John Saffery, Salisbury, to Philip Whitaker, Bratton, [Friday], 9 February 1816.
Salisbury Feby 9, 1816
My Dear Brother,
I fear you & dear Sister will be uneasy at not hearing from us, & that my dear Mary will not have time to write I therefore catch the pen to do it, tho’ in the midst of the domestic circle & the conversation at a meal. Indeed my time is, if possible, more than ever occupied – We are thro’ mercy all pretty well, except that my dear M continues much as she has & her spirits still greatly depressed occasionally, which to me as well as herself is very trying – I hope we feel thankful for so many mercies while afflictions & death abound on every hand. I was at Heytesbury yesterday & heard of N Everett’s sudden death in the morning. I preached at Shrewton in the evening, & reached home at 11 oclock when I found a Letter informing me of the death of Sister Shoveller on Wedy Morning. She had been dangerously ill 12 or 14 days, but from recent information we had indulged faint hopes of her recovery. She was very happy throughout her affliction. The last words she was heard to utter were
O how pleasant
The conquerors song –
She had gone from Poole to Portsea in consequence of the dangerous illness of Wm Ellis her grandson, & died herself at James Horsey’s – She was a truly good Woman, & will be much missed in her circle, & especially by her bereaved relative – Our dear friend Smith has taken to his bed intirely & very feeble indeed. Our old brother John Brookman at Wilton died on Monday. O that these dispensations may [leave] their sanctified influence on us – I know not if you are aware of the situation of things at Titchfield, & which I suppose has prevented for a season, the marriage of Philemon. Mr Penny was arrested last Saturday fortnight at the instance of Mr Roe at Southampton for £1500, & on Monday fortnight was conveyed to Winchester where he remains – A Docket has been since struck agst him & his two sons by the Bankers at Portsea who are satisfied that he could have paid 20/ in the pound had he been let alone & I believe he has more than enough for this purpose.
Attached to the above letter is a letter from Maria Grace Saffery to Anne Whitaker, dated the same as above.
Text: Timothy Whelan, gen. ed., Nonconformist Women Writers, 1720-1840 (London: Pickering & Chatto, 2011), vol. 6, pp. 348-49 (annotated version); Saffery/Whitaker Papers, acc. 142, I.B.2.(25.), Angus Library, Regent's Park College, Oxford. Address: Salisbury Feby 12 1816 | Mr P. Whitaker | Bratton Farm | near Westbury | Wiltshire. Postmark: Salisbury, 12 February. Susanna Shoveller was the wife of John Shoveller and daughter of the Rev. Joseph Horsey of Portsea (and sister to John Saffery’s first wife). Philemon Attwater of Bodenham (1787-1832) was a member of Saffery's congregation at Brown Street; he married Eliza Penny (1789-1877) in 1816. Quoted lines above taken from a hymn by John Newton in Olney Hymns (1779), Book III, hymn XXXVII, p. 355.