My dear husband,--Here we are at
Lausanne, in the
Hotel Gibbon, occupying the very parlor that the Ruskins had when we were here before.
The day I left you I progressed prosperously to
Paris.
Reached there about one o'clock at night; could get no carriage, and finally had to turn in at a little hotel close by the station, where I slept till morning.
I could not but think what if anything should happen to me there?
Nobody knew me or where I was, but the bed was clean, the room respectable; so I locked my door and slept, then took a carriage in the morning, and found
Madame Borione at breakfast.
I write to-night, that you may get a letter from me at the earliest possible date after your return.
Instead of coming to Geneva in one day, I stopped over one night at Macon, got to Geneva the next day about four o'clock, and to Lausanne at eight.
Coming up-stairs and opening the door, I found the whole party seated with their books and embroidery about a centretable, and looking as homelike and cosy as possible.
You may imagine the greetings, the kissing, laughing, and good times generally.