Disgrifiad | Has nothing to add to the letter which he wrote last night, but having received hers of the 12th, he is in haste to remove two mistakes in itwhich if he could possibly help it, She should not lie under one minute. The fiest is an apprehension of a quarrel assure her that nothing could be further from his thoughts. All he meant by it was a chidinghe sent her upon a piece of conduct which he did not approve. The second thing is the needless compliment she mentions. Professes that he did not intend it as a compliment but as the just sense of his soul of that trouble and change and laying out money he continually put her to. Protests that there is no person living whose conversation he would not utterly renounce rather than give her the least umbrage. As for Johnny he will write to him and desire him to give the writer an account in Latin of the progress he has made at Ruthin, and if he can read and underrstand ordinary Latin with the same readinessas he does English, then he will send him to Oxford, if not, the writer would have him stay while he can. Desires that the children should write to him. Cannot fix the time of his return until the parliament is adjourned but 'will run away' as fast as he can; although his name is fixed among the Lent preachers he will get some Bishop to preach for him rather than stay so long from Bangor. |