The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 6 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 705 pages of information about The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 6.

The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 6 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 705 pages of information about The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 6.

To drop metaphors, I am sure you have done wisely.  The very spirit of your epistle speaks that you have a weight off your mind.  I have one on mine.  The cash in hand, which, as * * * * * * less truly says, burns in my pocket.  I feel queer at returning it (who does not?).  You feel awkward at re-taking it (who ought not?) Is there no middle way of adjusting this fine embarrassment?  I think I have hit upon a medium to skin the sore place over, if not quite to heal it.  You hinted that there might be something under L10 by and by accruing to me Devil’s Money.  You are sanguine—­say L7:  10s.—­that I entirely renounce and abjure all future interest in, I insist upon it, and “by Him I will not name” I won’t touch a penny of it.  That will split your Loss one half—­and leave me conscientious possessor of what I hold.  Less than your assent to this, no proposal will I accept of.

The Rev. Mr.------, whose name you have left illegible (is it
Sea-gull?) never sent me any book on Christ’s Hospit. by which I could
dream that I was indebted to him for a dedication.  Did G.D. send his
penny tract to me to convert me to Unitarianism?  Dear blundering soul!
why I am as old a one-Goddite as himself.  Or did he think his cheap
publication would bring over the Methodists over the way here?  However
I’ll give it to the pew-opener (in whom I have a little interest,) to
hand over to the Clerk, whose wife she sometimes drinks tea with, for
him to lay before the Deacon, who exchanges the civility of the hat with
him, for him to transmit to the Minister, who shakes hand with him out
of Chapel, and he, in all odds, will ——­ with it.

I wish very much to see you.  I leave it to you to come how you will.  We shall be very glad (we need not repeat) to see your sister, or sisters, with you—­but for you individually I will just hint that a dropping in to Tea unlook’d for about 5, stopping bread-n-cheese and gin-and-water, is worth a thousand Sundays.  I am naturally miserable on a Sunday, but a week day evening and Supper is like old times.  Set out now, and give no time to deliberation—­

P.S.—­The 2d vol. of Elia is delightful(-ly bound, I mean) and quite cheap.  Why, man, ’tis a Unique—­

If I write much more I shall expand into an article, which I cannot afford to let you have so cheap.

By the by, to shew the perverseness of human will—­while I thought I must furnish one of those accursed things monthly, it seemed a Labour above Hercules’s “Twelve” in a year, which were evidently Monthly Contributions.  Now I am emancipated, I feel as if I had a thousand Essays swelling within me.  False feelings both.

I have lost Mr. Aitken’s Town address—­do you know it?  Is he there?

Your ex-Lampoonist, or Lamb-punnist—­from Enfield, Oct. 24, or “last day but one for receiving articles that can be inserted.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Works of Charles and Mary Lamb — Volume 6 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.