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Wordsworth, Dora (1804-1847) & Wordsworth, Mary (1770-1859). - Letter, from Rydal Mount, to Edward Quillinan (1791-1851), at Lee Priory, dated 8 November 1833. WLL / Wordsworth, Dora / 1 / 55
Rydal Mount My dear Mr Quillinan, I do not quite do your bidding as to answering your letter by return of post because it was received on Friday - and tho' I write today I shall not send it off till tomorrow when I may be able to give you some tidings of our Herefordshire friends from whom we have been looking for letters many days past. You can little tell the anxiety that has filled this house for many weeks past, & which alas still continues, for my Fathers poor eyes - the evening of the day on which I last wrote to dear when one considers how sparingly he eats - the little outdoor exercise he takes & the perpetual blisters that have been kept up behind the ears for nearly two months I think - & he is very patient on the whole but we have some difficulty in keeping up his spirits - but enough & a great deal too much on this melancholy subject & how unless I go beyond this house I am to find a more cheerful one I cannot tell - for dear Aunt has been ill again & in bed which she has not left for more than a fortnight - she is however much better today & we hope in a few days she may be able to sit up a short time - My Mother is well as her anxieties will allow & she will speak for herself on the other side the sheet & give the opinion of the wise heads on Lee or Boulogne - I know which I wish as children say but that's nothing The fair Edith is not yet married - & I dont pity her for the delay as her lover is living at Greta Hall where he has been since Augst & I suspect Lovers are much more agreeable Creatures then Husbands - Poor fell upon her nerves & for many months she was in most deplorable condition & now tho' so weak in body her spirits are greatly improved & she & her poor husband are look forward with hope to the birth of a third Infant in the early spring - Mr Coleridge is on the whole much better I dare say you may have heard of his visit to Cambridge at the meeting of the on Mr Stone's picture as a likeness - but it is a lovely thing beautiful picture & I am never wearied with looking upon so sweet & pure & lovely a thing - & I can see traces of what she was three years ago especially about the eyes - I wish our rooms had been larger & loftier for their sakes as they are not hung as advantageously as they ought to be - They are however a great delight to us & we Thankfully give them the best wall room we have till you recall them - Rotha's was copied by a Miss Wetherall a sort of very distant Cousin of my Fathers - the fault you speak of in the mouth is no fault of Boxall's but the length of the head is - it has frequently been noticed; by my Mother & Mrs Keate especially - I do wish the copy had been more worthy of the original but that is so excellent I always despaired of getting any thing done worth sending you - Mr Quillinan I did not say you had no mountains only none of our mountains - Ivy Cottage has again proved itself worthy of its name The Pasleys are stationary & likely to be so - the Godwins still at Spring Cottage Mrs Luff full as ever of selling her house - Dr Arnolds getting on famously & really a very handsome building - The Parrys at Grasmere & meaning to remain there till Spring - excellent people they are - The Cooksons are in sad affliction having lost their Father of Cholera in the Isle of Man - dear Elizabeth for whom the beautiful summer had worked such wonders is thrown back again & I fear we shall not be allowed to keep her long with us - The last two months Death has been very busy among our friend & acquaintances we have lost no less than nine from 70 years of age to three and twenty - Lionel Frayer was one - a youth of whom you must have heard us speak only twenty five - a clergyman & leaving a beautiful widow just twenty one & daily expecting to become a Mother - by the way he was Charlotte Smiths Grand-nephew & She is Sister to Edward Curwen's wife - They are going on happily & prosperously at Moresby but I fear I must sicken all my friends with my long histories of the connubial bliss in that quarter I am under promise of a visit to my niece, & to the Turtledoves at Greta Hall & I ought to have been at Leamington with the Hooks ere this - but of course I cannot even dream of leaving home as we are now situated nor shall I do so until Father can go too - we are very anxious that he should have the best advice I fear however it will be long before he can travel with safety - the season of the year being so much against him - Dear Man! he is not allowed to see his neighbours [page break (3 crossed writing)]he cant read he may not think - he ought not to doze in the day which he is sure to do when he is read to - & he cant walk in the garden when the sun is bright or when the air is sharp or when the wind is high - You say I am to give you Pray give my tenderst love to your Darlings - it was very good natured in them writing to me by you & I shall be delighted to receive their letter - We have no M.P.s in this neighbourhood or I would have enclosed a few lines for them - it is for them however better as it is - for what with receiving all the kind people that call to enquire after the Invalids - answering notes, & letters - reading to him - petting him & nursing him Mother & I have so much to do that our wits are quite a wandering & our Scrawls can be scarcely intelligible to elder heads & this you must receive as an excuse & Believe me ever your faithful & affectionate friend Dora Wordsworth Saturday Morning - they tell us the Eye is going on well & to be sure he suffers no pain in it but he can see nothing with it - & it looks frightfully inflamed we must however be hopeful - certainly it was a hundred times worse a month age & it recovered from that attack - Aunt is much better this morning - Will you ask the children when they next write to me just to draw on their sheet of paper the outline of the sole of your shoe - not of a great walking shoe - but of a house shoe or slipper. No news from Brin [Mary Wordsworth's hand] No my dear friend, you are not Regarding the question put to the "Divan" what can I say - you well know that we never relished the darlings being brought up among the "French folk" - but there they are, & if they are to return in the Spring - it seems of little consequence (if they do not dislike crossing the Channel) whether they pass the winter at Lee or Boulogne - further then they will see their Relatives - as to Lee (as far as they are concerned) being a God bless you all! - What a sweet Picture dear Mimas is - it makes me jealous when I think of Ro's - Dora will have told you that it is at Carlisle, & has been since yours arrived - ever affly yours M.W. Edward Quillinan Esqre Lee Priory Wingham Kent
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Object summary: WLL / Wordsworth, Dora / 1 / 55
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Ref. wll-wordsworth-dora-1.55
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