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<title TEIform="title">Letter to Miss Taylor <date TEIform="date">(1804)</date>
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<name reg="Barbauld, Mrs. (Anna Letitia)" date="1743-1825" place="UK" TEIform="name">Anna Letitia Barbauld</name>
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<publisher TEIform="publisher">King Library, Miami University</publisher>
<pubPlace TEIform="pubPlace">Oxford, OH</pubPlace>
<date TEIform="date">20040609</date>
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<p TEIform="p"> Miami University makes a claim of copyright only to original contributions
                        made by the Poetess Archive participants and other members of the university
                        community. Miami University makes no claim of copyright to the original
                        text. Permission is granted to download, transmit or otherwise reproduce,
                        distribute or display the contributions to this work claimed by Miami
                        University for non-profit educational purposes, provided that this header is
                        included in its entirety. For inquiries about commercial uses, please contact:<address TEIform="address">
<addrLine TEIform="addrLine">Judith Session, Dean</addrLine>
<addrLine TEIform="addrLine">King Library</addrLine>
<addrLine TEIform="addrLine">Miami University</addrLine>
<addrLine TEIform="addrLine">Oxford, OH 45056</addrLine>
<addrLine TEIform="addrLine">United States of America</addrLine>
<addrLine TEIform="addrLine">EMail: sessioja@muohio.edu</addrLine>
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<title TEIform="title">The Poetess Archive: An Electronic Resource</title>
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<resp TEIform="resp">General Editor.</resp>
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<name reg="Barbauld, Mrs. (Anna Letitia)" date="1743-1825" place="UK" TEIform="name">Anna Letitia Barbauld</name>
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<title level="a" type="main" TEIform="title">Letter to Miss Taylor, </title>
<title level="a" type="subordinate" TEIform="title">Now Mrs. Reeve</title>
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<name reg="Barbauld, Mrs. (Anna Letitia)" date="1743-1825" place="UK" TEIform="name">Anna Letitia Barbauld</name>
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<title level="m" type="main" TEIform="title">The Works of <name TEIform="name">Anna Letitia Barbauld</name>.</title>
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<name reg="Aikin, Lucy" date="1781-1864" place="UK" TEIform="name">Lucy Aikin</name>
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<p TEIform="p">This copy is transcribed from the volume held by the University of Cincinnati,
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<hi TEIform="hi">Letter to Miss Taylor, </hi>
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<title type="sub" TEIform="title">Now Mrs. Reeve</title>
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<title TEIform="title">
<name type="place" TEIform="name">Turnbridge Wells,</name>
<date TEIform="date">August 11, 1804.</date>
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<p TEIform="p">I may call you dear Susan, may not I? for I can love you, if not better, yet more
                    familiarly and at my ease under that appellation than under the more formal one
                    of Miss Taylor, though you have now a train to your gown, and are, I suppose, at
                    Norwich invested with all the rights of womanhood. I have many things to thank
                    you for: -- in the first place for a charming letter, which has both amused and
                    delighted us. In the next place, I have to thank you for a very elegant veil,
                    which is very beautiful in itself, and receives great additional value from
                    being the work of your ingenious fingers. I have brought it here to parade with
                    upon the pantiles, being by much the smartest part of my dress. O that you were
                    here, Susan, to exhibit upon a <emph TEIform="emph">donky</emph> -- I cannot tell whether my
                    orthography is right, but a donky is the <emph TEIform="emph">monture</emph> in high fashion
                    here; and I assure you, when <pb n="114" TEIform="pb"/>covered with blue housings, and sleek,
                    it makes no bad figure: -- I mean a lady, if an elegant woman, makes no bad
                    figure upon it, with a little boy or girl behind, who carries a switch, meant to
                    admonish the animal from time to time that he is hired to walk on, and not to
                    stand still. The ass is much better adapted than the horse to show off a lady;
                    for this reason, which perhaps may not have occurred to you, that her beauty is
                    not so likely to be eclipsed: for you must know that many philosophers, amongst
                    whom is ----, are decidedly of opinion that a fine <emph TEIform="emph">horse</emph> is a much
                    handsomer animal than a fine woman; but I have not yet heard such a preference
                    asserted in favour of the <emph TEIform="emph">ass,</emph> -- not our English asses at least,
                    -- a fine Spanish one, or a zebra, perhaps ....</p>
<p TEIform="p"> It is the way to <emph TEIform="emph">subscribe</emph> for every thing here; -- to the library,
                    &amp;c.: and among other things we were asked on the Pantiles to subscribe
                    for eating fruit as we pass backwards and forwards. "How
                    much?" -- "Half-a-crown." "But for how long
                    a time?" -- "As long as you please." "But I
                    should soon eat half-a-crown's worth of fruit." -- "O, you are
                    upon honour!"</p>
<p TEIform="p">There are pleasant walks on the hills here, and picturesque views of the town,
                    which, like Bath, is seen to advantage by lying in a hollow. It bears the marks
                    of having been long a place of resort, from the number of good and rather old-
                        <pb n="115" TEIform="pb"/>built houses, -- all let for lodgings; and shady walks, and
                    groves of old growth. The sides of many of the houses are covered with tiles;
                    but the Pantiles, which you may suppose I saw with some interest, are now paved
                    with freestone.</p>
<p TEIform="p">We were interested in your account of Cambridge, and glad you saw not only
                    buildings but men. With a mind prepared as yours is, how much pleasure have you
                    to enjoy from seeing! That all your improvements may produce you pleasure, and
                    all your pleasures tend to improvement, is the wish of </p>
<p TEIform="p">Your ever affectionate. </p>
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