The
letters are brown and brittle with age and enclosed in envelopes
that are well-worn. In 1910-11, when the letters are post-marked,
postage was just two cents. The letters were written just before
and immediately after a marriage that was to last for over sixty
years. Their author was a young man who was deeply in love with a
young lady. In them he spoke with clumsy eloquence of his love for
her.
She
had saved her precious letters all these years, and the badly torn
envelopes indicate she had often removed and read them. The
sentiments in the old letters took on new meaning with the passing
of time.
But
now her husband was near death. Sixty-four short years of marriage
were about to end. And knowing that soon she would no longer have
him with her, she carried the precious letters with her around the
house. She would cling to his words of love that had bound them in
life and from which she would not be separated in death.
After
her death, the letters were passed on to family members. They will
be cherished by those who knew and loved the couple. They, too,
will want to read the loving sentiments. But will the possessor of
the letters give them away? Never! He prizes the letters and
prefers to keep them. Loan them to those interested? Not likely:
they might become lost or damaged. Perhaps he will make himself
copies and send the originals to the other family members? No, he
will make copies for them, keeping the originals for
himself. And so with great care he copies each word from the old
letters, accurately reproducing each original. He thus gives to
others what they, and he, really want: not