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imported>Beth O'D
(Created page with "Boston July 18th 1839 Dear Brother I received your letter in due season and was happy to learn from it your good health, good spirits and I hurt good progress. it friend start...")
 
imported>Beth O'D
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Sister Ann July 28th Boston 1839
{{side of letter - left}}
Bangor
Ing 1839
Boston July 18th 1839
Boston July 18th 1839
Dear Brother
Dear Brother
I received your letter in due season and was happy to learn from it your good health, good spirits and I hurt good progress. it friend starts tomorrow for Bangor, and I improve the opportunity to scribble a few lines in answer to yours, but you must not expect a very long, or a very sensible letter this time, for I have only two hours in which to finish the letter to Mother and this, and, besides, a little accident happened to one of my eyes a day or two since, which makes it a little painful when closely applying myself to writing or reading. We have not heard from Mother since I wrote you, but expect to every day. We are all well, James has had an ill time but is better, Almeda is pretty well now, but cannot walk far; little Lucy is not very well to day, owning to the heat perhaps; sister Lucy enjoys herself very well, has not got much acquainted yet; it seems rather odd to me at first to go to meeting and about, with a sister taller than myself; I suppose 'you have' grown out of my knowledge quite as much as she has: but you are old enough to obtain the growth and stature of a man- a tall man- I like to see a tall man,-but be sure and have your intellectual and moral growth correspond with your physical, and then you will be a man indeed.
I received your letter in due season and was happy to learn from it your good health, good spirits and I hurt good progress. it friend starts tomorrow for Bangor, and I improve the opportunity to scribble a few lines in answer to yours, but you must not expect a very long, or a very sensible letter this time, for I have only two hours in which to finish the letter to Mother and this, and, besides, a little accident happened to one of my eyes a day or two since, which makes it a little painful when closely applying myself to writing or reading. We have not heard from Mother since I wrote you, but expect to every day. We are all well, James has had an ill time but is better, Almeda is pretty well now, but cannot walk far; little Lucy is not very well to day, owning to the heat perhaps; sister Lucy enjoys herself very well, has not got much acquainted yet; it seems rather odd to me at first to go to meeting and about, with a sister taller than myself; I suppose 'you have' grown out of my knowledge quite as much as she has: but you are old enough to obtain the growth and stature of a man- a tall man- I like to see a tall man,-but be sure and have your intellectual and moral growth correspond with your physical, and then you will be a man indeed.
We had at Sabbath school celebration of the 4th which was very interesting & with which Lucy was exceedingly delighted, particularly the singing which was performed entirely by about a hundred little girls & which was really very fine. Did you read an account of the steamboat excursion of the sabbath schools of New York? The great temperance dinner you have I suppose seen a notice of: it is said to have been the greatest occasion of the kind ever known here. Mr. Whipple and Bush attended it, and James probably would, but he wished
We had at Sabbath school celebration of the 4th which was very interesting & with which Lucy was exceedingly delighted, particularly the singing which was performed entirely by about a hundred little girls & which was really very fine. Did you read an account of the steamboat excursion of the sabbath schools of New York? The great temperance dinner you have I suppose seen a notice of: it is said to have been the greatest occasion of the kind ever known here. Mr. Whipple and Bush attended it, and James probably would, but he wished

Revision as of 13:19, 12 June 2020

Template:Side of letter - right Sister Ann July 28th Boston 1839

Template:Side of letter - left Bangor Ing 1839

Boston July 18th 1839 Dear Brother I received your letter in due season and was happy to learn from it your good health, good spirits and I hurt good progress. it friend starts tomorrow for Bangor, and I improve the opportunity to scribble a few lines in answer to yours, but you must not expect a very long, or a very sensible letter this time, for I have only two hours in which to finish the letter to Mother and this, and, besides, a little accident happened to one of my eyes a day or two since, which makes it a little painful when closely applying myself to writing or reading. We have not heard from Mother since I wrote you, but expect to every day. We are all well, James has had an ill time but is better, Almeda is pretty well now, but cannot walk far; little Lucy is not very well to day, owning to the heat perhaps; sister Lucy enjoys herself very well, has not got much acquainted yet; it seems rather odd to me at first to go to meeting and about, with a sister taller than myself; I suppose 'you have' grown out of my knowledge quite as much as she has: but you are old enough to obtain the growth and stature of a man- a tall man- I like to see a tall man,-but be sure and have your intellectual and moral growth correspond with your physical, and then you will be a man indeed. We had at Sabbath school celebration of the 4th which was very interesting & with which Lucy was exceedingly delighted, particularly the singing which was performed entirely by about a hundred little girls & which was really very fine. Did you read an account of the steamboat excursion of the sabbath schools of New York? The great temperance dinner you have I suppose seen a notice of: it is said to have been the greatest occasion of the kind ever known here. Mr. Whipple and Bush attended it, and James probably would, but he wished