Title:
Letter from Jeanne C. Carr to [J. B. McChesney and wife], 1877 Apr 25.
Creator:
Jeanne C. Carr
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:
[J. B. McChesney and wife]
Date:
1877 Apr 25
2008
Type:
Text
Format:
Image/jpeg2000
Identifier:
muir03_0532-md-1
Source:
Original letter dimensions unknown.
Language:
eng
Coverage:
Marysville [Calif.]
Rights:
Copyright status unknown
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of materials protected by copyright beyond that allowed by fair use requires the written permission of the copyright owners.
Responsibility for any use rests exclusively with the user.
Transcription:
(Original letter in possession of Mrs. J. B. McChesney) Marysville, April 85, '77. Dear Mr. and Mrs. McChesney: Ever
since my return from Oakland I have been thanking you and all the other precious friends who lightened our grievous burden
with their loving kindness, but my days go on into profounder grief as the loss of our son sinks deeper into our consciousness.
The blow was too sudden, too appalling, and needlessly made too cruel to be realized. He was so much a blessing to us - so
bright, sweet and faithful, that we had unconsciously leaned upon him. His orderly methods, industry and aptitude for business
made him invaluable in the office. When the day after we returned from Oakland I opened his desk and took up the pen which
he had laid down, I said no one shall ever make an entry in those clear pages except myself, everything was well and perfectly
done to the last hour. But it is not from the life alone. John had a rarely sympathetic and sensitive nature, and for the
last two years has given me much more than he received. His reading in the last two years has been comprehensive, his mind
was marking out original paths. While I was at Pasadena he wrote me every other day, the brightest and most inspiriting words
from home. We were going to YoSemite together. I wished to see him once under the full impression of natural grandeur. As
Emerson says, in losing him I mourn not what I made, but what I loved. I should have loved John if he had not been given to
me We have tried to shorten the days with work, but the work is poor - the spring seems wanting. We both find it hard to
live without our happier child. For we doubt not he is already wiser then we, and understands the reason of what seems unreasonable
enough to human vision. I began to thank you both, dear and true friends, but the uppermost thought has run away with my
pen. I lecture tonight for the Inst., Prof. Allen tomorrow night, Dr. Carr on Friday night. Just an Institute exercise. I
could not go into the church. The Marysville Institute both this year and the last has been less interesting than others;
there are good teachers here, I do not understand why it is so. Tell Mr. McChesney that I hope he will take very positive
ground in favor of Industrial Ed. in the coming discussions of Grangers and afterwards of teachers. Neither Dr. Carr or myself
can controvert Prof. Hilgard's positions, but they are to be met with strong counter arguments and more solid proof. I go
home in the morning. With many tender thoughts of you all, and especially of the suffering mother, Your friend, JEANNE
C. CARR 06389