Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Brontes Life and Letters, Vol. 2: Being an Attempt to Present a Full and Final Record of the Lives of the Three: Sisters, Charlotte, Emily and Anne Bronte From the Biographies of Mrs. Gaskell and Others, and From Numerous Hitherto Unpublished Manuscripts and Letters
MY dear ellen, - I mentioned your coming here to Emily as a mere suggestion, with the faint hope that the prospect might cheer her, as she really esteems you perhaps more than any other person out of this house. I found, however, it would not do any, the slightest excitement or putting out of the way is not to be thought Of, and indeed I do not think the journey in this unsettled weather, with the walk from Keighley and walk back, at all advisable for yourself. Yet I Should have liked to see you, and so would Anne. Emily continues much the same yesterday I thought her a little better, but today she is not so well. I hope still - for I must hope - she is clear to me as life - if I let the faint ness of despair reach my heart I shall become worthless. The attack was, I believe, in the first place, in?ammation of the lungs; it ought to have been met promptly in time. She is too intract able. I do wish I knew her state and feelings more clearly. The fever is not so high as it was, but the pain in the side, the cough, the emaciation are there still.
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