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to sell and it will come up again. We shall probably suffer as little as most any one.
I have not time to tell you what a chance has come over the city. I presume you have better descriptions in the papers than I could give. But the whole thing - the destruction and the reconstruction - the hurly-burly of the hitherto quiet streets, and the quiet of the formerly noisy ones - the hundreds of miserable disgusting looking people huddle together in barracks - the scores of carriages and [ruckles] of every description in the streets. Every things is so strange that I am hardly more at home in the next street than where driving on [?] Avenue or South Dear[?]on St.
Thank you dear Cousin for your kind inquiries. It did us good to know you hought of us. But I believe you owe me a letter, and people abroad not