Washington March 12 1820 My dear friend, I have been under the necessity of remaining at home to day to write letters, and I have appropriated part of the time to write to you- the last letters which I have received from home were dated on the 22d of February, but I am in daily expectation of receiving some as I cannot belive you would let more than one week pass without writing, unless Gibb should fail.  My health continues good so that I have lost no time this winter in attend- ing to the business of the house- As I have concluded that possi- bly Samuel may have returned to Burlington, I have directed my papers to you and hope you will be careful to preserve them- We have been voted down on the question of admitting Slavery into the new state of Missouri- We had considerable warmth in congress for two or three weeks on that, much gas- conade, many threats &c- from the Southern representatives- and they succeeded in scareing [scaring] some of our northern folks so that they were afraid to vote- but that subject is now laid to rest and we are engaged in making some attempts to lessen the expenses of government, which of later, like the expenses of many private folks, considerably exceed its income- Henry W. Edwards, a son of Pierpont Edwards, is one of the mem- bers from Connecticutt, he told me the other day that he remem- bered you very well, altho' he was quite young when you left New haven.  He is a decent good looking man- he made one speech in Congress, but displays no very brilliant tallent [talent]- the delegation from Connecticutt in this Congress, altho' decent respect- able men, and all repulican, I do not conceive, in point of talents, to be equal to those who were here during the last congress, par- ticularly to Mr. Pitkin and one other Mr. Sherwood-I expect you have lately had rather cold weather in Vermont, it has for about a week been quite cold here and freezes very hard- yet there is no snow on the ground, nor has there been any for some time, but ground is frozen hard and very rough- I want to hear how you get along, particularly with the [stock] whether they have got over the disorder, or are dead- And I wish you would tell Conant that, if there shall be water enough to save before I come home, I wish he would save for no person on any other condition, than to take his pay in boards- We shall want a good many next season and if we get more than we want for our own use, they can always be sold- I wrote something in my last about Garfield's taking the favor this year which I hope you will receive before this reaches you- I wish you to give my love to Mary, and tell her to write me-and accept the assurance of my constant love and esteem S C Crafts Mrs. E Crafts