Spiritist Review — 1867 · Allan Kardec
Chapter 98 of 109
Reply to Mr. S. B., of Marseille.
No account is taken of letters that are not ostensibly signed, or that do not bear a definite address, when the name is unknown. They are rejected.
This reply is addressed equally to a series of letters that bear the postmark of the Besançon road and that came daily during a certain time. If this notice reaches its author, he will be informed that, for the reason above, and given their length, they were not even read as they arrived; the person in charge of the correspondence set them aside, like all those that are surrounded with mystery and that, for this reason, are not considered as sufficiently serious to occupy one's time, to the detriment of works of real importance, which by themselves are already numerous enough. Allan Kardec.
Paris. – Typ. of Rouge frères, Dunon et Fresné, rue du Four-Saint-Germain, 43.