Joliet
Sept. 27th 1863.
My Dear Samuel,
I have tried in vain to find time to send you a few lines upon each of the past days since you left home but have not been able. I attended the concert and was charmed with the music almost divine. Such a voice and so highly cultivated I never heard before. Andrew was there to drive me home in the carriage. Yet so lonely did it seem that I could scarcely enjoy myself. I have exhausted the topic of your obtaining employment nearer home and will introduce a new one. Namely "to keep a lookout for someone who wishes a tenant for a few weeks or months. To occupy the house all furnished [c]. We could first suit such a place through the winter. Martha says that such a place offerd [sic] itself first before Christmas last year and extended through the winter. A Mr. & Mrs. Cook who went to [Cinnitie]. They found it very difficult to get a tenement altho [sic] everything was found to live upon. Please mention this to Mr. Theilsen [sic] and he will hear if there is any such opportunity and you may not hear of it. Now do mention it to him for I do not feel that I can spend this long winter alone. Especially if such an opportunity is to be embraced. I did not go to church this morning as my health is not good to day [sic] altho [sic] my spirits are bright in proportion to as my health is not good. Do you take the heat all right. I received a letter from [Genesea]. One of my former pupils Miss Wright, now Mrs. Physick is married and going to Memphis and wishes me to take tea with her at the [national]. I presume she will on the contrary come out here. The day is Tuesday. I wish I had the buggy repaired. Andrew picked the apples yesterday across the road there is for us only a little over a barrel.
The war news is not favorable, altho [sic] Col. B. is not dead as expected Capt. Ellwood's telegram says that Col. B. is well, but that Lieut. Col. Waterman and Mr. Barttels are wounded. Little Mary took a ride Friday for her picture and when we started she said "go see Papa" so plainly that you would have been pleesed [sic] . She calls for you a great deal. She still keeps pretty well altho [sic] not entirely. Anne is well and bright as a bird.
Receive love & kisses from your dear one at home.
Yours
Jennie E Reed
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