94
LETTERS FROM INDIA.
till the aide-de-camp comes back; and he cannot leave us. It is melancholy to see a week after the death of a head of a family everything advertised for sale. They won’t keep, and there are no shops to send them to.
Yours most affectionately,
E. E.
TO
.Government House, October 16, 1837.
, I must thank you myself (how do I know Fanny is to be trusted with thanks?) for your extreme kindness in sending me those two pretty muslins. It was so like you. I am still more pleased with the gowns. They came in such a nohow, unexpected sort of way, that is particularly pleasant at this distance from home. I hope, by a strict adherence to that wretched fashion of tight sleeves, to be able to spare enough of each pattern for a new douillette for that little darling whom you always remember with so much affection—that little angel Chance.
His servant informs me that he wants two new coats; he has one of Chinese brocade, with a gold breastplate, which was presented to him