A.B.’s LETTER is acknowledged with thanks, and further information is solicited most earnestly; no expense or labour will be spared in the pursuit of that justice which has hitherto been sought in vain; honour and secrecy may be relied on always.

24.—Thursday, November 7, 1816.

PHILIP.—Would PHILIP like to hear of his MOTHER’S DEATH?

25.—Monday, April 27, 1818.

G.B.—If every manly feeling is not extinct in you, you will return directly. It is false shame to leave a woman to combat difficulties that you could not withstand. You are vilified, as if you were a bad man, and that by persons whose indulgence you might expect. Your presence may reverse what has been done. It will relieve those who love you, from distress the most unutterable.—April 27. R.

26.—Thursday, May 7, and May 14, 1818.

G.B.—If you could conceive the sorrow and despair into which I am plunged, I am sure you would at last let me hear from you; this unkindness distracts me more than all the rest; with you I could suffer every privation; your absence only aggravates our miseries; you have still friends left, whose kindness can obliterate past recollections. S. B.

27.—Monday, March 22, 1819.

E.Z. is particularly expected; he will find a Letter in Cheapside.—Saturday morning, March 20, 1819.