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20 Yosemite Valley - May 15th, 1870 My dear friend Emily I would gladly climb to the top of our highest rocks to find
out whether you are on this or the other side of the rocky mtns. Can it be that you are indeed in California? If this be a
fact it has some rare unbelievable properties that make it hard to comprehend. But with faith like a grain of mustard seed
I will go on to believe that you are verily in Yuba. Well I congratulate you upon your arrival in this Pacific land of gold.
I mean the gold of yellow comps' that cover the plains. You must be very weary of that long ride. I should think that a week
of car locomotion on such hillocky railroads would sift all the best of a persons life out but doubtless you have had much
to enjoy from the beautiful plains and lakes and mountains that you have passed. Many say that the plains are monotonous deserts
but I do not think that you would see them so. Last year I was over the summit to Mono Lake. The whole country about there
is generally described as a dreary forbiding waste yet I never beheld a place where beauty was written in plainer characters
or where the tender fostering hand of the Great Gardener was more directly visible. You have not come at the most beautiful
time of year. The plains of the Sacramento will be crisp and dead ere this but if you are here in April you will see a sheet
of plant gold unrivalled in the world. I was left in charge here last fall when Mr. Hutchings left for Washington to attend
to his land claims, and as he has not returned I cannot leave the valley, though I would be so happy to meet you; but I will
now be here all summer and you must of course see Yo(Semite)*. I will undertake to guide(you)* to all the most holy nooks
(----)* in rock and grove and to standpoints where you will hear *() these particular lines fell on the side of paper which
was torn. Words and parts of words in () seemed logical to copyist. Where there are (-----) the whole word was torn from the
page.