+is a special delimiter that separates the headers you have specified
+from the text. Whatever follows this line is the text of the message;
+the headers precede it. The delimiter line itself does not appear in
+the message actually sent. The text used for the delimiter line is
+controlled by the variable `mail-header-separator'.
+
+ Here is an example of what the headers and text in the `*mail*'
+buffer might look like.
+
+ To: rms@mc
+ CC: mly@mc, rg@oz
+ Subject: The XEmacs User's Manual
+ --Text follows this line--
+ Please ignore this message.
+
+\1f
+File: xemacs.info, Node: Mail Headers, Next: Mail Mode, Prev: Mail Format, Up: Sending Mail
+
+Mail Header Fields
+==================
+
+ There are several header fields you can use in the `*mail*' buffer.
+Each header field starts with a field name at the beginning of a line,
+terminated by a colon. It does not matter whether you use upper or
+lower case in the field name. After the colon and optional whitespace
+comes the contents of the field.
+
+`To'
+ This field contains the mailing addresses of the message.
+
+`Subject'
+ The contents of the `Subject' field should be a piece of text that
+ says what the message is about. Subject fields are useful because
+ most mail-reading programs can provide a summary of messages,
+ listing the subject of each message but not its text.
+
+`CC'
+ This field contains additional mailing addresses to send the
+ message to, but whose readers should not regard the message as
+ addressed to them.
+
+`BCC'
+ This field contains additional mailing addresses to send the
+ message to, but which should not appear in the header of the
+ message actually sent.
+
+`FCC'
+ This field contains the name of one file (in Unix mail file
+ format) to which a copy of the message should be appended when the
+ message is sent.
+
+`From'
+ Use the `From' field to say who you are, when the account you are
+ using to send the mail is not your own. The contents of the
+ `From' field should be a valid mailing address, since replies will
+ normally go there.
+
+`Reply-To'
+ Use the `Reply-To' field to direct replies to a different address,
+ not your own. `From' and `Reply-To' have the same effect on where
+ replies go, but they convey a different meaning to the person who
+ reads the message.
+
+`In-Reply-To'
+ This field contains a piece of text describing a message you are
+ replying to. Some mail systems can use the information to
+ correlate related pieces of mail. This field is normally filled
+ in by your mail handling package when you are replying to a
+ message and you never need to think about it.
+
+The `To', `CC', `BCC' and `FCC' fields can appear any number of times,
+to specify many places to send the message.
+
+The `To', `CC', and `BCC', fields can have continuation lines. All the
+lines starting with whitespace, following the line on which the field
+starts, are considered part of the field. For example,
+
+ To: foo@here, this@there,
+ me@gnu.cambridge.mass.usa.earth.spiral3281
+
+If you have a `~/.mailrc' file, Emacs scans it for mail aliases the
+first time you try to send mail in an Emacs session. Emacs expands
+aliases found in the `To', `CC', and `BCC' fields where appropriate.
+You can set the variable `mail-abbrev-mailrc-file' to the name of the
+file with mail aliases. If `nil', `~/.mailrc' is used.
+
+ Your `.mailrc' file ensures that word-abbrevs are defined for each
+of your mail aliases when point is in a `To', `CC', `BCC', or `From'
+field. The aliases are defined in your `.mailrc' file or in a file
+specified by the MAILRC environment variable if it exists. Your mail
+aliases expand any time you type a word-delimiter at the end of an
+abbreviation.
+
+ In this version of Emacs, what you see is what you get: in contrast
+to some other versions, no abbreviations are expanded after you have
+sent the mail. This means you don't suffer the annoyance of having the
+system do things behind your back--if the system rewrites an address
+you typed, you know it immediately, instead of after the mail has been
+sent and it's too late to do anything about it. For example, you will
+never again be in trouble because you forgot to delete an old alias
+from your `.mailrc' and a new local user is given a userid which
+conflicts with one of your aliases.
+
+ Your mail alias abbrevs are in effect only when point is in an
+appropriate header field. The mail aliases will not expand in the body
+of the message, or in other header fields. The default mode-specific
+abbrev table `mail-mode-abbrev-table' is used instead if defined. That
+means if you have been using mail-mode specific abbrevs, this code will
+not adversely affect you. You can control which header fields the
+abbrevs are used in by changing the variable `mail-abbrev-mode-regexp'.
+
+ If auto-fill mode is on, abbrevs wrap at commas instead of at word
+boundaries, and header continuation lines will be properly indented.
+
+ You can also insert a mail alias with
+`mail-interactive-insert-alias'. This function, which is bound to `C-c
+C-a', prompts you for an alias (with completion) and inserts its
+expansion at point.
+
+ In this version of Emacs, it is possible to have lines like the
+following in your `.mailrc' file:
+
+ alias someone "John Doe <doe@quux.com>"
+
+ That is, if you want an address to have embedded spaces, simply
+surround it with double-quotes. The quotes are necessary because the
+format of the `.mailrc' file uses spaces as address delimiters.
+
+ Aliases in the `.mailrc' file may be nested. For example, assume you
+define aliases like:
+ alias group1 fred ethel
+ alias group2 larry curly moe
+ alias everybody group1 group2
+
+ When you now type `everybody' on the `To' line, it will expand to:
+ fred, ethyl, larry, curly, moe
+
+ Aliases may contain forward references; the alias of `everybody' in
+the example above can precede the aliases of `group1' and `group2'.
+
+ In this version of Emacs, you can use the `source' `.mailrc' command
+for reading aliases from some other file as well.
+
+ Aliases may contain hyphens, as in `"alias foo-bar foo@bar"', even
+though word-abbrevs normally cannot contain hyphens.
+
+ To read in the contents of another `.mailrc'-type file from Emacs,
+use the command `M-x merge-mail-aliases'. The `rebuild-mail-aliases'
+command is similar, but deletes existing aliases first.
+
+ If you want multiple addresses separated by a string other than `,'
+(a comma), then set the variable `mail-alias-separator-string' to it.
+This has to be a comma bracketed by whitespace if you want any kind of
+reasonable behavior.
+
+ If the variable `mail-archive-file-name' is non-`nil', it should be
+a string naming a file. Each time you start to edit a message to send,
+an `FCC' field is entered for that file. Unless you remove the `FCC'
+field, every message is written into that file when it is sent.