Papers of the Winthrop Family, Volume 1Note: you've followed an index reference to a note that, due to changes between the print and digital editions, may no longer be on page 396. Please look at all notes at the end of the document or documents on page 396.
1628-05-22
and my very good, and loveinge freind in the Lo: whome I blesse for my acquaintance with you; if it had bin his good pleasure, I would that had bin continued without any commerce, soe should love have bin continued without any breache therof.
The 21th of this instant of May 1 Rli. worth of wronge in the sale of Stewardes, surely if I were conscious to my self that euer I had done any man 5 li. worth of wronge to further my self I li. I should think the worse of my self soe longe as I live, much more my lovinge, and respected freind above any beinge that I know to further a meere stranger, and one so farre as I know or yet can heare from whome more may come then I expecte. I pray (Sir) weighe in the equall ballance of your iudgment what I shall write and I hope I shall make a sufficient apologie for my self. Sir the greatest complaynt that euer I made agaynst your woos.: further the stable wanted ground selleinge the barne, and outhowses thatchinge. I doe not see but a matter of iij li. vi s. viij d. will make all the howses in as good case as when I entered. mr. Fetherstoane takes notice of euery small matter not soe much but of the sealinge in the chambers, and the bowinge of the sparres in the backhowse roofe theise thinges were thus before my enterance, and for the sealinge of the green chamber I mended it once since I came, but agayne it is fallen downe for my promise duringe my beinge in it I was carefull to keepe the howse and howses in good repayre and I dare say when I left it xx s. would have performed my promise. Sir it is true I put in mr. Welles and as I thought for your wood. a yeare more s. fetched out of the backhowse lofte spared a litle. the 2d yeare he lopped 2 better loppes then euer I did in the 12, and all the headge neare the howse saved him a loppinge and sir I think all the wast rent you haue soe farre as I know vnlesse it be that in Lavinders hand who is sufficient to pay it, I have bin instant with him for it he putes me of somtymes with ill wordes, and sometymes with good, and as I am told he gives forth to some that he cares not what you can doe for it is more then you could doe to make your owne bond. I have here inclosed sent you his bond seinge I cannot by all meanes I can vse perswade him to payment, if you please to send downe a warit he shalbe arrested speedily. Good (Sir) give me leave it was neyther the plowinge nor the want of the reparations, that caused you to loose neare 200 li. in the sale of your land but your owne withstandinge by perswasion your first markit and chapman and your ouer hasty condiscendinge to the 2d peradventure he that once could say it is thus and thus bad can now say it is thus and thus good marcheantes that can trade for gayne beyond the seas know how to trade at home. Admitt the howse wantes 50 li. worth of reparations, as he would have it the ground hath bin plowed. The howse is here still in soe good fashion that he cannot sample it as it is for 2 of his 100 li. the wood and Tymber is here still worth 100 li. if it be all taken of the land is here still which if it were good may be good agayne 35 li. rent per annum he may have for it if he will have more I hope God (if I liveli. per annum, and yet vppon mr. Featherstoanes vrging of me I told him for 2 yeares I would give him 40tie In regard I had other groundes neare it, but neyther then or now doe I think it worth more. vppon your good conceipt of it (if it pleased your woos. the acre I dare not take it. I must needes say the howse is worse. I am not at all greived that mr. Babington had it not: but I am 399sorry you had not his 700 li. for it. mr. Babington is noe more to me then an other man but in common curtesie, but I dare vndertake for all his runninge, and fallinge from his word if you had but pased vntill I had come to towne I would have soe prevayled with him that by this you should have had 700 li. in your purse for it: but as you say that which is past cannot be recalled. much good may it doe him that hath it he knowes he hath a good penniworth of it: For the stuffe I cannot soe suddeinly send a noate of it my wife beinge abroade your half yeares rent (God willinge) I will send vp about midsummer which I take to be the tyme appoynted. from Jo: Easte I have noe certeyne answere, and thus suddeynly I cannot speake with him. the last tyme I spake with him I told him I did expect you in the country about this tyme, and then he told me he would give you satisfaction. I have made bould thus with large writeinge to hinder your greater imploymentes by reading. I would Sir you did but know how much greived I am at your vnkind if not vniust challenge if it had bin myne owne land I could have done noe more to improve it then I have done I would I had dwelt out of it at this tyme for
Through his marriage with Mary Forth, his first wife, Winthrop acquired a considerable estate at Great Stambridge, in Essex, where the Forths had long been settled; and the writer of this letter had evidently been a tenant of some part of this property. He is presumably the ’Goodman Hawes’ mentioned in Winthrop’s letter of March 2, 1629–30.
L. and L.
, I. 380.
W. 4. 65; 5
Collections
, I. 182–187.