Transcription:
3 John Gilfin had ye but eaten flap-jack for breakfast, you nier had feared to part company from your steed, secure in this
knowledge we galloped on, drawing rein as we passed The California with its beautiful granites and natures own frescoing then
on again reaching Aspen Valley at four-thirty, our Sancho having arrived an hour before, Ah Louis, blessed be his name, had,
I record it with joy, made gorgeous preparations to entertain four stomachs We suffered no ill-effects from our forty-mile
ride which is not surprising for Holmes says and we agree with him that saddle-leather is preferable to sole-leather. One's
hepar, or, in vulgar language, liver, goes up and down like the dasher of a churn, in the midst of the other vital arrangements,
at every step of a trotting horse. The brains also are shaken up like coppers in a money box. (N. B. My Pegasus was a trotter,
so if this is rather muddled, attribute it to the fact that my brains were a bit much disturbed--not to any real deficiency
for believe me, seven years at Mills seminary, nie? College, is guaranteed not only to cultivate to the fullest extent what
brains one possesses, but to supply them when a deficiency occurs I do not quite understand when you say Mrs. Muir went to
Mills seeking knowledge know that those of us who went there with that end in view found that it was like illegible dy's Kingdom
of Heaven, to be had for the asking it was a pity that little Johnny Muir ever lost his flannel petticoat, otherwise he too
might have gone to Mills But because of this do not spend your life in a vain regret, none of us can have all of the good
things of life and I think, to be earnest, that you have your share, but I cannot find it in my heart to envy you, for you
paid a heavy price for it. Now here's a bit of gossip. There was a dinner party the other night and Mrs. Crow was there, in
all her glory, the magpie who, as usual, was listening at the window told me she imagined that she was entertaining