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Lydia Maria Child, Isaac T. Hopper: a true life, The two young offenders. (search)
daily. I am sure he must have received some pleasure, he bestowed so much. We feel his friendship to be a great acquisition. Samuel J. May wrote to me: I cannot tell you how much I was charmed by my interview with Friend Hopper. To me, it was worth more than all the Fair beside. Give my most affectionate respects to him. He very kindly invited me to make his house my home when I next come to New-York; and I am impatient for the time to arrive, that I may accept his invitation. Edmund Quincy, writing to Friend Hopper's daughter, Mrs. Gibbons, says: You cannot think how glad we were to see the dear old man. He spent a night with me, to my great contentment, and that of my wife; and to the no small edification of our little boy, to whom breeches and buckles were a great curiosity. My Irish gardener looked at them with reverence; having probably seen nothing so aristocratic, since he left the old country. I love those relics of past time. The Quakers were not so much out, w