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Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 2

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To John Dyer
RTP Dyer, John
Boston April 14th. 1760 Sr.,

I wrote you last Novr. inclosing a Power from Mr. Joseph Palmer to Sue Fairbanks.1 I have not heard from you but hope you have effected the thing, & reduced my Note into a better Scituation than it was if not got the money. With pleasure I hear of yr. health by Dr. Grey, & with great I inform you that Mrs. Fuller2 is fully recovered to her health & Reason. My Respects to yr. Lady. Mrs. Billing3 has lost her child. I Subscribe yr. Obliged hble. servt.,

RTPAINE

LbC ; addressed: "To John Dyar Esqr. at Canterbury by Dr. Grey omitted by Mr. Simons."

1.

Letter not located, but RTP noted in his letterbook under the date of Nov. 9, 1759: "wrote to John Dyar Esqr. of Canterbury & sent Mr. Joseph Palmer power to him to sue Fairbanks. by Mr. Huntington."

184 2.

Sarah (Dyer) Fuller (1728–1803), wife of Abraham Fuller of Newton, and one of John Dyer's Weymouth family connections.

3.

Theodora (Dyer) Billings.

To Henry Ferguson
RTP Ferguson, Henry
Boston April 14 1760 Sr.,

I wrote you in Octr. last, but have not have the pleasure of hearing from you since I saw you. I should take it extreemly kind if you would let me know What is like to be done abt. Mr. Freemans Estate. It is extreemly hard that after all the expence & trouble I was at which you well know was great that I should get Nothing. It lays with you Sr. & I doubt not you'll do the thing that is right, without obliging me to make another Voyage there. Pray let me hear how the affair Stands, that so I may judge. The Widow is the Only person that favrs. me with any letters & her whole concern is abt. being turnd out of the house. I should be glad of your advice about all these affairs, you know I respect you on many accts. & therefore hope to be favoured with a line from you. Yr. Obliged hble. sert.,

RTPAINE

LbC ; addressed: "To Mr. Henry Ferguson at Halifax."

To Abel Willard
RTP Willard, Abel
Boston April 14th. 1760 Sr.,

The letter I recieved by Mr. Divol I did not Answer as it deserved & as I intended expecting he would return sooner than he did. I can't express how pleased I was at the discovery wch. yr. Epistle (for that name this one of a thousand deserves) convinced me I had made. I don't pretend to claim it as an discovery Invention but really a discovery & as truly so as that of Gunpowder & much more valuable to me that of Gunpowder or the much desired Longitude for by this Sr. I can as with Gunpowder Operate on you at a distance & know my Scituation with regard to you more as Surely than by the discovery of Longitude & with as much reall pleasure as Sailors would know their distance course & distance to their desired port by the discovery of Longitude.185The discovery I allude is a sure means of knowing yr. existence & making you comunicate yr. invaluable state of mind & employments. In the Natural World we have found a strange Sympathy between different Bodys, thus the Loadstone attracts Iron, Aqua Regia operates on Gold & aqua fortis on Silver, And the hidden qualitys of many valuable bodys are only known by the application of some other Bodys to them. & thus Sr. to write to you on the Subject of Judging horse flesh is a sure Means to throw open yr. Soul & make you discover excellencys which you industriously Strive to hide. O blessed Day in which by being cheated in horse flesh I first was laid under a Necessity of applying to you, O Noble Animal form'd by Nature the only Heroe to break the bulwarks of yr. Mind & penetrate to the Magazines of yr. inexhausted Kingdom; Nor will I ever forget you O individual of this Noble Species tho' broken Winded & unfit for my use, but will record you with a remembrance before that of Buchephalus1 seeing thou hast eventually led me on to more valuable acquisitions then he ever did his Master. I doubt Sr. after this I never shall have a horse that suits or at least I lay at yr. Mercy for the least signal? reservedness from you will disgust me to my horse, I fully determine.

RTP

Dft ; endorsed: "Letter to Abel Willard April 1760."

1.

The favorite horse of Alexander the Great (N. G. L. Hammond and H. H. Scullard, eds., The Oxford Classical Dictionary. 2d ed. [Oxford, 1970]).