Holograph, signed with initials.
On pages 1-3, there is a letter from Debora Weston to Aunt Mary Weston. Debora describes the harbor view from the house. "I see all the ships as they come in... How many barrels has she got in the first question." Debora has been told by Mr. [John F.] Emerson about Wendell Phillips's having been mobbed at the Odeon. "What are the facts of the case?" Debora is troubled at hearing of little Henry Chapman's sickness and longs to take care of him. She expresses indignation at the "N. Yorkers," who are "at the bottom of the new paper." [Alanson] St. Clair is lecturing her, "the villain!" She mentions Caroline Weston's allusion to "something which is preparing for M[ary S.] Parker--a good dose I hope."
On pages 3-4, there is a letter dated March 4th, 1839, from Debora Weston to Lucia Weston. Debora Weston comments on Emma Weston's improved handwriting, and remarks: "She takes a very good model I think in the Grimkes--but as times are now she must not copy anything else about them." Debora is reading the novel, the Pickwick Papers [by Charles Dickens], and finds it melancholy "to have to sit & laugh all by ones-self." She recommends that Lucia begins Latin.