★ Find a new page on our Untranscribed Manuscripts list.
No edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(3 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown) | |||
Line 3: | Line 3: | ||
<!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- ENTER TRANSCRIPTION BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
<p> <sic>L<hi rend="superscript">d</hi></sic> L. and the ladies are got back to Bowood from their<lb/>late excursion in to the North. I am expected there, but <lb/>I am in doubts about going. If I were to go, I should<lb/>stay as long as they did which will be <sic>till</sic> the 1<hi rend="superscript">st</hi> of <sic>Nov<hi rend="superscript">r</hi></sic><lb/> | <p> <sic>L<hi rend="superscript">d</hi></sic> L. and the ladies are got back to Bowood from their<lb/>late excursion in to the North. I am expected there, but <lb/>I am in doubts about going. If I were to go, I should<lb/>stay as long as they did which will be <sic>till</sic> the 1<hi rend="superscript">st</hi> of <sic>Nov<hi rend="superscript">r</hi></sic><lb/>Are you <hi rend="underline">erratic</hi> at all this summer, or altogether stationery?</p> | ||
<p> A friend of mine is just returned from Paris where he <lb/> <!-- small area torn away --> <gap/> been to the Jubilee — He and Smith the Number <gap/><!-- word obscured by seal --><lb/> <gap/> travelled together. They were at several of <gap/><lb/>public meetings in the provinces and were every where in <lb/>quality of Englishmen treated with great distinction and cordiality.<lb/> Cherbourg he was at, and found it a <sic>compleat</sic><lb/>Port. The <foreign>Marquis de la Fayette</foreign> professes an antipathy<lb/>to the English and is violent for war: but they say he has<lb/>lost a good deal of reputation as a General and man of <lb/>business by the Jubilee which was very ill conducted, though<lb/>the people were so very generally well affected to the Revolution<lb/> as not to be willing to find fault.</p> | |||
<p> <foreign>Adieu</foreign> — Remember me respectfully and affectionately at <lb/>the Heath — not forgetting the honourable gentleman, when<lb/>he happens to make one.</p> | |||
<p> <sic>Sat.<hi rend="superscript">y</hi></sic> Aug. 14 <del>inst</del><hi rend="superscript">th</hi> 1790. Bedford Row</p> | |||
<!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | <!-- DO NOT EDIT BELOW THIS LINE --> | ||
{{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}} | {{Metadata:{{PAGENAME}}}}{{Completed}} |
Ld L. and the ladies are got back to Bowood from their
late excursion in to the North. I am expected there, but
I am in doubts about going. If I were to go, I should
stay as long as they did which will be till the 1st of Novr
Are you erratic at all this summer, or altogether stationery?
A friend of mine is just returned from Paris where he
been to the Jubilee — He and Smith the Number
travelled together. They were at several of
public meetings in the provinces and were every where in
quality of Englishmen treated with great distinction and cordiality.
Cherbourg he was at, and found it a compleat
Port. The Marquis de la Fayette professes an antipathy
to the English and is violent for war: but they say he has
lost a good deal of reputation as a General and man of
business by the Jubilee which was very ill conducted, though
the people were so very generally well affected to the Revolution
as not to be willing to find fault.
Adieu — Remember me respectfully and affectionately at
the Heath — not forgetting the honourable gentleman, when
he happens to make one.
Sat.y Aug. 14 instth 1790. Bedford Row
Identifier: | JB/541/142/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 541. |
|||
---|---|---|---|
1790-08-14 |
|||
541 |
|||
142 |
|||
001 |
|||
Correspondence |
|||
Jeremy Bentham |
|||