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How to Write Love Letters : LETTER XXXV. Another more favorable.by Madame le Fontaine (Carleton B. Case, ed)  
Return to "How to Write Love Letters" Index LETTER XXXV. Another more favorable.LETTER XXXV. Another more favorable.Elizabethport, January S, 1914. Although my own conscience tells me that anything like clandestine conduct should be avoided, still I feel that we are most unhappily placed, and that the undue opposition on the part of my aunt, in seeking to force upon me a man whom I dislike, excuses to some extent what I cannot justify. Would that we could both act uprightly, and cherish an honorable attachment (such as I feel yours to be) without restraint! A few months more, however, will see me mistress of my own fortune and liberty, and then there will be no farther need of concealment. I shall be walking in the park at three o'clock, when we shall perhaps gain an opportunity of a few minutes' conversation. Hoping sincerely that fairer prospects may yet arise for both of us, believe me, dear Tom, Ever affectionately yours, Leila Lane. |
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