3343 - Thomas Twining to Daniel Twining, 23 March 1790

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Colchester March 23 1790
Dear Brother,
I was going to write to you last night, but,
I found Dr. F. so ill & low yesterday, that I determined to wait till
for the chance of a better account to-day. I am glad I did; for I found
him somewhat better this morning, though still bad enough. I sate
with him yesterday a good while. His spirits were sadly depleted;
but I had the satisfaction to hear him say, when I left him, that he
thought he felt himself better: and to-day he appears to be better, & had
a better night. He has been obliged to discontinue Dr. Fordyce's medicine.
Newell tells me, he hopes, & thinks, that the Doctor's throat will come
to an external suppuration, which will relieve him, he says, for a
considerable time, at least. If this should happen within, there
will be danger of suffocation. The Doctor himself seems [illeg]
that the disease has reached his lungs. God knows. What he suffers,
body & mind, in a great deal. It is some comfort to me that
I seldom see him, without leaving him in seemingly, better spirits
than I find him, & drawing him from himself into some chearful

Details

Thomas Twining to Daniel Twining, 23 March 1790

Twining Family

Add MS 39930

British Library

1790

3

23

March. 23. 1790

Colchester [Essex, England]

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How to Cite

To Cite this Letter

Thomas Twining to Daniel Twining, 23 March 1790, 2331790: 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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