Transcription:
2 the brow? and I think that can be made right when you make us the visit of which you wrote in your last letter. the nose
looks rather too narrow I think. The work is beautiful and I can easily imagine the loving carefulness you bestowed upon it.
Oh Mary you are always asso- ciated in my mind with those blissful days of possession? and those sad sad days and I thinnk
gratefully of you and Willis too. But I have come to think very calmly of dear little Gracie for as time passes, it seems
more and more a reality that she is not dead but gone before and that she is not far away but very 3 near? and I sometimes
dream? to find her close be- side me. I do not believe the spirit world is half so far away as we used to im- agine and I
think death only takes the veil from our mor- tal eyes that we may see as we are seen. Oh how I would enjoy a talk with you.
Well you want to hear about Annie. She is certainly far from well but has perfect assurance of returning health and so is
very illegible . I sup- pose she will write for herself. She illegible very much as she always does. You asked about Maggie,
she looked better I thought than when I last saw her in Wis.? and