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to kennel in your bed - Is not this free and easy?</p> | to kennel in your bed - Is not this free and easy?</p> | ||
However he shall be made to answer - the Lord is a gracious | <p>However he shall be made to answer - the Lord is a gracious | ||
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Lord and out of evil bringeth good. He (I mean not the Lord | Lord and out of evil bringeth good. He (I mean not the Lord | ||
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do with all his heart - Blanquet perhaps may not stay above | do with all his heart - Blanquet perhaps may not stay above | ||
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a fortnight in London. | a fortnight in London. P. talks of returning <add>to London</add> in about a week; but | ||
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if he does not of his own accord you must make him for the purpose | |||
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of introducing you. I don't doubt but what you could get B. to | |||
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let you have the rummaging of his Russian papers.</p> | |||
<p>Interrogate P. about Keppel - what I have collected from him | |||
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confirms your stories, & in part accounts for them.</p> | |||
<p>Swede has been introduced to Baron Dimsdale - not the | |||
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Son to whom he remains yet to be introduced, but the old man | |||
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who has behaved to him with cordiality & promised him all sorts | |||
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of letters and introductions.</p> | |||
<p>I have got a most divine Bookbinder of Swede's recommending | |||
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— Bring with you any books you have unbound — Polish | |||
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Letters you have - I want to bind them with Lind's other works.</p> | |||
''This Page Has Not Been Transcribed Yet'' | ''This Page Has Not Been Transcribed Yet'' |
Nov. 21. 1778. Linc. Inn
The sanglier who will give you this came and attacked
me last night at 10 o'clock — seeing no remedy I put him
to kennel in your bed - Is not this free and easy?
However he shall be made to answer - the Lord is a gracious
Lord and out of evil bringeth good. He (I mean not the Lord
but the Sanglier) is upon intimate terms with one Blanquet or
Blanket a 2d Lieut:t on board the Victory - Blanquet was intimate
with Adm. Knowles and was over with him one summer
in Russia. He was with him when he died got a great
many of his papers and regrets that he did not get more. He is
a free hearty, communicative harum-scarum fellow - For further
particulars I refer you to the Sanglier - pump him well - I proposed
to him to introduce you to Blanquet — that he would
do with all his heart - Blanquet perhaps may not stay above
a fortnight in London. P. talks of returning to London in about a week; but
if he does not of his own accord you must make him for the purpose
of introducing you. I don't doubt but what you could get B. to
let you have the rummaging of his Russian papers.
Interrogate P. about Keppel - what I have collected from him
confirms your stories, & in part accounts for them.
Swede has been introduced to Baron Dimsdale - not the
Son to whom he remains yet to be introduced, but the old man
who has behaved to him with cordiality & promised him all sorts
of letters and introductions.
I have got a most divine Bookbinder of Swede's recommending
— Bring with you any books you have unbound — Polish
Letters you have - I want to bind them with Lind's other works.
This Page Has Not Been Transcribed Yet
Identifier: | JB/538/259/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 538. |
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1778-11-21 |
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538 |
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259 |
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001 |
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Correspondence |
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Jeremy Bentham |
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