Accession: L05453
Editorial Title: Mary Baker Eddy to Caroline D. Noyes, October 5, 1893
Author: Mary Baker Eddy 
Recipient: Caroline D. Noyes 
Date: October 5, 1893
Manuscript Description: Handwritten by Mary Baker Eddy on unlined Pleasant View stationery from Concord, New Hampshire.
Archival Note: This letter includes an archivist notation of “1893 (Postmark)”.
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L05453
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Reproduced from the archive of The Mary Baker Eddy Library
Beloved student

Stop all mental effort, or any kind, to get my addressEditorial Note: Mary Baker Eddy’s address to the World's Parliament of Religions at The World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. in the Parliament bookEditorial Note: John Henry Barrows,The History of the World’s Parliament of Religions, 2 vols.(Chicago: Parliament Publishing Company, 1893). Since the newspapers devoured it contrary to my solemn charge God has shown me by signs and wonders that it must not be published at this date The dose is too great the chemicalizationEditorial Note: “Chemicalization" is a term Mary Baker Eddy used to refer to a temporary stirring up of symptoms or process of “fermentation” as errors of various types are being destroyed. will do incalculable harm. This is evidently why God has always kept me from concentrating portions of my works and publishing them as students have so often begged me to do. Will you go to all the students interested in this and read them my letter to you, dear faithful servant as you have always been? M. A. M. needs taking up now by you all but not to address anyoneAs Written:any one only pour oil on the Waves a "peace be stillMark 4:39 And he arose, and rebuked the wind, and said unto the sea, Peace, be still. And the wind ceased, and there was a great calm. " (and reconcile Kimball to drop this matter so far as I am concerned leave out my address and put in what else he pleases)

lovingly
Mother
L05453
-
Reproduced from the archive of The Mary Baker Eddy Library
Beloved student

Stop all mental effort, or any kind, to get my addressEditorial Note: Mary Baker Eddy’s address to the World's Parliament of Religions at The World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. in the Parliament bookEditorial Note: John Henry Barrows,The History of the World’s Parliament of Religions, 2 vols.(Chicago: Parliament Publishing Company, 1893). Since the newspapers devoured it contrary to my solemn charge God has shown me by signs and wonders that it must not be published at this date The dose is too great the chemicalizationEditorial Note: “Chemicalization" is a term Mary Baker Eddy used to refer to a temporary stirring up of symptoms or process of “fermentation” as errors of various types are being destroyed. will do incalcu [?] Unclear or illegible lable harm. This is evidently why God has always kept me from concentrating portions of my works and publishing them as students have so often begged me to do. Will you go to all the students interested in this and read them my letter to you, dear faithful servant as you have always been? M. A. M. needs taking up now by you all but not to address any oneCorrected:anyone only pour oil on the Waves a "peace be stillMark 4:39 And he arose, and rebuked the wind, and said unto the sea, Peace, be still. And the wind ceased, and there was a great calm. " (and reconcile Kimball to drop this matter so far as I am concerned leave out my address and put in what else he pleases)

lovingly
Mother
 
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Mary Baker Eddy’s address to the World's Parliament of Religions at The World's Columbian Exposition in Chicago, Illinois. John Henry Barrows,The History of the World’s Parliament of Religions, 2 vols.(Chicago: Parliament Publishing Company, 1893) “Chemicalization" is a term Mary Baker Eddy used to refer to a temporary stirring up of symptoms or process of “fermentation” as errors of various types are being destroyed.