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Correspondence from William Brooks Cabot to Fannie Hardy Eckstorm ca. 1930-1946, part 2
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�447, Sept. 25/84
Dear Mrs. Eckstrom, Thanks for your [?], it comes with our first sunshine for a good while. I can't say much about your Maine twisters; am off the Me. [?] still, may work around them some when the binding is done, + it is due. But I [?] no use or luck as you are of [?] in your presence. These with such Indians alive as there are I'm no face anyway, [?] [?] one, need him more than a [?]heart. I've got humble about Manhegan, after bringing what I could scrape together to paper. After all we don't war about the meaning, only what passage was the one. But I have it used indifferent with Monhegan (in Connecticut) + that runs into the Mahican of the Hudson. Then Mohegan, with world acceptance as [?], gets itself into trouble with me, + a doublt is a doubt. The Conn. Monhegan I could get [?], it is likely the Northern meaning stops in Rhode Island. But it is the worst mess I [?] got. [?] [?], occurs in R.I. in