Robert Keen, letter, to Nathaniel Whitaker, 1767 November 30
Date30 November, 1767
abstractKeen reports on Occom’s illness and return to London, and encourages Whitaker to continue the rest of the tour alone.
RepositoryRauner Special Collections Library, Dartmouth College.
Call Number767630.4
handwritingHandwriting is formal, clear and legible. The trailer appears to be in Whitaker's hand.
paperMedium-sized sheet is in good-to-fair condition, with light-to-moderate staining, creasing and wear that results in a minor loss of text.
inkBrown-black.
signatureThe signature is abbreviated.
noteworthyThere are ink spots sprinkled throughout that are easily confused with punctuation.
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Bank bills of £20 each and a Bill on Thomas Cloake 10 days
after date £42 Total value in the above letter. £82 with
the accounts to Tenterden to all which I shall acknowledge To‐
‐morrows post — — I was surprised to see Mr. Occom on Wednesday
last when as I told him you were to meet him the next day
at Tunbridge wells — he said he had left word for you; but
I find you were not acquainted with it — I asked him how he
came not to meet you at Tunbridge wells and then have come to
London — he said he found himself very poorly and had a fever
on him then — — he went pretty early to Bed and as Dr. Sparks and
I dined with Mr. Whitefield he came whilst we were there about 2
o'Clock —Dr. Sparks sent him something to take and some sack whey
was made him and he lay in his old lodging — I saw him on
Saturday and he looked pretty well in the parlour below — he
made an engagement to come about 5 o'Clock this afternoon
to my house to drink Tea and Sup with us and go home about ½ after 9
—I've just now sent to know how he does and why he did not come?
my Lad brings me word he was but poorly but thinks he shall be
better on the morrow and will then come and dine with me — — if he had been
here tonight he should have wrote you a letter himself or a part in
this — if he should be better I thought he should meet you at least on
Friday Evening at Canterbury — but if you can pursue the 2 weeks
you can do it as well without him and it will be a pity to miss any
places that you can accomplish in that time — you and I must
bear the burden and I dare say have had more of it to our share
then all the rest put them altogether — but it is for God, and the pleasur[gap: worn_edge][guess (h-dawnd): e]
we have had to see the cause prosper has greatly overbalanced all
our trouble and fatigue — your friends here will be glad to see you
at the end of this Tour —as it will be then 9 months since you left londo[gap: worn_edge][guess (h-dawnd): n]
heard before now viz Sir Charles Hotham — all the others are
pure well, met together last week and are quite harmonious — neve[gap: worn_edge][guess (h-dawnd): r]
any one disagreed or jarred with another — though Mr. Robarts said he
heard otherwise at Bristol — Remember me kindly to
Mr. Bradbury and his Lady — we often remember them at Mr. Wests
where we are to be tomorrow Evening — dear Mr. Brewer is to be
at our Annual meeting at the Kings head in the poultry and our
worthy friend Mr. Whitefield is to meet them in his room — I shall send
my Money to the Kings head but propose to be at Mr. Wests — Mr. Brewer
may perhaps get time enough to conclude with prayer — let me
hear from you as often as convenient and believe me to be dear Sir