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ary thought a Letter from me might amuse you in your torment-- [Robinson was the victim of a sudden attack of acute rheumatism. He had a course of Turkish baths at Brighton to cure him.] LETTER 484 CHARLES LAMB TO GEORGE DYER Enfield, April 29, 1829. Dear Dyer--As well as a bad pen can do it, I must thank you for your friendly attention to the wishes of our young friend Emma, who was packing up for Bury when your sonnet arrived, and was too hurried to express her sense of its merits. I know she will treasure up that and your second communication among her choicest rarities, as from her _grandfather's_ friend, whom not having seen, she loves to hear talked of. The second letter shall be sent after her, with our first parcel to Suffolk, where she is, to us, alas dead and Bury'd; we solely miss her. Should you at any hour think of four or six lines, to send her, addressed to herself simply, naming her grandsire, and to wish she may pass through life as much respected, with your own G. Dyer at the end, she would feel rich indeed, for the nature of an Album asks for verses that have not been in print before; but this quite at your convenience: and to be less trouble to yourself, four lines would be sufficient. Enfield has come out in summer beauty. Come when you will and we will give you a bed. Emma has left hers, you know. I remain, my dear Dyer, your affectionate friend, CHARLES LAMB. [From _The Mirror_, 1841. Lamb made the same pun--Bury'd--to George Dyer in his letter of December 5, 1808. His Album verses for Miss Isola I have not seen.] LETTER 485 CHARLES LAMB TO THOMAS HOOD [No date. ? May, 1829.] Dear Hood,--We will look out for you on Wednesday, be sure, tho' we have not eyes like Emma, who, when I made her sit with her back to the window to keep her to her Latin, literally saw round backwards every one that past, and, O, [that] she were here to jump up and shriek out "There are the Hoods!" We have had two pretty letters from her, which I long to show you--together with Enfield in her May beauty. Loves to Jane. [_Here follow rough caricatures of Charles and his sister, and_] "I can't draw no better." [I have dated this letter May, 1829, because Miss Isola had just gone to Fornham, in Suffolk, whence presumably the two letters had come.] LETTER 486 CHARLES LAMB TO EDWARD MOXON [No date.] Calamy is _good reading_. Mary is always thankful for Books in her way.
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