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OCR Page 1 of 4M. C. BERNAYS
Windy Hill Farm
Roxbury, Connecticut
1 November
Dear Katherine,
The trivia first:
The correct mode of address is "Dear Murray." Some times women
make it "Murray darling,' and "Honey" is not unheard of. When I
was young, with the vigor, vanity, and susceptibilities appropri-
ate to that time of life, the more affectionate modes of address
were a great peril to me . It would not have mattered, had I been
a strong character; in that case I would have left the wreckage
strewn around and gone my own cheery way; unhappily I was so con-
stituted that I suffered wreckage instead of creating it. I'm sure
you will love this fascinating lapse into autobiography. I could go
on at great length, but, suddenly overwhelmed by reticence and the
imminence of the post, must return to more immediate things. Your
first query is now checked off.
Rushing off to communion on this day of obligation, the Not-
so-Little woman looked back over her shoulder and said very firmly
"Louise, of course.' It was a characteristic response : firm,
direct, and to the point. A happy thing it is, that our modest
domestic stage is not crowded with two like me .
That cryptic message from Williamsburg meant only that I hoped
the mission would be accomplished in time for the lot of you to see
the New Year in back hore at home. I could put forward high reasons
TRUMAN
of State for so hoping; or interest in the desires and welfare of
53° "NATIONAL AND
my erstwhile confreres, their wives, children, and sweethearts ti do
APCHIVES
not insist that the first and third must be mutually exclusive); or
RECORDS
ADHIN."
I might interpret the message as a confession of feeling guilty be-
Es
cause I did not last the course. The trouble with me is that I talk
first and think afterward, differing therein from some of our more
notable commanders, who takk without thinking at all.
I have been at some difficulty about writing since I read the in-
dictment. It seems to me a poor piece of work. It lacks incisiveness and
force. The people who constructed it lacked understanding of the real
mission. They wrote for their own timorous legalisms instead of for his-
tory, and in so doing they missed the contemporary reader as well. I
cannot think when there has been such an opportunity for lawyers to trans-
Late technical principles into the moving verities of justice, or for
statesmen to create, out of our own suffering history, beacon lights to
guide us through our besetting problems. No, my friend, I am not sug-
gesting that we should have resorted to purple passages or the turgidities
of so-called eloquence. In point of fact, that is exactly what the in-
dictment now is : turgid. There were a hundred ways to do it right, once
we had grasped the point -- which I think was missed -- that our job was
to turn out a document whose legal sufficiency and moral impact sprang
from simple, sinewy structure, and the marshalling of facts so that they
spoke starkly for themselves. What Jackson achieved in his report to the
President could just as well have been achieved by his staff in the in-
dictment, had they understood what they were doing. I see now why all the
advance ballyhoo spoke insistently of the 25,000 word length. I kept
hoping that the bulk would be in attached exhibits, or, somehow, similarly
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