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    • Adams, Abigail
    • Adams, Abigail
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    • Adams, John
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    • Colonial

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Documents filtered by: Author="Adams, Abigail" AND Author="Adams, Abigail" AND Recipient="Adams, John" AND Period="Colonial"
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I dare not express to you at 300 hundred miles distance how ardently I long for your return. I...
I have just returnd from a visit to my Brother, with my Father who carried me there the day...
Five Weeks have past and not one line have I received. I had rather give a dollar for a letter by...
I am very impatient to receive a letter from you. You indulged me so much in that Way in your...
The great distance between us, makes the time appear very long to me. It seems already a month...
I know not where this will find you whether upon the road, or at Phylidelphia, but where-ever it...
Alass! How many snow banks devide thee and me and my warmest wishes to see thee will not melt one...
The Doctor talks of Setting out tomorrow for New Braintree. I did not know but that he might...
When I wrote you by the Doctor I was in hopes that I should have been out the next day, but my...
I am much obliged to you for the care you have taken about help. I am very willing to submit to...
Welcome, Welcome thrice welcome is Lysander to Braintree, but ten times more so would he be at...
Your desire that I would write every Opportunity is punctually observed by me, And I comply with...
Your Friendly Epistle reach’d me a fryday morning, it came like an Infernal Mesenger, thro fire...
Why my good Man, thou hast the curiosity of a Girl. Who could have believed that only a slight...
I think I write to you every Day. Shall not I make my Letters very cheep; don’t you light your...
Mr. Cranch informs me that Hones will go to Town tomorrow, and that I may not miss one...
Here am I all alone, in my Chamber, a mere Nun I assure you, after professing myself thus will it...
If our wishes could have conveyed you to us, you would not have been absent to Day. Mr. Cranch...
How do you now? For my part, I feel much easier than I did an hour ago, My Unkle haveing given me...
You was pleas’d to say that the receipt of a letter from your Diana always gave you pleasure....
If I was sure your absence to day was occasioned, by what it generally is, either to wait upon...