Boston, Feb 26th My dear Mrs. Gibbons Mother wanted you to know how grateful she was for your kind loving letter, & how much comfort it gave her, for as she said, she could feel that you only spoke of what you knew. She said you wrote just what she had wanted to hear from you. We were all very grateful to you. Mother sends much love [left side] to you and will write herself, but does not feel able to quite yet. She has not felt as if she could write even to Aunt Sarah, until yesterday. She gets her strength slowly, but is now again at her daily work for the soldiers & Theodore's regiment. She is strong enough to walk about twenty minutes every day, & since all anxiety has been over, she has been able to sleep better, often five to six hours, than she [right side] did for many weeks before. We were saying the other day, how little we thought, when we thought of you, last year on the 17th of December, how near to that day, our day of mourning would come, & how soon. In our first distress we conjured the dates & thought the day was the same. Mother feels, as we all do, that we have one comfort more than those had who had to mourn in the very beginning, when they were not sure that after all this suffering they would win any result worth the sacrifice, not knowing as we can, that nothing can now, prevent emancipation. We have the comfort of knowing that Theodore knew that too, felt sure of it. I hope you all keep well & happy. WIth kind remembrance to all & much love to the girls Respectfully & affectionately yours Mary R Parkman