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Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 2

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From Robert Barker

18 March 1758

From Elizabeth Freeman

1 April 1758
To Eunice Paine
RTP Paine, Eunice
Saturday Morning April 1758 Our Eunice,

You have my Epistles from all quarters. I am determind to make you pay for the paper. I dont know whether any thing else is meritorious; I expect Capt. Ford will return in a Boat to Boston. I pray you to send the Electrical Machine1 by him, & first take off the Glass83Globe & wrap it up some how very safe, & screw up all the screws tight so that nothing be lost; I have great thoughts of coming down to day in a chair to bring you up on Monday, but being uncertain how it would suit you & also not much spirited for Enterprizes I cant tell how it will be. My Compliments to all; yr. last Present fit me nicely but I believe won't last till next Winter; if I dont come down you had better come up with Capt. Ford in a Boat if you see cause; I think of nothing else but that I am yrs. &c.

R.T.P.

Miss Dora is in Town, brim full of Matrimony; O amazing! how are the choicest souls corrupted!

RC ; addressed: "To Miss Eunice Paine at Weymouth"; endorsed.

1.

Machines for creating static electricity had become widespread in Europe and America by this time. Benjamin Franklin is said to have given one to Yale College in 1749 (see Franklin, Papers, 3:126–135, 5:500). Gilbert and Lewis Deblois advertised "An Electrical Machine and two spare Globes" for sale in 1754 (George Francis Dow, The Arts & Crafts in New England, 1704–1775 [Topsfield, Mass., 1927] 114).