Camp White, August 23, i863.
Dearest: — Very glad to get your good letter from
Columbus. I wish I could travel with you a few weeks now. Everybody praises our
nephew and his wife. That last phrase means Laura.
You must tell me more particulars about Fanny and Minnie, or
do they call her Emily now? If she is growing into a young lady as fast as I
suppose she is, Emily is the best name.
I got a letter from Mother at the same time with yours. She
is very contented and happy at Fremont. You will be together soon. I hope you
will manage to have the boys like her. She is not likely to have much time to
enjoy with her grandsons, and I hope the most will be made of it.
I see that our beautiful little lost one is in your thoughts
a great deal — much more perhaps than you thought he would be when you left
here. If it does not sadden your life, as I think it does not, I am not sorry
that you remember him so often. He was too lovely to be forgotten. Your
moralizing on your want of dignity and all that doesn't disturb me. You'll do
for your husband, and I love you so much, darling. Be cheerful and happy. Do as
well as you can by the boys, but don't worry about them. They will come out
sometime. — Love to all.
Affectionately yours,
R.
Mrs. Hayes.
SOURCE: Charles Richard Williams, editor, Diary and
Letters of Rutherford Birchard Hayes, Volume 2, p. 429
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