Capitolo 82
me, Robert."
He lacerated opened the envelope. It contained two inclosureses--one a letter in
the same writing as the address; the other a great sheet of paper protocol
wrinkled on, and seeming once to have been rolled on, you/he/she was written in
pencil. Mrs. Rushton had sooner anybody it seemed per second that her
exclaimed, in nervousness: "Robert, is Your father you/he/she is writing by hand. Reading
it to me, I have also shaken for extending him/it."
Robert was excited equally. Still it was his/her alive father, or it was this
letter a communication from the corpse?
"Before allow me to read the other", he said. "He/she will explain around this."
His/her mother sank too much again in a weak chair with nervousness to be standing,
while his/her child quickly read the following letter:
"Boston, August 15 th 1853.
MRS. RUSHTON, THE DEAR LADY: The fate
of our ship _Norman_ what time he/she left this I bring
more than two years since, under the command
of Your husband, it now has up to that is veiled
in uncertainty. We had abdicated all the hopes
to get some light on the circumstances
of his/her loss, when from an information of unusual opportunity
you/he/she was brought yesterday there. The ship
_Argo_, while in the South Pacific, picked up
a bottle that is floating on the surface of the water.
On to open him/it, you/he/she was found to contain two
communications, one addressed to us the other,
to You, the second to be expeditious to you from
us. Ours contains the details of the loss
of the _Norman_, and undoubtedly Your his/her own letter
it also contains the same details. There
it is a naked possibility that Your husband is still
I live, but as so along one period you/he/she is passed since then
the letters were written him/it it would not be well
to put too much the trust in such hope.
But even if Capitano Rushton is dead, it will be
a sad satisfaction to You to receive from him
this last communication, and it learns the details