MY DEAR FRIEND, I am two kind letters in your debt, but I have been from home, and horribly busy, buying and preparing for my farming business, over and above the plague of my Excise instructions, which this week will finish. As I flatter my wishes that I foresee many future years' correspondence between us, 'tis foolish to talk of excusing dull epistles; a dull letter may be a very kind one. I have the pleasure to tell you that I have been extremely fortunate in all my buyings, and bargainings hitherto; Mrs. Burns not excepted; which title I now avow to the world. I am truly pleased with this last affair: it has indeed added to my anxieties for futurity, but it has given a stability to my mind, and resolutions unknown before; and the poor girl has the most sacred enthusiasm of attachment to me, and has not a wish but to gratify my every idea of her deportment. I am interrupted.—Farewell! my dear Sir. R. B.
Letter № 120 · CXX
To Mr. Robert Ainslie
Mauchline · 26 May 1788
- Recipient
- Mr. Robert Ainslie
- Place
- Mauchline
- Dated
- 26 May 1788
- Source note
- Mauchline, May 26, 1788
- Source
- Project Gutenberg #18500 — The Complete Works of Robert Burns (ed. Allan Cunningham)