.MzE.MjAzNjA: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
My dear cousin Lizzie | My dear cousin Lizzie | ||
what a commotion was made when Jack | what a commotion was made when Jack Nathaniel's good letter, and your representative ? in among us, you ought to have seen it! I was ironing at the time, and though I gave myself great credit for not leaving my work to answer your note immediately, I must confess that some wrinkles dried into the clothes, as every now and then they were left spread out on the table, which state away to get a fresh look at your sweet face. | ||
Each of us girls tried to claim you as a | Each of us girls tried to claim you as a nearer relative than the rest, by saying I believe she looks like me "No, she don't, she looks like me" [me is underlined] be, but Lizze, I carried the palm, for when we showed the likeness to baby, he [he is underlined] said it was "thithy," as he calls me, [me is underlined] and you the proverb, Children and fools always |
Revision as of 04:10, 20 August 2017
Remsen, July ,1865
My dear cousin Lizzie
what a commotion was made when Jack Nathaniel's good letter, and your representative ? in among us, you ought to have seen it! I was ironing at the time, and though I gave myself great credit for not leaving my work to answer your note immediately, I must confess that some wrinkles dried into the clothes, as every now and then they were left spread out on the table, which state away to get a fresh look at your sweet face.
Each of us girls tried to claim you as a nearer relative than the rest, by saying I believe she looks like me "No, she don't, she looks like me" [me is underlined] be, but Lizze, I carried the palm, for when we showed the likeness to baby, he [he is underlined] said it was "thithy," as he calls me, [me is underlined] and you the proverb, Children and fools always