Sender Location | Tent Lodge, Coniston Water, Ambleside |
Transcript or Index | Lady Tennyson 1850 (in pencil) Tent Lodge Coniston Water Ambleside August 2nd My dear Eleanor Your kind note was sent to me here and I beg you to accept my best thanks for all your good wishes. In very truth had the ideal been the absolute standard for the real, I know well I should never have been Alfred’s wife. Shall I rather think it is a veil instead? Or would it not be better still to feel it neither but only some far off goal to which there is hope of attaining in another life if not this, towards which I may look for help without invidious comparison. You say nothing of how you are and how baby thrives nor whether Mr Gell has returned back strong for his London duties. Yes Eleanor I am very happy and I have the comfort of hearing my Father is so likewise, though I can scarcely resist the wish it might have been with us as we had hoped rather than at Grasby. However doubtless it is all well as it is. It could be doubly ungrateful to think otherwise in the midst of such cheering reports both of Daddy and of Charles and [?]Anne My kind remembrances to your husband from Your affectionate Cousin Emily Tennyson We are in a house kindly lent us, by Mrs Marshall, one of the Miss Spring Rices who was. We have a beautiful view of the Old Man & the head of the Lake and of [?]packd jagged rock walls upon a rugged gorge from our windows.
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