2 December 1878 • Munich, Germany (MS: CtHMTH, UCCL 01611)
Mother dear, I thank you ever so much for your sumptuous birth-day present. A covered Krug of beaten brass (& gilded at in addition,) is not a common spectacle in any country; & we all enjoy the grace & splendor of this thing as much as we do its utility & its rarity.
I will whisper in your ear, privately & confidentially, that our quarters here are not paradise—or rather they were not, when we came. The street entrance was like that of a barn; when one got up stairs the halls were so dark he could not see six feet before him,—& phew! how they did smell of the closets!—& how raw & chill they were! The table cloth was never clean. One day I found a servant tipping up a tall what-not (which had some of Livy’s precious glassware on it,) to shove the corner of a carpet under it. Our bedroom window looked upon a court; all sorts of occupations were carried on under it. At 5 a.m., they sawed wood & split it there; at 6 a professional carpet beater began to add his whackings; at 7 some boiler-makers reinforced the carpet beater—now think of all those noises going at once! The very first night, as I was dropping to sleep I discovered that my pet destestation was in the house—a cuckoo clock. (There is also one in the house where I write.) Clara Spaulding’s bed has tumbled down twice. Her window shade has to be put up with a step ladder, & gotten down in the same way. To our morning noises was soon added, (in the hall,) the barking of a s Spitz dog at 7.30 a.m. The fact is, there was but one thing we took solid & healing comfort in, & that was our gentle young coloredⒶemendation girl who waits ed on our table. But alas, day before yesterday she fell in the cistern & the color all came off.
We require her to fall in every day, now. We have clean table linen, now. Clara’s bed & window shade are to be fixed today. I shall invite the Spitz to supper this evening, & tomorrow he will know more about the Sweet By & By than he does now.
So we are all right, now, Mother my dear. We are contented, & pretty happy. We think the world of the Fraülein, & would not be willing to live elsewhere in Munich than under her motherly wing. But by George it it would do my very soul good to have Charley & Theodore here a month & keep a record of their comments!
With the love of us all to you & all in the homestead,
Mrs. J. Langdon | Elmira | New York | U.S. of America. in upper left corner: Via England. | flourish on the flap: slc postmarked: münchen ◇◇◇ ◇ 7-8 am and new york dec 15 paid all e
MS, Jervis Langdon Collection, CtHMTH.
MicroPUL, reel 1.
The Jervis Langdon Collection was donated in 1963 by Ida Langdon.
More information on provenance may be found in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.