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	Back to Index 
 Loose pages from Flinders' private letterbook (4 of 6). Flinders to his father 1801; to cousin, Henrietta Flinders 1801  (FLI04)
	
	
		Page 1
 
  
    to get my agent to put into the stocks. As far as I can learn
 the only way he can do it, to receive the dividends for me, is
 by investing it in his and my name jointly. I shall be obliged
 to you to inform me how far this is neceƒsary, and the
 plan you adopt for Wilson and Co to receive yours. Was
 any accident to happen to me, the money would rest with
 him in the bank books, and my heirs could only claim as
 a debt from him. I have the most perfect reliance in my
 agents uprightneƒs, but as I cannot tell who his executors
 or heirs might be, I do not like this plan altogether; and
 I shall be much obliged to you for information on the subject.
 I have just now a melancholy letter from Mrs Carr,
 informing me of the unhappy marriage of her eldest daughter
 and expreƒsing a desire that I would take her out as a com-
 -panion to 
Mrs Flinders. This, for many reasons, would be
 highly impolitic in me, and indeed impoƒsible under
 present circumstances. She rather complains of having
 never heard from you, as in my letter from Spilsby, when
 first in the country, I had led her to expect.
 I have heard from my 
cousin Henny about a week fortnight since
 I do not find that her great concern advances much. I fear
 that a peace with Sweden will lose captain Lawford his
 prizes, and then they ^ it will, if profitable, be more uncertain. I
 have endeavoured to persuade her to cut the connexion en-
 -tirely, but the happineƒs or misery of her future life seems
 so entirely wrapped up in this procrastinated marriage
 that all argument and almost matters of fact become wind before
 it; and as it only gives her pain without answering any
 good purpose, I have given it up lately.
 If you should ever invite 
Miƒs Tyler to Donington, you
 will find her to be a girl of strong sense, somewhat eccen-
 -tric, but of an amiable disposition. She returns into the
 country with her father, whom we shall meet in town, if
 I am called up about the 19th . The family with whom we lived
 in town is a respectable one, and they have been very atten-
 -tive to Penelope and my 
sister Susan. It came in our way
 to aƒsist the former ^ at least in raising her consequence with her employers
 at least
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 Related people
 Flinders, Matthew
 Flinders, Henrietta
 Flinders family
 Flinders, Matthew
 Hursthouse
 Flinders, Samuel
 Banks, Sir Joseph
 Chappelle (Flinders),  Ann
 Tyler, Isabella (Belle/Bell)
 
 Places
 Spilsby
 Donington
 Tidd (Tydd)
 Spalding
 
 Vessels
 Investigator
 
 Related Documents
 Other documents written by Flinders, Matthew
 
 Other documents received by Flinders family
 
 Other documents received by Flinders, Henrietta
 
 Other documents received by
 
 Other documents received by
 
 Other documents written in  1801
 
 
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