B-250-3
Philadelphia 1st mo 3rd 1815
Dear Aunt,
I received thy acceptable letter, and was pleased
to hear you thought of coming this way; so that we expect to
see you; or rather indulge the hope that it will be so. the weather
has been remarkably fine, it would be very grateful to our
feelings to know that you had the benefit of it in journeying
towards us; but we much not be too anxious, lest it should end
in disappointment, we do want to see you very much.
I have attended to thy several messages, cousin M Morton
seem d pleased to hear from thee, and spoke as if she had
thought of writing to thee, she send sher love, her daughter
Hetty is now at home, Robert is at Westown school, thought
he does not seem to like it much.,
Samuel Smith said he was pleased to hear that you had
no reason to doubt the propriety of your being at Kendal;
that he believed you had not an external motive in it,
that he had no doubt Unkle Thomas had been very useful
there, and he did not expect there was many men so qualified
as he is for the undertaking. His wife seem d to unite, adding
that she thought Charity was not behind him William