| Description | Respected Sir, Perceiving by a letter I received last night from Mr. Woodward, that you have been apprized of the return of your Father’s complaint; and being well assured that it will be a great satisfaction to you to receive a more favorable report on this interesting subject, I feel a lively pleasure in stating to you, that the accounts of this morning are very agreeable: your Father has had a tolerably comfortable night; feels himself much refreshed; is exempt from extreme pain; and indulges a hope that to-morrow it may be in his power to reply, with his own hand, to a letter he has had the happiness to receive from you, which at present he is prevented from doing by the measures Mr. Freer has adopted to prevent a relapse. I hope your late indisposition, which has been glanced at by Mr. Woodward, is perfectly removed, being, Respected Sir, your obliged and obedient Servant, Wm. Cheshire Soho House, March 15th, 1807. [Edited transcript.] |