[Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals by Samuel F. B. Morse]@TWC D-Link bookSamuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals CHAPTER III 13/25
They are thought here to wear a more threatening aspect than they have heretofore done.
From my own observation and opportunity of hearing the opinion of the people generally, they are extremely desirous of an amicable adjustment of differences, and seem as much opposed to the idea of war as the better part of the American people.... "In this letter you will perceive all the variety of feeling which I have had for a fortnight past; sometimes in very low, sometimes in very high spirits, and sometimes a balance of each; which latter, though very desirable, I seldom have, but generally am at one extreme or the other.
I wrote this in the evenings of the last two weeks, and this will account, and I hope apologize, for its great want of connection." In a long letter to a friend, dated September 17, 1811, he thus describes some of the sights of London:-- "A few days since I walked about four miles out of town to a village of the name of Hackney to witness the ascension of a Mr.Sadler and another gentleman in a balloon.
It was a very grand sight, and the next day the aeronauts returned to Hackney, having gone nearly fifty miles in about an hour and a half.
The number of people who attended on this occasion might be fairly estimated at 300,000, such a concourse as I never before witnessed. "When the balloon was out of sight the crowd began to return home, and such a confusion it is almost impossible for me to describe.
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