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Dearest of Friends
Shall I tell my dearest that tears of joy filld my
Eyes this morning at the sight of his well known hand, the first line which has
blessed my Sight since the his four months absence during which time
I have never been able to learn a word from him, or my dear son till about ten
days ago an english paper taken in a prize and brought into
Salem containd an account under the
Paris News of your arrival at the abode of Dr. Franklin, and
last week a Carteel from
Halifax brought Capt. Welch of the
Boston who informd that he left you
well the Eleventh of March, that he had Letters for me but distroyed them, when he was taken, and this is all the
information I have ever been able to obtain. Our Enemies have told us the
vessel was taken and named the frigate which took her and that she was carried
into
Plimouth. I have lived a life of fear and anxiety ever since you
left me, not more than a week after your absence the Horrid Story
of Doctor Franklins assassination was received from
France and sent by Mr. Purveyance of
Baltimore to Congress and to
Boston. Near two months before that was contradicted, then we
could not hear a word from the Boston, and most people gave her up as taken or
lost, thus has my mind been agitated like a troubled sea. You will easily
Conceive how gratefull to me your favour of April 25 and those of our Son were to me and
mine,tho I regret your short warning and the little
time you had to write, by which means I know not how you fared upon your Voiage, what reception you have met with, (not even from
the Ladies, tho you profess yourself an admirer of
them,) and a thousand circumstances which I wish to know, and which are
always perticuliarly interesting
to [a] near connextion. I must
request you always to be minute and to write me by every conveyance. Some
perhaps which may appear unlikely to reach [me] will be the
first to arrive. I own I was mortified at so Short a Letter, but I quiet my
Heart with thinking there are many more upon their passage to me. I have wrote
Seven before this
But in this country it was too much the [illegible] you need not be told how much female Education is
neglected, nor how fashonable it has been to ridicule Female learning,tho I
acknowledge it my happiness to be connected with a person of a more generous
mind and liberal Sentiments. I cannot forbear transcribing a few Generous
Sentiments which I lately met with upon this Subject. If women says the writer
are to be esteemed our Enemies, methinks it is an Ignoble Cowardice thus to
disarm them and not allow them the same weapons we use ourselves, but if they
deserve the title of our Friends a tis an inhumane
Tyranny to debar them of priviliges of ingenious Education which would also
render their Friendship so much the more delightfull to themselves and others us.
Nature is seldom observed to be niggardly
Whose mentor like appearence age & philosophy lead the on oft certainly [illegible] Ladies of France to suppose they embracing the God of wisdom in a Humane form but I who own that I never yet wish'd an Angle whom I loved a Man, shall be full as content if those divine Honours are omitted.
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