Paris, October 25, 1861.
My Dearest Little
Mary: Your letter of 5th of October arrived a few days ago, and we are
glad to find that you are growing fat and hearty, although we hardly expected
that result from the hot sun of your native land at this epoch. I am very
grateful to all the kind friends who are so good to you. I hope your dear
grandmama will continue to improve in health and strength, although I fear that
Boston will hardly be so strengthening to her as Nahant. Give us as many
details as you can of what you see and hear, in all affairs of public interest,
military and political. You have no idea how we hunger and thirst for such
details, and how entirely we depend upon you. I wish that you would keep a
journal of what you see and hear that you think will interest us, and so when
you write to your mother and me, you will merely have to refer to and copy from
your diary. This will be a more satisfactory as well as an easier way of
corresponding than it is to sit down at the last minute and write a hurried
note.
Nothing makes letters more interesting than personal and
private details of important events. You are living at this moment in a country
on which the eyes of the whole world are fixed, and in the midst of one of the
most momentous epochs of the world's history. Try to describe to us simply but
fully whatever you see or hear that you think may be interesting to us. It will
be a good mental occupation to yourself, and the results will be very welcome
to us. Do not be appalled at what I propose to you. I do not expect my dear
little Mary to write me great political letters, and I shall not print them in
the “Allgemeine Zeitung,” but if you take pains you may make them a great
comfort to us. So soon as I get to Vienna, I mean to write to a few of my
friends who promised me letters, and shall hope at least for a reply. The
object has been from the beginning, and is still, not to secede permanently
from the Union, but to conquer the whole United States and make it all one slave
State. Here are foes against whom it is legitimate to feel some resentment. But
one would think it impossible for those engaged in a common resistance to this
mutiny not to sink, for the period of the war at least, every petty feeling of
dislike to each other. I am sure that I have none but the kindest feelings now
to every man of whatever party in the free States — hunker, Democrat,
Belleverettian, Republican, or abolitionist — provided they are willing to
stand shoulder to shoulder to save the country from extinction.
Your affectionate
Papa.
SOURCE: George William Curtis, editor, The
Correspondence of John Lothrop Motley in Two Volumes, Library Edition,
Volume 2, p. 208-9
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