Monday, January 5, 1835
1835
January
Monday
5
8
50/..
11
3/4
Very quiet good
kiss last night.
Very
fine, sunny morning – hard frost – F 35° now at 9 35/.. in my study, at
which hour, went down to breakfast – Sat over it above an hour –
John Pearson came about before 11 and staid till 12 40/.. ostensibly to know if he should convenience me by giving up the Mytholm land on Wednesday and taking the valuation of the tenant to pay the rent and receiving the overplus –
Said I was much obliged to him, but that as to draining ploughing which he thought I should be glad to begin of immediately, I did not mean to trouble myself about either, and would rather he paid his rent to my father as usual and left me to settle about the land when the time came; that I should in fact leave this matter to Mr. Washington, whom I thought he, Pearson, would understand better than he might understand me – That I had mentioned to Washington some time ago that I did not want the skin pits and should not take them in the valuation – Pearson seemed disappointed at this – said I had promised to take them – at least desired to have them valued – Explained that I had certainly not promised to take them – Had fancied Pearson and I should agree, and then would have paid him for all before his signing the lease, but should certainly not buy the pits when I had no use for them –
It at last came out, Pearson wanted Dewhirst to have them – I then explained that I would have nothing to do with Mrs. Dewhirst nor with her son in his present circumstances, but that if he married and Pearson thought him likely to be steady, and would help him, I had no objection to let him the buildings – Pearson knew he (Dewhirst) had offered £20 per annum for them, but I said nothing about the amount of rent – Said I would not have it on my conscience to make Dewhirst marry if he did not like it, but that I would not take him as a tenant so long as he continued unmarried – Pearson was at liberty to tell him this or not, just as he (Pearson) liked – Pearson said ‘they would help him’ and he believed him to be steady and wishful to do well , and that he would have married long since but his mother would not let him –
Pearson at last (becoming very civil and hoping nothing disagreeable between us would be any more thought of) talked of taking a field or 2 of me for summering – I said I was in no hurry about letting – this; could be talked of by and by – He then thought one of his sons might be wanting a farm and hoped I should make no objection – Said merely No! I should make no objections to anyone who would be a good tenant and pay a fair rent but I could not afford to let under value – Pearson wished I would not let so dear – I explained – and he owned people must pay for situation and that Mytholm was a very good situation – Said I should never want a skinner at the old buildings and if I built new ones for the land, it would do very well –
Then
had Joseph Mann about cones for firelight at night -- Said Holt had promised to come this
afternoon – He (Mann) would inquire the price of iron rails and be back to meet
Holt at 4 –
With
my father and Marian till 2 (from 1 40/.. to 2). Explained what I had said to Pearson, with
which both seem well satisfied – Marian hoped it would not be inconvenient
to me not to be able to see my father 4 evenings per week! because
Thursdays always engaged (Abbott comes) and Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays
should have Miss Sarah Inman, for whom it was not good to be constantly at
school (Miss Walkinson’s)! – Said Oh! no! No inconvenience to me – I
never did make and never intended to make difficulties – I only hoped my father
understood the thing – Oh! yes! Marian said, she had explained it all to him –
I then turned to him laughingly, and said, I find Marian was going to have
so much company I could not come to him Thursdays, Fridays, Saturdays, and
Sundays, but Ann and I would be very glad if he would come in to us and we
would have a good fire for him –
Then
at 1 50/.. came upstairs to Ann – Explained – Told what Marian had said – Ann
as much astonished as I was –
We
got out at 2 – Down the walk along the Lower brea road thro’ the German house
fields to Hopkin’s – The sister better – Thence to Hove Edge to Mrs. Ann
Lee’s to see her old oak bedstead – about 3 centuries old? Her mother not inclined to sell it, but if
she did sell it, I to have the 1st refusal – She gave no idea what she thought
it worth – To ask (for me) the price of an old oak chair she knew of, but not
to mention my name –
Returned
by Hove houses and Yewtrees wood lane – Passed Moseys (the joiner’s). His man said the hunters had found the 1st
hare in a field close by (one of Macauley’s) and only followed their
game through Yew trees wood – Had not ranged or found anything there – This was
mentioned incidentally –
Called
at Barber’s (in Yew trees wood) in passing – Barber not at home, but his wife
said he was at dinner when the hunters came and did not see them in the
wood – then got into the new road at Hipperholme lane ends – home thro’ through
the walk at 5 –
I went to talk to John about carting coals for the drift – Thinks he can do it – Then went to the drift – A good fire – Had had 2 wheelbarrows of coal (i.e. not quite 2 corves) which will last 2 nights – John brings 8 corves at a time at 6d = 4/. + turnpikes 10d = 4/10 –
Had
had letter that waited my return from W. F. Holroyde for the chairman of
Mr. Wortley’s Committee, dated at the Talbot Inn to ask me to get John
Bottomley to go down to give a plumper for Wortley as soon as possible in the
morning – To go first to the magistrate’s office at Ward’s End – Sent John
Booth to John Bottomley to speak to him – He was not returned from Halifax – Had
had 2 letters, one telling him to go to the Talbot, the other telling him to go
to the White Swan – She was going to Halifax to seek him, and would send him
here on his return home – No John Bottomley by 9, so sent George to inquire
again about him, and to take John Booth to be after him (John Bottomley) by 5
a.m. tomorrow and take care of his plumping for Wortley –
Came
in a little before 6 – Dinner at 6 25/.. – Dessert – Coffee – Then Ann and I
with my father and Marian 1/4 hour till came upstairs at 8 –
Wrote
out today – with my aunt about 20 minutes or more till 10 10/.. – She pretty
well – Ann never well in very frosty weather so not quite well today in
spite of her walk, which, however did not tire her much –
Very
fine day –hard frost – Fire all day in the library stove so that F 40° in my
study at 10 10/.. tonight.
WYAS Finding Numbers SH:7/ML/E/17/0137
and SH:7/ML/E/17/0138
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