
, ed. Hermione Lee (London: Vintage, 1999).
âChurchill himself':
see Churchill, speech, 6 and 25 July 1944 (
War Speeches
).
âThe anxiety it causes':
Harold Nicolson to Ben and Nigel Nicolson, 13 August 1944 (
Diaries and Letters
).
âStephen Spender assured':
see Stephen Spender to Christopher Isherwood, 17 August 1944 (Stephen Spender archive, Bod).
âTonight the doodlers':
PdeM to HS, undated (HS PdeM).
âabsolutely brilliant':
PdeM to HS, 22 August 1944 (HS PdeM).
âthe news of Paris had really':
see PdeM to HS, 23 August 1944 (HS PdeM).
âIsn't the war':
PdeM to HS, 24 August 1944 (HS PdeM).
âI'll see you in the stove':
âThe Horrors of Lublin',
The Times
, 12 August 1944.
âWhat an execrable':
PdeM to HS, undated (HS PdeM).
âHarold Nicolson heard':
see Harold Nicolson, diary, 4 September 1944 (
Diaries and Letters
).
âthe ear-splitting':
HS,
DaB
, p. 137.
âconceived among bombs': ibid.
âthe heroic stand':
Churchill, speech, 5 October 1944 (
War Speeches
).
âBoring and dangerous':
HS, diary, 1 December 1944 (HS NLV).
âYou should comfort':
PdeM to HS, 8 December 1944 (PdeM Mon).
âthe backdrop for':
CR, 3 January 1945 (
The Siren Years
).
âThe baby doesn't':
HS, diary, 15 December 1944 (HS NLV).
âWe were all': HS,
DaB
,
p. 137.
âso glad to be':
EB to Susan Tweedsmuir, in Victoria Glendinning,
Elizabeth Bowen
(London: Phoenix paperbacks, 1993), p. 147.
âI wouldn't want to give':
CR, diary, 19 December 1944 (
LCW
).
âI suppose I could have':
CR, diary, 3 February 1945 (
The Siren Years
).
âWe are so close':
EB to CR, 17 January 1945 (
LCW
).
âE says she would':
CR, 3 December 1944 (
LCW
).
âWe rush, we storm':
EB, âThe Art of Reserve' (
People, Places, Things
).
âShe said she thought':
CR, diary, 12 November 1942 (
LCW
).
âE has become':
CR, diary, 6 February 1943 (
LCW
).
âit was impossible for him':
see CR, diary, 27 February 1944 (
LCW
).
âOutside us neither':
EB,
HoD
,
ch. 10.
Â
14:
âA collective intoxication of happiness'
âLet us be of good':
Winston Churchill, speech, 18 January 1945,
War Speeches, 1939â45
, compiled by Charles Eade (London: Cassell & Co, 1951â2).
âI feel the war':
RM to David Ley, 14 February 1945 (RM TC).
âPeople were anxious':
see William Sansom,
The Blitz: Westminster at War
(London: Faber, 2010), p. 199.
âa huge crash':
GG, diary, 20 March 1945 (GG HRC).
âIt really looks':
GG to Marion Greene, in Norman Sherry,
The Life of Graham Greene
(London: Pimlico, 2004â5),
vol. 2, p. 205.
âHis captivating smile':
Churchill, speech, 17 April 1945 (
War Speeches
).
âEarly this morning':
HS, diary, 13 April 1945 (HS NLV).
âDarling, darling, I'm':
HY to Mary Keene, 15 February 1945 (private collection).
âI think about you':
Mary Keene to Matthew Smith, undated (private collection).
âI don't take':
Mary Keene to HY, undated (private collection).
âI fear they are': HY to Mary Keene, 26 February 1945 (private collection).
âDearest dearest':
Mary Keene to HY, undated (private collection).
âMy dearest darling':
Dig Yorke to Mary Keene, undated (private collection).
âMy darling darling':
HY to Mary Keene, 9 March 1945 (private collection).
