Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 1
I had this day the happyness of receiving a Letter from you;1 nothing cou'd have given me a more real pleasure than what I found contain'd in it (vizt.) that my Friend was well. I assure you Sr. that my affection for you is such, that, had I only a principle of self-love to move me, that112were sufficient to make me thankfull to Heav'n for any of its favours to you. I think I can't express the sentiments of my Heart better than in the following lines of Mr. Thos. Rowe.
Your complaining of your want of Company, that are to the purpose makes me the more desirious of your selling, if possible, near Boston (this is self-love still) that so I might have an opertunity of gratifying my self in your company, and at the same time help to remove the mention'd inconveniency.
I wish you cou'd meet with such a solitude as that you mention, which I think would be much more eligeable than the tumult of the Town.
Mr. Palmer's going home is still uncertain, it depending on our receiving our Debts, which we hope to get when the Dollars are paid out.
As to the state of money, all that I know is, that People already refuse Hampshire Bills and that our Province Bills will be redeem'd according to the late Act;4 and that no Bills of other Provinces may Pass here after this Month.
113And now, after so much verse and Prose, I'm apt to think it will be very a propos to subscribe my self Your sincere Friend and humble Sert.
P.S. Mr. Palmer and Ribb, and Polly5 are recover'd from their indisposition. You'll have a letter from Mr. Palmer I suppose per Bearer. I sent you a Letter last Week. Pray be so kind as to write, when you have an opertunity, which shall always be acknowledg'd as a favour by
Not located.
From "An Epistle to a Friend. Written in the Spring, 1710," by Thomas Rowe, in Original Poems and Translations (London, 1738), reprinted in The Miscellaneous Works in Prose and Verse of Mrs. Elizabeth Rowe, 2 vols. (London, 1739), 2:269β270.
From "Occasion'd by the Foregoing" [i.e., "Sent the Author into the country. Written by a Lady"] by George Granville Lansdowne, Poems upon Several Occasions (n.p., n.d.), 70.
Mass. Province Laws, 3:480β481. For a discussion of this and the redemption of paper currency, see Andrew McFarland Davis, Currency and Banking in the Province of the Massachusetts-Bay, 2 pts. (New York, 1901), 1, chap. 12.
Mary Palmer (1746β1791), eldest child of Joseph and Mary (Cranch) Palmer.