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    A Letter

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    TO THE AGED AND HONORABLE JOSIAH TRAYLOR FROM HIS GRANDSON, A SOLDIER IN
    FRANCE, WHEREIN THE MOTIVE AND INSPIRATION OF THIS NARRATIVE ARE BRIEFLY
    PRESENTED.

    _In France, September 10, 1915._

    Dear Grandfather:

    At last I have got mine. I had been scampering towards the stars, like a
    jack-rabbit chased by barking greyhounds, when a shrapnel shell caught up
    with me. It sneezed all over my poor bus, and threw some junk into me as
    if it thought me nothing better than a kind of waste basket. Seems as if
    it had got tired of carrying its load and wanted to put it on me. It
    succeeded famously but I got home with the bus. Since then they have been
    taking sinkers and fish hooks out me fit only for deep water. Don't
    worry, I'm getting better fast. I shall play no more football and you
    will not see me pitching curves and running bases again. No, I shall sit
    in the grandstand myself hereafter and there will not be so much of me
    but I shall have quite a shuck on my soul for all that. I've done a lot
    of thinking since I have been lying on my back with nothing else to do.
    When your body gets kind of turned over in the ditch it's wonderful how
    your mind begins to hustle around the place. Until this thing happened my
    intellect was nothing more than a vague rumor. I had heard of it, now and
    then, in college, and I had hoped that it would look me up some time and
    ask what it could do for me, but it didn't. These days I would scarcely
    believe that I have a body, the poor thing being upon the jacks in this
    big machine shop, but my small intellect is hopping all over the earth
    and back again and watching every move of these high-toned mechanics with
    their shiny tools and white aprons. My mind and I have kind of got
    acquainted with each other and I'm getting attached to it. It is quite an
    energetic, promising young mind and I don't know but I'll try to make a
    permanent place for it in my business.

    I've been thinking of our Democracy and of my coming over here to be
    chucked into this big jack pot as if my life were a small coin; of all
    the dear old days of the past I have thought and chiefly how the
    wonderful story of your life has been woven into mine--threads of wisdom

    and adventure and humor and romance. I like to unravel it and look at the
    colors. Lincoln is the strongest, longest thread in the fabric. Often I
    think of your description of the great, tender hands that lifted you to
    his shoulder when you were a boy, of the droll and kindly things that he
    said to you. I have laughed and cried recalling those hours of yours with
    Jack Kelso and Dr. John Allen and the rude young giant Abe, of which I
    have heard you tell so often as we sat in the firelight of a winter
    evening. Best of all I remember the light of your own
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