Memoirs Of Aaron Burr, Volume 1 by Matthew L. Davis (best book recommendations .txt) 📖
- Author: Matthew L. Davis
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Devote It Entirely To You In The Letter Way. Although I Do Not Write
Frequently To You, Yet, Believe Me, I Think Frequently Of You. Oh,
Burr! May You Enjoy Health, And Be Completely Happy; As Much So As I
Am--More I Cannot Wish You. Nor Will You Be Able To Attain High
Felicity Until You Experience Such A Union As I Do. Mrs. Paterson Is
In Tolerable Health, And Gives You Her Best Respects. I Wish Her
Safely Through The Month Of May, And Then I Shall Be Still More Happy.
When You Come To Jersey I Shall Certainly See You. If I Do Not, It
Will Be Treason Against Our Friendship.
Peace Is Distant. There Is No Prospect Of It In The Present Year. Nor
Do I Think That Britain Will Come To Terms While She Fancies Herself
Superior On The Ocean. The War, However, Goes Southward, And There Is
Some Hope That We Shall Be More In Quiet This Year Than We Have Been
Since The Commencement Of Hostilities. On The Opening Of The Campaign
We Shall Be Able To Judge Better. Adieu.
William Paterson.
Chapter XII Pg 181From Colonel Troup.
Princeton, April 27Th, 1780.
My Dear Burr,
I Wrote To You Yesterday, And Happened To Put The Letter Into The
Postoffice A Little After The Post Had Gone. In That Letter I
Requested You To Come Here As Soon As Possible, For It Was Highly
Probable That I Should Leave Princeton Entirely, And Determine To
Follow Our Original Plan. The Event Has Confirmed My Conjecture. I
Came Here From General Morris'S Yesterday, And Exerted All The
Influence I Was Master Of To Get New Lodgings, But Could Not, Without
Lodging In The Town, Which Would Be Disagreeable To Me On Many
Accounts. I Have Now Given Over All Thoughts Of Staying Here; And,
Having An Excellent Pretext For Changing My Ground, I Shall Write To
Mr. Stockton, Who Is Still In Philadelphia, And Acquaint Him With My
Intentions Of Going Away. Nothing Is Therefore Wanting But Yourself,
With A Horse And Chair, To Make Me Completely Happy. I Wish To God I
Could Push Off Eastward Immediately, But I Cannot. I Have No Horse,
Neither Is It Practicable To Borrow Or Hire One. I Must, Then, Wait
For You; And I Request You, In The Most Pressing Terms, To Lose Not A
Moment'S Time In Coming For Me At General Morris'S, About Six Miles
From This, Near Colonel Van Dyke'S Mill, On The Road To Somerset,
Where I Shall Wait Impatiently For You.
I Am Extremely Uneasy Lest This Letter Should Reach You After You Have
Left Home, And Begun Your Journey Northward. In That Case I Shall Be
Very Unfortunate; And, To Prevent Too Great A Delay, I Write To Mr.
Reeves At Litchfield, And Enclose Him A Letter For You, And Desire Him
To Forward It To You, Wherever You Are, With All Expedition. I Shall
Likewise Enclose Another For You To Mrs. Prevost, Who Will Be Kind
Enough To Give It To You The Moment You Arrive There.
If We Once Get Together, I Hope We Shall Not Be Soon Parted. It Would
Afford Me The Greatest Satisfaction To Live With You During Life. God
Grant Our Meeting May Be Soon. You Have My Best And Fervent Wishes For
The Recovery Of Your Health, And Every Other Happiness. Adieu.
Robert Troup.
Chapter XII Pg 182To Colonel Troup.
Fairfield, 15Th May, 1780.
My Dear Bob,
I Wrote You From This Place The 12Th Inst. This Follows Close Upon It,
That I May Rest Assured Of Your Having Heard From Me.
I Go To-Morrow To Middletown, From Whence I Shall Hasten My Departure
As Much As Possible. No Trifling Concerns Should Command Me A Moment;
But Business Of Importance, And Some Embarrassments Too Serious To Be
Laughed Out Of The Way, Will, I Fear, Detain Me This Month. But The
Month Is Already Gone Before You Can Receive This. I Hope Your
Philosophy Will Not Have Forsaken You. Far From You Be Gloom And
Despondency. Attune Your Organs To The Genuine Ha! Ha! 'Tis To Me The
Music Of The Spheres; The Sovereign Specific That Shall Disgrace The
Physician'S Art, And Baffle The Virulence Of Malady. Hold Yourself
Aloof From All Engagements, Even Of The _Heart_. We Will Deliberate
Unbiased, That We May Decide With Wisdom. I Form No Decision On The
Subject Of Our Studies Till I See You.
I Write From The House Of Our Friend Thaddeus, In A World Of Company,
Who Are Constantly Interrupting Me With Impertinent Questions. Your
Summons Came Unexpected, And Found Me Unprepared. Nevertheless, My
Assiduity Shall Convince You That You May Command
A. Burr.
Chapter XII Pg 183From Colonel Troup.
