
ASYLUM
FOR THE INSANE
LONDON
ONTARIO
London, Ont., 11 Mch 1888
I have been and am still in considerable of a flustration here—have had the
Inspector, he left yesterday, have to go to Toronto this afternoon to interview the
minister of Public Works about the new building to replace one burned. Shall be back
here again Monday evening or Tuesday. We are all well, sleighing's done though
still a great deal of ice and snow over the fields &c I enclose Lippencott's
letter—have heard nothing since about the
Worthington business. Have done nothing more with my W.W. paper, shall
rewrite it as soon as I get a little time (a mighty hard thing to find nowadays) and
I think send it to Walsh of Lippencott. Or would it be
well to keep it until Kennedy's book comes out (will be out
very soon now I suppose?) and incorperate it in a notice of that book—?
In any case I shall get to work elaborating it as soon as I can—It has been snowing, & blowing great guns all day—there is a lull now and sun trying to come out.
Always affectionately R M Bucke
