Roswell Farnham to Laura
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Your letter sent to Brattleboro, reached me tonight and you may be sure I was
glad to hear from you. I hope you continue to get along as well as you appear to
have been at the time you wrote. Write a little at a time every day & send
what you write once a week or oftener. I will replay as often as I can. We are
very busy & I have a great deal to do. Mary can tell you how busy we were at
Brattleboro & we have not got over it yet. We are just beginning to drill in
addition to our other duties.
We had a fine battalion drill this
afternoon of two hours. My horse acts charmingly. He will make a fine horse
& if I ever get him home you & Mary will like him much.
I wrote Mary last night that I had a slight cold, but I woke up this morning
entirely rid of it. I am very well indeed & am getting fat. I told Mary
about our mess chest with stove &c. Our cooking arrangements are now in good
shape. This morning it was quite cold so the Col. when he was down in town
bought three sheet iron stoves for our tents & I have mine up now. A little
wood in it makes quite a difference in the temperature, for we have very cold
nights. I have not been out of camp today but shall go
into the city
tomorrow. The unfinished capitol is just west of us. The dome is a magnificent
structure. In every other direction is a barren plain, stripped of every
portable thing by the thousands of troops that have encamped here. There is
hardly a blade of grass under our feet & the men have to go more than a mile to get limbs of trees for bedding in their
tents.
No one can imagine the desolation that war carries in its track.
The time is passing very rapidly with me, tho' I suppose it is more slow with you
at home. Give my love to all in the house. Remember me especially to Mrs.
Flanders & tell her that I shall be under lasting obligations to her for her
kindness to you. Tell Jane to stick by you till you get well or we will have
John Eastman drafted.
I have written twice to Mary & expect to hear from her soon. My love to her & tell her to be patient for nine months will soon pass. My regards to Dr. Poole, & all who enquire.
I shall write to either you or Mary twice or three times a week.
I directed the Dr's letter to 83 Shawmut Avenue. Was not that right?
I am teaching school. The Commissioned officers of the right wing recite to me in the Tactics, once a day in the movements that we go through with in drill.
Write as often as you are able & get along as fast as you can.
Your affectionate brotherRoswell Farnham