B 12 To John Valton
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | letter |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-letter-1785b-12-to-john-valton-000 |
| Words | 226 |
To John Valton
Date: BRISTOL, September 5, 1785.
Source: The Letters of John Wesley (1785)
Author: John Wesley
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MY DEAR BROTHER, - Neither Sister Brisco nor her husband ever made application to me for money. Now and then I have given her a guinea; but, I think, never more at a time. We could not regularly give her any more for her child; but I would have given her five pounds at a word speaking. Now she must take some trouble to get it. [Thomas Brisco was stationed at Thirsk, and was evidently in financial straits.]
Our preachers (I mean many of them) are unable as yet to judge and undervalue each other. Henry Foster is a weak man, but by no means a weak preacher. This was never objected to him before in any circuit where I have followed him. He is a sound, judicious man and one of deep piety.
I am thinking that her best way is, if any one will give T. Brisco five guineas, I will repay it.
Consider, a person that was very happy and good is now less happy than he was. Then he thinks, 'I should be happier if I was married.' Is not this feeling
Love's all-sufficient sea to raise
With drops of creature happiness [Poetical Works, i. 132.]
I am
Your affectionate friend and brother.