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Documents filtered by: Author="Waterhouse, Benjamin" AND Period="post-Madison Presidency"
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Your letter of the 26 th of June I have read again & again, with renewed satisfaction ; and...
I received your letter with pleasure, and read it with high satisfaction. You have paid the...
Habituated as I have long been to consider your judgement as infallible, I have not found it...
In reflecting on my late journey south, I found one omission to regret, and especially as I...
I have just read in one of the Boston News-papers, a paragraph to this effect—that through the...
Here send for your acceptance a production of early life, being my inaugural oration, when...
Having reached home but a few days since, I seize the first day of leisure to express to you, and...
To read every letter sent to you must be no small task; but to read every book which vanity may...
It was a saying of one of the wise men of antiquity that a Great Book was a Great Evil ; thereby...
I, in some measure, regret that you have no spare niche for the Rev d M r Bertrum, yet I should...
I noticed not long since in the Newspapers, that the venerable Mr Madison was elected President...
The Rev. Joseph P. Bertrum, an Englishman of the established church, has an inclination to become...
Hearing that your rheumatism was no better, I hasten to say that instead of the Volatile Tincture...
Considering you the head of the University in your State, I send for its Library a volume I have...
A man occupying so large a space in the world’s estimation as M r Jefferson , must expect to have...
I read your letter of the 19 th July with pleasure, and though at first disappointed, I cannot...
Accept my most cordial thanks for your truly friendly epistle. I loose not a moment in answering...
Bearing in mind your lame wrist, and that you are a dozen years older than myself, & that you...
I seize the first leisure time since my return (for I tarried more than a week in New York with...
Your letter justifying & glorifying the character of Junius Brutus is the most masterly apology...
I rejoice, and so will you, that I am enabled to inform you that our aged friend M r Adams has...
I cannot sufficiently thank you for the fresh instance of your friendship in writting to Prest....
Ever since certain evil minded persons entered the Navy-yard at Charlestown, and beheaded the...
I here send for your acceptance a copy from my last edition of the Lecture on the pernicious...
D r Waterhouse having long had “ a concern of mind “ to visit the shrine of S t James and S t...
Putting off writing is like postnoing a visit,—if you let it alone too long you know not how to...
I here send for your acceptance a copy from a new edition of my Lecture on the pernicious effects...
I hate the idea of teazing men in high office with letters of individual import, when they are...
Although answering of letters may have become an irksome task, the reading them may sometimes be...