Letters 1773
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | letter |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-letters-1773-029 |
| Words | 214 |
But thou wouldst do thyself, if thou couldst see
The end of all events as well as He!
[See letter of July 18].
--My dear sister, adieu. Your affectionate brother.
To Joseph Benson
BRISTOL, September 10, 1773.
DEAR JOSEPH,--If Mr. Thompson [The Assistant in Edinburgh. See letters of July 31 and Oct. 23 to Benson] consents, all is well. The more you preach abroad, both in England and Scotland, the better. Only take care not to do more than you can do, not to go beyond your strength. And keep to the plain, old Methodist doctrine laid down in the Minutes of the Conference. At Trevecca you were a little warped from this; but it was a right-hand error. You will be buried in Scotland if you sell your mare and sit still. Keep her, and ride continually. Contrive (you and Mr. Thompson) how this may be. Sit not still at the peril of your soul and body! Mr. Fletcher [John Fletcher] ought to have received their thanks.--Dear Joseph, adieu!
Do all you can for poor Scotland, and write how things are there.
To Francis Wolfe [19]
BRISTOL, September 15, 1773.
Franky, are you out of your wits Why are you not at Bristol
To the Countess of Huntingdon [20]
BRISTOL, September 16, 1773.