Page:Posthumous Works of Mary Wollstonecraft Vol3.djvu/138

122 rate I will avoid conversations, which only tend to harrass your feelings, because I am most affectionately yours,



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you the letter, which you desired me to forward, and I am tempted very laconically to wish you a good morning—not because I am angry, or have nothing to say; but to keep down a wounded spirit.—I shall make every effort to calm my mind—yet a strong conviction seems to whirl round in the very centre of my brain, which, like the