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I thank you for that excellent mixture of truth advice, and
raillery contain’d in your long letter, which ought to have been answerd
immediately, but being so well apprized of your patients’ case you will the more
readily forgive his neglect, which has chiefly proceeded from absolute inability
to think or feel in the right humour. Let this at last assure you that I recieve
your friendship and your castigation in good part; and shall be right glad to
see you here. And be you further assur’d that I am much
better, though the occasions of my late sorrow are by no means removed, This may
appear unaccountable, but cannot be explaind here. I struggle with pecuniary
difficulties for some months longer. My Bookselling concerns are critically
situated, and I fear may lead to litigation, and I hate Law as a patient in
Hydrophobia hates water. The preservation of my life untill March is of vital
consequence to my family; I therefore rejoice in being this far amended, and
think I shall yet live to cheat the Booksellers, if not ‘to dig in the earth for
my lost Muse’ Some parts of your advice I cannot fullfill, we have neither Cat,
nor regular Fish kettle, and slaming the Doors would be no novelty, for the wind
does that from morning till night.
Messrs Weston & Inskip are highly pleased with your
letter, and have urged me to write sooner. I have just sent my Boy to a school, which is
one small anxiety off my mind. Perhaps I may be in London before March, but not
if I can possibly avoid it.
Darkness is coming upon us, and the letter-bag is making up.