âprepare a “scheme”':
HY to Mary Keene, 10 March 1945 (private collection).
âslip in a bit':
Mary Keene to HY, undated (private collection).
âThere was a hole':
Mary Keene to Alice Keene, undated (private collection).
âLoving
had been':
see HY to Mary Keene, 21 March 1945 (private collection).
âYour letters':
HY to Rosamond Lehmann, 14 March 1945 (RL KC).
âArmies monotonously':
Evelyn Waugh, diary, 13 April 1945,
The Diaries of Evelyn Waugh
, ed. Michael Davie (London: Phoenix, 2009).
âThe war hurries':
HS, diary, 28 April 1945 (HS NLV).
âHitler reported dead!':
HS, diary, 1 May 1945 (HS NLV).
âNow she told Charles':
see EB to CR, March 1945, in Victoria Glendinning,
Elizabeth Bowen
(London: Phoenix paperbacks, 1993),
p. 155.
âThere was a breathless':
EB to CR, March 1945, in ibid.,
p. 156.
âeveryone wondering':
EB to CR, 7â8 May 1945 (
LCW
and in ibid.,
p. 157).
âGod bless you':
Churchill, speech, 8 May 1945 (
War Speeches
).
âOn a monster':
EB to CR, 7â8 May 1945 (
LCW
and in Glendinning,
Elizabeth Bowen
, p. 157).
âHaving watched the blitz':
GG to Marion Greene, undated, in Sherry,
The Life of Graham Greene
,
vol. 2, p. 207.
âLOVE AND HAPPY':
GG to VG, in ibid.,
vol. 2, p. 206.
âhuge leaping pyres':
VG to GG, May 1945 (VG Bod).
âThere was precious little':
GG to Marion Greene, undated, in Sherry,
The Life of Graham Greene
,
vol. 2, p. 207.
âIt was very quiet':
GG,
EoA
,
book 3, ch. 5.
âjust as completely':
GG to VG, 3 June 1948 (VG Bod).
âit is a mistake':
see GG,
HoM
,
book 3, part 1, ch. 1i.
âI felt a sort':
VG, interview in Sherry,
The Life of Graham Greene
,
vol. 2, p. 208.
âNever before or':
HS,
DaB
,
p. 138.
âeach one staggered':
EB to CR, 7â8 May 1945 (
LCW
and in Glendinning,
Elizabeth Bowen
, p. 157).
âI would not have':
EB, autobiographical note, 1948 (EB HRC).
âdeteriorating dead':
EB to Cyril Connolly, in Glendinning,
Elizabeth Bowen
,
p. 158.
âcompletely incarcerated':
EB to William Plomer, 24 September 1945 (
LCW
).
Â
15:
âThe days were listless and a flop'
âslow motion':
EB to CR, June 1945 (
LCW
).
âfirst entering the house': see ibid.
âreally, focuses internally':
EB to CR, 17 June 1945 (
LCW
).
âI look round and see': ibid.
âNo more danger':
HS,
DaB
,
p. 138.
âHe does it all':
HS, diary, 19 April 1941 (HS NLV).
âI would have treated':
HS,
DaB
,
p. 140.
âEverything now is':
HS, diary, 10 July 1945 (HS NLV).
âAt odd moments':
PdeM to HS, 22 June 1945 (PdeM Mon).
âThis is the crowning':
PdeM to HS, 8 July 1945 (HS PdeM).
âboiling in sweltering':
PdeM to HS, 15 July 1945 (HS PdeM).
âMy darling':
HS to PdeM, 23 July 1945 (HS PdeM).
âI picked my way':
Richard Dimbleby, in Juliet Gardiner,
Wartime: Britain 1939â1945
(London: Headline, 2005),
p. 674.
âThis is the crowning':
PdeM to HS, 17 July 1945 (HS PdeM).
âI'm quite innocent':
PdeM to HS, 21 July 1945 (PdeM Mon).
âthe problems and pressures':
Let Us Face the Future
, in David Kynaston,
Austerity Britain
,
p. 21.