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London 6th Novr 1780 Monday morning
 I arrived in town yesterday.   This morning came
 to hand two of your letters: the one the so-much
regretted one from Czernobyl:  dated Aug. 1st the other dated Petersbourg 
 4th Sept.r the day after your return.   They 
 had been withheld from me very good intentions
 by a mistake of the same  with 
 that which sent my letters astray from you; with 
 the difference that my directions were in writing.
 Still however yours from Pultacra is wanting, 
I hope there was nothing in it very particular.
 I sit down to write without loss of time; for various
 reasons one of which is to sure you of it
 be not not too late, the trouble of writing over again
 the contention of that from Czernobyl: which by the 
 bye came to me under cover directed by you indeed
 (on strange brown paper) but without your 
 seal; indeed without any seal but a lump of 
 was over which while hot paper  with a letter or two on it  seemed to have 
 been stuck and then torn off.
  The circumstance you mention in yours of the 
 4th Sept.r is unfortunate indeed; but I do not see
 how it was to have been avoided.  As to the 
 anxiety you express at the apprehension of an abatement
 of my affection, that I trust has 
been considerably relieved at least if not altogether
 dispelled by my letter to your friend, 
 to whom I wrote the beginning of last month, 
 as I did to you about the latter end, after 
 having rece'd your note from Mittau.   Before 
 I cease to love you my Sam, I must have 
 ceased to love any thing that exists, beginning 
with myself.   But my affection for you were 
 if possible for it to be ten times stronger than 
 it is, could not prevent me from passing in 
 my own mind such judgment on your conduct
 as the data I have before inc, such as 
 they are, appear to call for: and in the case
---page break---
 
 in question, circumstances required that that judgment
 should be made known to you.
 I cannot for reasons not worth mentioning 
 write any thing very material at this present
 instant, and therefore here follows some ordinary 
 chit-chat.   Dining at Sir Paul's at Chertsey
 t'other day  there was  the rest of the company 
 consist'd of a Sr Chs & Lady Cocks or Cox. Sr 
 Ch. is M.P. Chief clerk of the ordnance and has 
 16000£ a year. In Worcestershire and Herefordshire If you don't know him already
 you will find him in the Court Calendar.
 Talking with Lady C. she told me of a brother
 she had who was then upon the point of having 
 it had left Sweden to go to Petersburg.   His 
 name was Poole which he changed to Carew
 or Carey for an estate of £5,000 a year.   he 
 had written to Lady C. to desire he to send him 
 one of Wedgwood's catalogues to give to Bergman.
 He is about 27, has been travelling there 5 
 years, and as she says is very assiduous in informing 
 himself of every thing.  I  has a 
 great thirst for knowledge.   It had  did  not happen 
 to be in my way to make much enquiry
 about him, but from what I happened to collect
 I shou'd imagine you would find him
 a very accomplished man.   if so, you might
 give me (if you happened to have nothing 
 else to do) some  estimable account of him, taking no 
 notice of this: not that it is of any other 
 consequence that that it would naturally give 
 pleasure to his Sister who seems to be a very 
 sensible agreeable woman.  She won my heart; 
 by the care she took of my eyes, which though in
other respects perfectly good require to be protected
 by screens from candles as well as from fire 
 but particularly from the latter.
| Identifier: | JB/539/104/001"JB/" can not be assigned to a declared number type with value 539. | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| 1780-11-06 | |||
| 539 | |||
| 104 | |||
| 001 | |||
| Correspondence | |||
| Jeremy Bentham | |||