Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 1
Since I see you last at Philadelphia, I have been constantly Engag'd with heats & colds, Storms & Tempests, but amidst all my Fatigues & hurries I have never forgotton my Freinds, but have often thought of you with a great deal of Satisfaction & desire. I have never have had any perticular Oppertunity of writing to you, till now. Mr. Addington Davenport a perticular Freind of mine is travailling that Way an acquaintance wth. whom I doubt not will be very Agreable to you as he is a Gentleman of great Ingenuity. Pray Remember me to all acquaintance & tell Mrs. Read that I have not forgott the Care she took of me, give my Sincere Respects & Service to Dr. Bond & Family & Complements to all the Ladies I have had Any Acquantance. I am bound to Sea very soon but hope in the Fall if possible to visit the City of Brotherly Love, I never think of Philadelphia without a vast deal of pleasure, I had some Acquaintance there wch. I believe I never shall forget. Excuse my Brevity & assure yr. Self that I am yr. Loving Brother very Freind & humble Servt.,
Stephen Woolley (1724–1776), son of Edmund and Mary (Parsons) Woolley, and nephew of William Parsons, surveyor general of Pennsylvania, was a medical practitioner in Philadelphia (information from Whitfield J. Bell, Jr., former librarian of the American Philosophical Society).
As I was musing the Other Night, by my Fire side, & preparing my Body to take that Refreshment which Nature calld aloud for, My Thoughts from thence took Occasion to consider the great difference between our souls & our Bodies, & to ruminate on the hidden Mistery of their Union.1How is it thought I, that so active a Spirit as I find my self posses'd off, should inhabit & be so closely United to a lifeless Lump of Clay. But while I mus'd, My Body doz'd Unable any longer to assist my Mind in its Contemplations left it a Captive to the wild flights of Fancy. My Spirit unincumber'd with my Clayey Tabernacle soon trans-186ported me thro' the Deserts of this lower World, being determin'd if possible by indifatigable searches to explicate that Mistery wch. had so lately ingag'd its attention. In this Rapidity I was hurried over hills & dales, thro' Woods & dismal Swamps till at last I came to a stupenduous Montain, whose vast height was perpetually covered with Ice & Snow. Down its steep sides hung Rocks immensely cragged, upon whose rough Backs the purling Stream was conde
The woman to whom RTP addressed this literary exercise was not further identified.