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unclear unclear We received your letter this evening together with one from Robert? and another from Sarah unclear. You can well imagine I am joyous? just now. Robert is well and in fine spirits. May? are unclear well at? home. I did not expect to write you so soon as this but your request seems to demand immediate attention. I am sorry that I cannot say I am well acquainted with unclear unclear. She is not here this unclear. She was obliged? to go home on account of the severe illness of a sister. I can vouch for her beauty at least. When I first saw her she had shown her head of its natural unclear and I must say never did short hair so gracefully adorn a more beautiful head. Her face was lovely and her manners sweet. You know every beauty in this world must have its faults, hers is in her form, though I would not have you think that is bad at all. You ask if she is good. They say she is so. She is very conscientious unclear. She seems to live however in an ideal world. Such as facts? and novels? form out of their beautiful imaginations. This is her greatest failing, so far as I know. She is not a fine scholar, their seems too much reality about schoolbooks to interest her. One of her friends told me that she was injuring? herself by reading romances. This is a great unclear, it affects her more than it would some one of a different cast of mind. She is very enthusiastic and when anything pleases her words cannot