June 18, 1866.
My dear Mother,
This may be the last letter I write home before I appear there in my bodily presence. I don't feel half as near home as I did three weeks ago. Even the sight of our trunks in the hall fail to give me a realising sense of our approaching meeting. Just now we are living in clover, as far as studies are concerned. Latin has ceased, Hattie's Greek stopped a week ago, gymnastics are over, and we have only ourselves and the public meeting to attend to, and the members of twenty-three are not at all concerned in that personally- We'll come home as fresh as can be. We held our Society
elections last week, the results were as follows: Miss Dickinson Pres.
Miss Goods ell Vice Pres. Miss Talbot Sec. Miss Glover Treas. All
but one were western girls. Miss Mitchell insists that its only the western girls (handwriting changes here, who do the talking in Society, and she is nearly though not wholy right. Tuesday noon. Mattie has some studying to do and wants her letter to go this noon so I am finishing it. She received your letter this morning and we were delighted to hear from you again. How soon we shall be at home. Don't worry about our clothing. I guess we can manage to look respectibly at church without anything new for one Sunday. I dont like to ask you about it again buthave you forgotten that I want some money. I don't know but my note
to you about it failed to bo put into a letter to Helen that it was written
to go with. I asked you. If Father was certainly coming for us to send
me $ 15.00 if not $55.00. I think now it is so uncertain that I wish very
much that if you would send the whole immediately if you have not sent
any, or the remainder if you have sent part. I am afraid if it is not
sent soon that we shall have to wait, and I want some money to get
some things here. I do hope that Father will come. It will be so much
pleasanter. We now expect to start Wednesday noon, If so, we shall be
at home Thursday at about half past five. Will you be glad to see us ?
and shall not be glad to see you all. We girls are anxiously awaiting
the arrival of the proof sheet of our paper. You know we talked about
having one and Father wrote to us he was afraid we would neglect our
studies for it and so we gave up the idea; but some of the girls were
very anxious we should get it up, after Greek was closed and we had
so much more time. I thought Father would not care It so wrote an article for it, and helped about it generally for two day. It is being printed in New York. We expect it will be here by Saturday. I wrote to Father about it
last Saturday, and sent my letter to Washington. I hope he received it.
He wrote to me he expected to go home the last of last week or the first
of this and by your letter I see he had not come home Saturday morning. We had strawberries for tea last night In great abundance- They were
delicious. We have bad them only once before and then the girls at our
table ordered and paid for them. The dinner bell has rung, and I must go. After dinner. I have received a letter from Father Ik he say he has told Mr. Colburn to send me some money- so it is all right. I am very sorry that he probably will not be here to come home with us. Good by
Your loving Hattie.