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Letter and envelope from Mary Etta Syphus, Panaca, Nevada to John M. Bunker, St. Thomas, Nevada

Information

Creator

Date

1894-10-04

Description

From the Syphus-Bunker Papers (MS-00169). The folder contains an original handwritten letter, an envelope, a typed transcription of the same letter, and a copy of original letter attached.

Digital ID

man000862
Details

Citation

man000862. Syphus-Bunker Papers, 1891-1994. MS-00169. Special Collections and Archives, University Libraries, University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Las Vegas, Nevada. http://n2t.net/ark:/62930/d1125tn7k

Rights

This material is made available to facilitate private study, scholarship, or research. It may be protected by copyright, trademark, privacy, publicity rights, or other interests not owned by UNLV. Users are responsible for determining whether permissions are necessary from rights owners for any intended use and for obtaining all required permissions. Acknowledgement of the UNLV University Libraries is requested. For more information, please see the UNLV Special Collections policies on reproduction and use (https://www.library.unlv.edu/speccol/research_and_services/reproductions) or contact us at special.collections@unlv.edu.

Standardized Rights Statement

Digital Provenance

Digitized materials: physical originals can be viewed in Special Collections and Archives reading room

Language

English

Publisher

University of Nevada, Las Vegas. Libraries

Format

application/pdf
image/tiff

Letter and envelope (with stamp) from Mary E. Syphus, Panaca, Nevada, to John M. Bunker, St. Thomas, Nevada, dated October 4, 1894.
Envelope addressed:
Mr. John M. Bunker, St. Thomas, Nevada.
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Panaca, Nev.,
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Oct. 4, 1894.
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Mr. John M. Bunker,
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St. Thomas, Nev.
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Dearest John:-
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I am just home from school and
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am as tired as I care to be, but as this
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is my only opportunity to write I shall
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make the best of it.
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I cannot tell you how anxiously
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I awaited your letter, and how pleased
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I was to hear from you last night.
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We almost dreaded the mail to
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come for fear we would get bad
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news;—I mean something much
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worse than we did hear.
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We knew that you boys had been
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gone three weeks and had not
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returned, and, as we did not hear
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from any of you last Satraday, we
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thought you were not back, or someone
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would have written, so we were more than anxious last night.
I see, by the date of your letter and Clara's, that both were written to come by last mail. Suppose you did not post them in time or else they were delayed.
Am so sorry you all have been so unfortunate,, but still am very thankful that nothing of a more serious nature occured. It seems to bad you couldn't find the horses after trying so long, And I know you are dissapointed in not being able to go north as you intended.
When, do you think you will go, or do you still intend going? I am sorry the school-year will be so far gone before you can enter.
I shall hate to know you are so far off again for so long, though it seems I ought to be used to that for I have never known much else. If I am used to it, I am not happy, and never shall be in your absence.
I sometimes think I should feel quite contented if our homes were in
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the same place so I could see you and speak to you often. How strange it seems that we know so little of each other, and, yet, seem to know each other so well. I often think, how strange the way we met, and, even, that we ever met at all.
I can’t help but think of the poor opinion you have of yourself, or, rather of the character you gave yourself, to me. I didn't believe it was true, and don't now, but I can't forget it.
You said in your letter you would not bother me more with
the details of your trip, Now, if you knew how anxious I was to hear, you wouldn't have thought you were bothering me any. I am interested in all that you are; at least I hope I am.
I wanted to write to Clara this mail but shall not have time, nd. my hand trembles so I can hardly write at all. I am so tired when school is out at night I can hardly do anything. It seems to be
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harder work than ever this year. Every year I have taught I have thought I would not try it again but when the times comes for school to open I am too glad to teach. I like my department better than any I have had before, and
when I get along well all day, and have good recitations, I think I like to teach almost as well as to stay at home. Before this year the grammar department has not been divided, but now we are trying to grade the schools better. I have third and fourth readers in my school and besides that I hear five of Chari's classes recite in my department every day. Some of his fourth and fifth readers come in for, arithmetic; grammar, geography, physiology, and history.
A good many of the pupils in physiology and history haven't text books yet, so I have to give the lessions in lecture form and then ask questions themv on them. Of course I have
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be better for both
to prepare every night, and it is
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usually about bed time when I
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get at it. I have to be up by six
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and it is sometimes twelve when
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I retire and now I am begining
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to feel like I haven’t had a good
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rest for a month.
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Quite a number of the pupils are
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good hands to criticize a teacher
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when they are out of school, so I am
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going to work all the harder for I
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don't, propose giving them a chance
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to give me any poor criticizoms if
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I can help it.
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I am glad Clara is looking
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and feeling better. Shall be very
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glad when she comes home. Should
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like her to stay as long as she wishes
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to though, but I know your Ma has
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to work harder than she ought.
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Della is quite ill and has been for
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several days. We shall all feel so
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Written across top of Page 5 badly to see
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Ellen go away
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from here, but
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know it will
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Written across top of Page 5
her and Harry.
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Julia is very
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anxious to go
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back to the
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Muddy, and
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sometimes Ma
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and Pa say they
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are going this
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winter. I sup-
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pose I shall be
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the only one that
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can't go.
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Well, I must
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Written across top of Page 4
stop this idle
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talk for want
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of more time.
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Don't read
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what doesn't
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interest you.
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I suppose Clare
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will give me a
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scolding for
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not writing
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to her. Tell her
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I will write
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next mail.
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With much
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