Page:Austen Lady Susan Watson Letters.djvu/275

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

LETTERS OF JANE AUSTEN

through Croydon and Kingston, which will be much pleasanter than any other way; but he is decidedly for Clapham and Battersea. God bless you all!

Yours affectionately,
J. A.

I flatter myself that itty Dordy will not forget me at least under a week. Kiss him for me.

Miss Austen, Godmersham Park,
Faversham.


IX

Steventon: Saturday (October 27).

My dear Cassandra,

Your letter was a most agreeable surprise to me to-day, and I have taken a long sheet of paper to show my gratitude.

We arrived here yesterday between four and five, but I cannot send you quite so triumphant an account of our last day′s journey as of the first and second. Soon after I had finished my letter from Staines, my mother began to suffer from the exercise or fatigue of travelling, and she was a good deal indisposed. She had not a very good night at Staines, but bore her journey better than I had expected, and at Basingstoke, where we stopped more than half an hour, received

much comfort from a mess of broth and

  [239]
[239]