H.M.S. Reliance March 16th 1799
  
  
    
Short as may be the probable time before we sail; and uncertain as it is  
    
that any conveyance may present itself, for this little meƒsenger to call the  
    
remembrance of my dearest friend to this verge of the enlightened world. And  
    
perhaps the author of its existence may himself enjoy that too often anticipated  
    
pleasure before its arrival; yet impelled by my feelings at this moment,  
    
I cannot resist. It is like opening my bosom to thee, — to a friend who can feel,  
    
and whose sensibility can inhale the rising the rising thought.  
    
 
    
 
    My reading this morning, has called up a train of recollections; which, in  
    
my present situation at least, ought to be suppreƒsed. I read the first vo-  
    
-lume of Mrs Radcliffs {Adolphs}, which I had not seen before. Thou,  
    
I think, hast; for from the specimens of poetry in this, it will surprise me  
    
not to find thy beautiful lines on Autumn in a future volume.  
    
 
    
 
    The parting description at the end, recalled to my remembrance what my  
    
feelings were, on something like a similar situation. Fatal, enervating,  
    
moment! I have never since been satisfied with my profeƒsion; and,   
    
strange as it may appear, when mature deliberation was called, to de-  
    
-cide upon the question; it aided the sentiment and condemned the  
    
sea. Let those cases be excepted, where it can be made use of as a stepping
    
stone to fortunes favours; and thence, to the more perfect complete enjoyment of rational  
    
life, and a more perfect obedience to the dictates of nature and reason. But  
    
to be cooped up in a wooden box; year after year; one decade after another;  
    
and the ultimate object not a bit more forward! Thus to sink down hill,  
    
— not a new friend raised up to smooth the path, and the old dead; or what  
    
is worse, forgotten by them! Is this right? Say — ye whose hearts  
    
can feel the delights of love and friendship? — you will answer, that the  
    
bosom which is alive to those, ought not to be so situated. No, my  
    
friends! it is for that where apathy resides, — for those, whose senses ad-  
    
-mit not the beauties of nature, or the finer arts; — who feel not the extacy  [sic]  
    
arising from the contemplation of such. But such, I trust, is not my case.  
    
Sea; I am thy servant; but thy wages must afford me more than a bare sub-  
    
-sistence; I do not mean to be always insulated. Thou art but a rough mas-  
    
-ter; hast little mercy upon the lives and limbs of thy followers; but some-  
    
-times thou bestowest favours. Half my life I would dedicate to thee, but the  
    
whole I cannot. If thou keepest me in penury all the morning and noon  
    
of life —   
    
 
    
 
    March 19th I meant to have expreƒsed my feelings to thee, on something like a   
    
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