Title: | William Wightman, [Lisburn?] to [Madelina Patton, Belfast?]. |
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ID | 3336 |
Collection | Irish Emigration Database |
File | Wightman, William/139 |
Year | 1816 |
Sender | Wightman, William |
Sender Gender | male |
Sender Occupation | unknown |
Sender Religion | unknown |
Origin | Lisburn, Co. Antrim, N.Ireland |
Destination | Belfast, N.Ireland |
Recipient | Patton, Madelina |
Recipient Gender | female |
Relationship | Mr Wightman would like for Ms Patton |
Source | T 1475/1 p13: Copied by Permission of Miss A. McKisack, 9 Mount Pleasant, Belfast. |
Archive | The Public Record Office, Northern Ireland. |
Doc. No. | 9404163 |
Date | 27/03/1816 |
Partial Date | |
Doc. Type | LET |
Log | Document added by LT, 20:04:1994. |
Word Count | 752 |
Genre | |
Note | |
Transcript | 27th March 1816 With the deepest and most distressing feelings of my own unworthyness [unworthiness?] do I now implore your kind attention for a few moments, Ah! do not - do not repulse this consolation. You will frown on me when I dare to write your beloved name, but still I will have the hardihood to do so - even if that frown should terminate my existence. Ah! repress your indignation for a little I beseech you. Were you aware of the distracted and tortured state of my mind I am convinced you would sympathize with me. Yes, I feel too well you would. My --- I must brave your resentment. I feel it totally impossible to offer something in mitigation of my culpability unless I tresspass [trespass?] on your feelings by repeating a name that has long beat in unison with my best and tenderest affections. My ever dear, dear and adored Madelina, soon after that blessed day that first witnessed the happiness of your acquaintance, the memory of which I ever retain to cherish with the sweetest recollections, I conceived for you the most refined and exalted friendship continued for some years firm and sincere, without my dreaming of it growing into a more endearing appellation, until it eventually burst into the most lively and impassioned attachment. This it was impossible to conquer, but which I have to confess from honourable motives with respect to my circumstances I endeavoured to restrain. With these sentiments I avoided your society unless that friendship subsisting between our families seemed to demand, and even seldom as we met it was my utmost and earnest endeavour to keep a most vigilant watch over my conduct, that in case I did not think myself justified in soliciting you to unite your destiny with mine I might not be anyway [any way?] instrumental in engaging the affections of one so inexpressibly dear to me. Matters continued in this state of torturing anxiety, sometimes an idea suggested itself to my mind that if I could have the temerity to prevail on you to accompany me across the Atlantic I might through the Divine blessing have a brighter prospect for you than in my native country. My feelings will scarcely allow me to proceed, but with the indulgence of your generous and beneficent disposition, I will try all in my power to go on. Well, on your late visit to my dear sister Nancy, your presence delighted my soul - every other idea was banished. I was carried along by the ardour and impetuosity of my passion, and was then maddened with joy that it was perhaps reciprocated. You know I could not with any delicacy have avowed the object of my dearest wishes when you were at Lisburn, yet I considered I gave you proofs, in a more endearing manner than words can express, of my sincere and unalterable affection. Nancy I will request to explain to you the causes of my delay. I would be ashamed to offer them myself as an alleviation as I now feel most poignantly that any business matter that I might consider necessary to ascertain, should not have delayed so long an affair of so singularly interesting moment - poor Nancy was also unthinkingly an innocent cause of much uneasiness to me, in ridiculing my presumption in wanting any Lady to leave her native shore - I almost dreaded the interview that was to decide my happiness for life. But let you act with me as you think proper, I trust that it will cause no diminution of that friendship between you and my dear sister, as I will most probably not be in the Kingdom to be an obstacle to it. I hope however you will restore a penitent offender once more to your heart who is weighed down by the deepest sense of contrition, whose distracted mind and trembling hand in daring to address you, bears too true a testimony of it, and do not thrust him entirely from you, but he entreats that you will hold out some ray of hope, and that you will name a day when he may appear in your presence to bless you for this indulgence. At all events he may have been guilty of many errors, but I do not think he is possessed of a bad heart, and he still glows with the most unabated and ever inviolable love for his ever beloved and adored Madelina. Adieu and once more, yours unalterably Wm. [William?] Wightman. To Miss Patton Lisburn Belfast Near five a.m. 27th March 1816 |