I do like her: she is worth winning.--Can one say warmer of a future

mother-in-law who stands hostile?

All the same it was an ordeal. I believe I have wept since: for Benjy

scratched my door often yesterday evening, and looked most wistful when

I came out. Merely paltry self-love, dearest:--I am so little accustomed

to not being--liked.

I think she will be more gracious in her own house. I have her formal

word that I am to come. Soon, not too soon, I will come over; and you

shall meet me and take me to see her. There is something in her

opposition that I can't fathom: I wondered twice was lunacy her notion:

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she looked at me so hard.

My mother's seclusion and living apart from us was not on that

account. I often saw her: she was very dear and sweet to me, and had

quiet eyes the very reverse of a person mentally deranged. My father, I

know, went to visit her when she lay dying; and I remember we all wore

mourning. My uncle has told me they had a deep regard for each other:

but disagreed, and were independent enough to choose living apart.

I do not remember my father ever speaking of her to us as children: but

I am sure there was no state of health to be concealed.

Last night I was talking to Aunt N---- about her. "A very dear woman,"

she told me, "but your father was never so much alive to her worth as

the rest of us." Of him she said, "A dear, fine fellow: but not at all

easy to get on with." Him, of course, I have a continuous recollection

of, and "a fine fellow" we did think him. My mother comes to me more

rarely, at intervals.

Don't talk me down your mother's throat: but tell her as much as she cares

to know of this. I am very proud of my "stock" which she thinks "poor"!

Dear, how much I have written on things which can never concern us

finally, and so should not ruffle us while they last! Hold me in your

heart always, always; and the world may turn adamant to me for aught I

care! Be in my dreams to-night!




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