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(Created page with "Hartford Oct. 2nd, 48 Dear brother Isaac I think I owe you an apology for so long silence, but I knew Lucy wrote you an account of our journey home, safe arrival &c. and my h...") |
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I think I owe you an apology for so long silence, but I knew Lucy wrote you an account of our journey home, safe arrival &c. and my hands as well as mind have been in full employ ever since: I suppose you have heard by this time, that I have given up any school and left Bangor for a long tour. | I think I owe you an apology for so long silence, but I knew Lucy wrote you an account of our journey home, safe arrival &c. and my hands as well as mind have been in full employ ever since: I suppose you have heard by this time, that I have given up any school and left Bangor for a long tour. | ||
Several circumstances have led me along, step by step, to this conclusion, and though I have shed many tears at the thought of being a stranger and so far from you all, - we have as a family always enjoyed a great deal in each other and have never been far separated yet I cannot but feel that I am in the right course, Providence has it seems to me, made my way plain. I am not going away to enjoy more, - I look forward to trials, - less of ease less of happiness, except that which comes from the consciousness of doing good, of being in the path of duty. | Several circumstances have led me along, step by step, to this conclusion, and though I have shed many tears at the thought of being a stranger and so far from you all, - we have as a family always enjoyed a great deal in each other and have never been far separated yet I cannot but feel that I am in the right course, Providence has it seems to me, made my way plain. I am not going away to enjoy more, - I look forward to trials, - less of ease less of happiness, except that which comes from the consciousness of doing good, of being in the path of duty. | ||
Perhaps I have been too much in a state of repose; convenience, | Perhaps I have been too much in a state of repose; convenience, the faculties of the mind - the impulses of the heart, may need to be roused to the performance of their proper work; I have been very happy the last few years particularly, and have been perhaps too much disposed to rest in the gratification of my own feelings and wishes without enough considering that I am not my |
Latest revision as of 02:34, 20 October 2020
Hartford Oct. 2nd, 48 Dear brother Isaac I think I owe you an apology for so long silence, but I knew Lucy wrote you an account of our journey home, safe arrival &c. and my hands as well as mind have been in full employ ever since: I suppose you have heard by this time, that I have given up any school and left Bangor for a long tour. Several circumstances have led me along, step by step, to this conclusion, and though I have shed many tears at the thought of being a stranger and so far from you all, - we have as a family always enjoyed a great deal in each other and have never been far separated yet I cannot but feel that I am in the right course, Providence has it seems to me, made my way plain. I am not going away to enjoy more, - I look forward to trials, - less of ease less of happiness, except that which comes from the consciousness of doing good, of being in the path of duty. Perhaps I have been too much in a state of repose; convenience, the faculties of the mind - the impulses of the heart, may need to be roused to the performance of their proper work; I have been very happy the last few years particularly, and have been perhaps too much disposed to rest in the gratification of my own feelings and wishes without enough considering that I am not my