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Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 2

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From Eunice Paine

30 November 1758

To Eunice Paine

1 December 1758
To Richard Cranch
RTP Cranch, Richard
Boston Decr. 1, 1758 Dear Sr.,

The design of this is to mind you of yr. Promise to favour me with yr. ever desirable company to Taunton the Monday after next. I have heard nothing from freind Abel,1 & as I can't tell when he will be down so can't plan out the time of my coming along exactly, whether on Saturday PM or on Monday Morning, but if you will go you can be ready at a minutes warning; Dear freind do not if possible dissapoint my Expectations of much Pleasure this Journey. He who go in quest of happiness ten to one but he is Chagrind, but he who Carrys it with him, come good come bad it does but aggrandize his felicity either by making a reall addition, or shewing his own in a better point of light by Comparison. Pray write me on the subject by the first Opportunity. I am got fixed at my new Lodgings where I long to see you; I have been in great confusion lately & in the clutter of moving have mislaid my best ready cut & dry'd compliments. Therefore pray you who always have a stock to lend me a few & present them in my name to Miss Hannah.2 that Sr. will be a121pleasure to you and a great peice of Service to me. My Respects to Md. Quincy,3 & wt. is proper to every body else. I have but just paper enough to desire you to convey the accompanying Letter to my Sister as it relates to business, renewing my Petition aforsd. I conclude yr. freind & hble. servt.

R. T. PAINE

RC ; addressed: "To Mr. Richard Cranch at Weymouth"; endorsed.

1.

Abel Willard.

2.

Probably Hannah Hill (1734–1782), who later married Samuel Quincy. See Benjamin Church to RTP, Dec. 3, 1758.

3.

Perhaps Elizabeth (Waldron) Quincy (1722–1759), daughter of Rev. William Waldron of Boston and second wife of Col. Josiah Quincy (H. Hobart Holly, Descendants of Edmund Quincy, 1602–1637 [Quincy, Mass., 1977], 6).