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Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 2

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From Abel Willard
Willard, Abel RTP
Lancaster January 13 1761 Sr.,

I Recd. yours by Capt. Richardson & the Note Inclosed1 & herewith Send Full & for the loan of the Book shall expect (after you have Settled the Affair with de la Vertu2 for till then Mechanism aside) a drill Plow in miniature or Such Directions that Aaron may be able to build one. You gave me a hint in your Letter of an Intercourse cum fratre3 de la Vertu. You had better Said nothing or Said more for it was just enough to Sett me alonging to hear the whole. For I fear O. Bob. O. de la Vertu me Occidisti4 will be the Language of your Soul if Success attends not on thy long & deep laid Schemes. Valeo de Scabie. Quare Gaudeo & valde gavisus Sum5. I am yr. Friend & hble. Servt.

ABEL WILLARD

N.B. Send me Rasilas6 if you have it at home by my Brother the Bearer therof.

I have got a Power of Attorney from Mr. Haskell but it is only a common one which I believe will do if not I will get another & send it in Short time.

RC ; addressed: "To Mr. Robert Treat Paine in Boston"; endorsed: "Abel Willard Jany. 1761."

1.

Not located.

2.

An unidentified woman with whom RTP corresponded. Judging from the comment in this letter, she may have been the E. Clark, probably of Boston, who appears twice in RTP's diary, both times in coded entries: July 31, 1760: "About this time contracted an acquaintance with E. Clark";203Dec. 29, 1760: "This night owned my mind to E. Clark." She does not appear again in either the diary or correspondence.

There are three items, all undated, addressed to I'Vertue in the Paine Papers, none of them published in this edition. One is a undeciphered coded letter, one is titled "To l'Vertue on human Uncertainty," and the other is "To I'Vertue on the Death of her sister."

3.

With the brother of.

4.

You have slain me.

5.

I am well from the scabies. Wherefore I rejoice and have rejoiced very much.

6.

Samuel Johnson, Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia (London, 1759).

To Reynold Marvin
RTP Marvin, Reynold
Boston Jany. 14th. 1761 Sr.,

Hearing yr. Name respectfully mentioned I make bold tho unknown to you to request a favr. wch. is I have the Care of two peices of Land, abt. 15 acres in Kent in the 35th. pitch & 7th. division & abt. 50 acres in Cornwall in N15. 5th. division. My desire is to know the value of these peices & whether there be any buyers for Land there as these are to be Sold. I should receive it very gratefully if you would let me know by Mr. Fitch Who bears this how things are & if you dont know perticularly the Lots Supposing them to be middling good what may be expected of them, & whether you will undertake to Sell them for me. The distance is so great that I cant come often there & being unacquainted in that part of the County I am obliged to trouble you which I hope youll excuse & yr. favr. shall be gratefully acknowledgd by

R.T. PAINE

P.S. Please to write directed to me Care of Mr. Fitch or Mr. Bracket

LbC ; addressed: "To Mr. Renold Mervin."

1.

Reynold Marvin (1726–1802) graduated from Yale in 1748 and practiced law in Litchfield, Conn. He served as kings attorney for the county from about 1765 to 1772 (Dexter, Yale Biographical Sketches, 2:168–169).

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