3341 - Thomas Twining to Daniel Twining, 15 March 1790

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Colchester March 15. 1790.

Dear Brother

I have just been with Dr. F. & am happy
in being able to tell you that he is certainly, at present,
considerably better. He has been mending ever since I
wrote last, by slow degrees: to-day, for the first time, I found
a considerable alteration for the better. I dare not flatter
myself, that it will last; but I will hope the best. He
now swallows comfortably. "I wish, Sir," says the inestimable
Sally, "you had seen what a breakfast my master eat
this morning"! He had also a smooth & sleeping night,
without those wildnesses of head which he has lately
complained of so much.- I found him in good spirits
this morning, & I could not keep him from a great talking too much,
deal about the [illeg] business: which we think is

Details

Thomas Twining to Daniel Twining, 15 March 1790

Twining Family

Add MS 39930

British Library

1790

3

15

March. 15. 1790

Colchester [Essex, England]

People
How to Cite

To Cite this Letter

Thomas Twining to Daniel Twining, 15 March 1790, 1531790: British Library, Twining Family, Add MS 39930

To Cite this Edition

Material Identities, Social Bodies: Embodiment in British Letters c.1680-1820. Compiled by: Karen Harvey, Helen Esfandiary, Sarah Fox, Emily Vine, University of Birmingham. Project funded by the Leverhulme Trust (2021-2025, Ref. RPG-2020-163), https://socialbodies.bham.ac.uk.

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