Title:
Letter from John Muir to [Annie] Wanda [Muir], 1893 Aug 8.
Creator:
John Muir
Publisher:
University of the Pacific Library Holt-Atherton Special Collections. Please contact this institution directly to obtain copies
of the images or permission to publish or use them beyond educational purposes.
Contributor:
[Annie] Wanda [Muir]
Date:
1893 Aug 8
2008
Type:
Text
Format:
Image/jpeg2000
Identifier:
muir07_1249-md-1
Source:
Original letter dimensions: 33 x 21.5 cm.
Language:
eng
Coverage:
London, [England]
Rights:
Copyrighted
The unpublished works of John Muir are copyrighted by the Muir-Hanna Trust. To purchase copies of images and/or obtain permission
to publish or exhibit them, see
http://library.pacific.edu/ha/forms
Muir-Hanna Trust
1984
Transcription:
Hotel Metropole, London, August 8th, 1893, My dear Wanda: It seems a long long time since I left Hew York, and in all
my long wide wanderings since then I have not received a single letter until to-day. I got here last night after dark and
this morning I went to tho London, Paris, and American Bank Limited, 58 Old Broad St., London, England, and there I found
your letters of June 27 and July 7, also Mama's of June 21, Maggie's of June 20 and brother Dave's of June 20, and my, wasn't
I glad to find you were all well after so long a silence. I wrote to you from Norway and many times from Scotland, so I suppose
you know pretty well where I have been and what I have been doing. I left Edinburgh last Saturday and went to Windermere,
a lovely region in England where a great poet lived. Then oame down here. It is a grand place, this town, with far more people
in it than there are in all California, Oregon, and Washington. But I am very lonesome, for I have not had time to find anybody
that I know or to make new friends. I'm going; away to Switzerland tomorrow morning, and I hope you will have some more of
your nice letters waiting for me. I expect to get back from Switzerland about the end of this month, and then I'll soon start
for home. How glad I'll be then to be going nearer and nearer to home, instead of farther and farthor away from it. I don't
like to travel, although everybody is good to me and I find so much that is beautiful. I am very glad to hear that you are
learning some good lessons every day. The precious time of youth is nov; yours, my dear, but it will soon pass away and never
come back. Make haste then to fill your TpLnd with beautiful and good things While your memory is able to hold them. I hope
you and Helen got the flowers I sent you from the grand valleys of Norway. Thank you, darling, for your two fine letters.
Goodnight. Your loving papa, JOHN MUIR Envelope addressed Wanda Muir, Martinez, California, U.S.A. 705