A 37 To Henry Moore
| Author | John Wesley |
|---|---|
| Type | letter |
| Year | None |
| Passage ID | jw-letter-1788a-37-to-henry-moore-000 |
| Words | 171 |
To Henry Moore Date: MACCLESFIELD, April 6, 1788. An organ! Non defensorbus istis tempus eget. 'The time does not need such defenders.' This will help them just as old Priara helped Troy. If Mr. and Mrs. Smyth are gone to England, I doubt Bethesda will droop; but Dr. Coke will be saved from some embarrassment, anti will have a smoother path to walk in. See letter of May 6. I am, if possible, more fully employed than before since my brother's death. Thus far I am come in my way to North Britain, perhaps for the last time. Lately I have been threatened with blindness He had a pearl on his eye. See letter of May 28 to Mrs. Rogers.; but still you and I have two good eyes between us. Let us use them while the day is! I am, with tender love to Nancy, dear Henry, Your affectionate friend and brother. My brother fell asleep so quietly that they who sat by him did not know when he died.