At General Morris'S, Near Princeton, 16Th May, 1780.
My Dear Burr,
I Wrote You, About Three Weeks Ago, A Very Pressing Letter, And
Requested You To Come For Me Here As Soon As Possible. My Anxiety To
See You Is Extreme, And, Lest My Letter Should Have Miscarried, I
Cannot Help Troubling You With Another. Every Thing, My Dear Burr, Has
Succeeded To My Wishes. I Have Left Mr. Stockton Upon The Most
Friendly Terms Imaginable, And I Am Still At General Morris'S To Avoid
Expense, But Am So Situated That I Cannot Study. I Assure You, My
Future Prosperity And Happiness In Life Depends, In A Greater Measure
Than You May Imagine, On My Living And Studying With You; And The
Sooner We Get Seated In Some Retired Place, Where We May Live Cheaply
And Study Without Interruption, The Better. I Know Myself--I Think I
Know You Perfectly. I Am More Deceived Than Ever I Was If We Do Not
Live Happily Together, And Improve Beyond Our Most Sanguine
Expectations. Delay Not, Therefore, A Single Moment, My Dear Burr, But
Come For Me Yourself. A Horse Or A Chair Without You Will Be
Unwelcome. I Want To Consult You About Several Matters Of Importance
To Me Before I Leave This State. I Say Leave This State, For Our
Original Plan Of Studying With Mr. Osmer Appears The Most Rational To
Me On Many Accounts.
I Am So Much Attached To You, My Dear Burr, And Feel Myself So Much
Interested In Every Thing Which Concerns You, That I Believe, And Hope
Sincerely, It Will Be Many Years Before We Separate If We Can Once Sit
Down Together. As Long As My Slender Fortune Will Permit Me To Live
Without Business, We Will, If You Find It Agreeable, Enjoy The
Pleasures Of Retirement. And When We Enter On The Theatre Of The
World, Why Not Act Our Parts Together? Heaven Grant That We May. I
Repeat It Again, My Dearest Friend, Lose Not A Moment'S Time In Coming
For Me. It Is Painful To Trespass So Long Upon General Morris'S
Bounty, Though He Be My Friend, And I Have Not Any Means Of Stirring
An Inch From Him Unless I Walk. For Fear You Should Not Be At
Middletown, I Shall Enclose A Copy Of This Letter To Mr. Reeves, And
Request Him To Forward It To You Immediately If You Should Not Be With
Him.
With What Pleasure Did I Receive Yours Of The 24Th Ult., At Princeton,
The Other Day, When I Went To Pay Mr. Stockton A Visit After His
Return From Philadelphia. I Cordially Congratulate You On The
Improvement Of Your Health By Rash Experiments. May It Be As Well
Established As My Own, Which Is Perfectly Capable Of The Closest
Application. But I Was Not A Little Mortified To Find You Say Nothing
About Your Intention To Ride To Jersey. Let Me Entreat You Once More
To Set Off As Soon As Possible. Every Moment Is Precious, And Ought To
Be Employed To Advantage. I Shall Wait For You With The Greatest
Impatience; And, In The Meantime, I Am, What I Always Wish To Be,
Your Affectionate And Sincere Friend,
Robert Troup.
Chapter XII Pg 184From Colonel Troup.
Society-Hall, General Morris'S, 23D May, 1780.
My Dear Aaron,
My Patience Is Almost Exhausted. I Have Been Waiting For You This
Month Past. Here I Am, A Pensioner Upon The Bounty Of My Good Friend
General Morris, And Am Likely To Continue So, Unless You Are Kind
Enough To Come And Carry Me Away. This Is The Fifth Or Sixth Letter I
Have Written You On The Subject. What Can Be The Reason Of The Great
Delay In Forwarding Letters By The Post? Your Last Was Above A
Fortnight Old Before It Got To Princeton; And, Upon Inquiry, Daddy
Plumb Informs Me The Riders Are Ordered To Ride _Forty Miles_ A Day
During The Season. Must I Attribute It To The Fatality Which Has
Already Separated Us, And, I Fear, Is Determined To Put An Eternal Bar
To Our Junction? Such An Event Would Blast All My Hopes Of Future
Happiness. My Dear Aaron, I Want Words To Express My Pleasure In
Anticipating The Satisfaction Of Retiring From The Cares Of The World
With You, And Living In All The Simple Elegance Of Ancient
Philosophers. We Should Make A Rapid Improvement In Every Branch Of
Useful Literature; And When We Came To Act Our Parts On The Theatre Of
The World, We Might Excite Admiration, And, What Would Be Infinitely
More Pleasing To Us, We Should Be Better Men And Better Citizens.
After Mr. Stockton Returned From Philadelphia, I Communicated To Him
My Situation And My Intentions. He Approved Of My Determination To Go
Away, And Gave Me Some Advice, Which You Shall Know When You See Me.
Thus I Have Left Mr. Stockton Without Causing The Least Uneasiness,
And I Am Now Ready To Enter Upon Our Old Plan, Which Appears The Most
Consistent With Our Present Views. As I Said In All My Letters
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