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Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 1

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From Samuel Haven

21 June 1750

From Gideon Richardson

10 August 1750
From Samuel Haven
Haven, Samuel RTP
Westboro' July 19th. 1750 Dear Sr.,

Since I saw you I receiv'd yours1which you won't wonder was very gratefull to me when I tel you, that every Thing that comes furnished with your Name in its Rear, Can't miss of a grateful Acceptance. But I would Thank you for it & so Dismiss it, and proceed to the business in hand viz.

First to See if you will according to proposal take a ride with me into Connecticutt this Septembr. which is at hand. Now you may be induced to it from two Motives. (1) Love to your Self. (2) Love to your Friend. Self Love will be an Incentive in that such a ride may probably be for the preservation of Life & emolument of your Health as also an inlargement of Knowledge and reciprocal Edification of the Historical part of your Scientific Edifice. Wc. brings me to say 2dly. you may be induced to it from Love to your Friend, in as much as I Shall participate in the same advantages for edification with the adjunction of your instructive & beneficiall Conversation. Wherefore I Shall dismiss this first article with only Desiring you to Consider well what has been Said and order your business accordingly.

(Thus far (I hope) innocent mirth).

122

But now, my Friend! let Me propose some thing more Serious and that is that you would write to me upon those Topicks which you told me you had Thoughts of doing: viz. Some things wc. occurred to your mind in Divinity by way of Objection or wc. were Dark and puzzling: not that I would intimate by this request that I am certainly able to Solve 'em or in any measure to teach you; but merely that I am a Searcher after truth, and would be glad to Know all argument pro & con in all parts of Theology. But I dismiss this particular also with a friendly Caution to be impartial in your Contemplation on those points, and proceed to the melancholy news of Thurston's Death 2 No doubt you had heard of it before, however I think it Deserves a second thought. Oh! how painful the Consternation how ineffable the grief when the mournful sound Thurston is Dead first Saluted my Ears. & even now the Idea can't be Erased from our minds if we Consider what particular relation he stood in to us as Class-Mates, and as of the Same Phoen philenici but in espical Manner as we are Embarqued in the Same Christian Cause. If we Consider farther that God has in his Righteous but aufull providence by the much lamented Death aforesd. removed from the world not a New but a Noble Light, from this Land one of her Youthfull but Spritly Ornaments, from Harvard a Dutiful Son from the Church a promising Teacher, and from us a Jonathan a Friend a peculiar Friend, well may each of us say Alas! Alas! my Brother. But the Subject is too Mournful, too Tender. May Almighty God grant that we may each of us so Consider that Already two of our Small Number are Dead 3 being in their full Strenght whilst their Breasts were full of milk and their Bones moisoned with marrow, as that we may be ready when ever that aufull moment shall approach when the King of Terrors Shall Seize us, and be able to rejoyce (as our Friend did) and say for us to live is Christ but for us to Die is gain. Unspeakable gain.

I am not in a very good State of Health, but would be Thankfull to Heaven for what I enjoy.

Please to Send a Line the first Opportunity, and give Love and respect where due. I Should be glad to See you but am uncertain when I shall have an opportunity at Boston. But this I am Certain of that I am your most heaty Friend and Sert.,

SAMLL. HAVEN

N.B. Please to convey the Enclosed.4

RC ; addressed: “To Mr: Robert-Treat Paine In Boston to be left at Mr. Brackets in School-House lane"; endorsed.

123 1.

Not located.

2.

Abijah Thurston died at Wrentham on July 8, 1750.

3.

William Whipple (1730–1750), the class orator, had died at his home in New port, R.I., on June 23, 1750.

4.

The enclosure has not been located.