Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 1
Brother Paine,
with pleasure I Imbrace this Opportunity to write. You mention'd in your letter to me you tho't their was not any thing Engage my tho'ts, but Worcester. But I can assure you my friends now in the Expedition & the Consequences of it, (if they should not proceed, as you seem to think they will not) are Continually in my mind, & the Chief Toppick is Crown Point. But we Now Dispair of your proceeding this year & I Expect to see you at Lancaster soon, for poor Abel is in trouble, for he is not able to confine himself to his Chamber above an Hour at a time except when asleep, & if you Dont Return soon he will loose this Winter Intirely.
Mars engrosses so much of our thots. and conversation that I can scarce put in a word or Even think of Venus, & the Nuptial day Stands Perogued untill the fifteenth of Novr. which will be a Saturday Night.
Ms. Kate & all our friends at Worcester are often Inquioring after you, & as for Lancaster for a fortnight after you left us, the discourse was when one pe
You tell me your Stores ar not arive'd which I am sory to hear, but if you stay any time their, when your Stores arive & get you a good house317built, I hope you will give your Self time to set down to your Desk & Give us a full acct. of the Proceedings that we may know What to Depend upon.
Our Nova Scotia friends are well the last acct.—as allso Lancaster & Boston friends. We have accounts by Capt. Partridge from London that the English have taken 5 french men of War & Severall Marchantmen as allso one of our Ships in the Engagement were Blown up by some accident. I shall add no more but Subscribe my Self Your Sincear friend &c. &c.,
Well knowing your natural Curiosity, & the pleasure you take in the discription of foreign parts, I undertake to describe to you some Obs
Abt. the latter end of Summer I sat out, accompanied with some persons of Quality, each one properly accoutered with Fire Arms & Blanketts to defend agst. the Insolencys of an Enemy or the Inclemencys of a cold Night. I shall not troble you with Occurrencys near home, every one meets with them, but after a Travail of some Days we came into a fine Country where the Face of the Earth was covered with Produce not indebted to the Labour of the Husbandman, the highways thro' this country laid out in a very spacious manner being in most places 20, 30, yea 100 miles wide & in many places very plentifully pav'd, but the Country being new, the paving work seems not to be compleated, for in many places the rich fat soil proves very offensive to the feet of the Travailer. However there is abundant provision for water wch. is so scituated that a foot Travailer cannot avoid washing himself. In passing thro' this country, We visited many fine Citys, wch. were not sufficiently different from wt. we commonly see to deserve describing; till after a long Travail we came to318a city so very extraordinary, as deserves the minutest discription. We arrived abt. dark, & took Quarters at a Freinds house for some considerable Time & in discribing this wonderfull place I shall note down obsPurgatory at the other End, & so one would think to see the innumerable Ferry Boats which are here prepar'd to waft the Inhabitants forward. The Land here is not tilld, tho it is excellently manured. They raise no Provision but have it transported from other parts, that at times you would think you were in Lubber Land, & again that you were on a Moroon Island. The No. of Inhabitants tis impossible to tell for like the world 'tis perpetually changing with
The rise & progress of this City, or even the various alterations that happned during my tarry there would abundantly divert a curious person. Upon my first Arrival I found only a small tract of abt. 22 acres compactly setled & the Inhabitants strictly confind within these Narrow LimHorn genrally growing on the Right side. 'Twould be natural to think it a reall part of their Body if it grew on their Heads, but 'tis genrally thought by Strangers to be an Excrescence, for upon Examination they are found to contain a sort of black, subtile, penetrating Powder, no ways akin to their Constitution, tho' some have said320that this is their Brains, because 'tis Observed they have Another Instrumt. of strange form & Composition, with wch. only they hold Arguments & disputes, & 'tis seen that when ever they use them, they put of this powerful Trade into it; wch. renders their Arguments very penetrating & wn. they Argue matters of Consequence they add a small leaden Composition taken from a Neighbouring Receptacle to this Brain, wch. often render their Arguments decisive, & hence 'tis inferr'd, that Leaden Brain'd men are the most sutable Inhabitants of this City. Having described the Persons, Dress, & manner of Living of this Strange People, I shall take Notice of some perticulars which are not reducible to any head of Oeconomy known among us, as in perticular, every thing here is done by the Sound of a Bell, but then they are different from ours being a Composition of Wood & Leather, & are carried about for various Uses. Early in the Morning you'll hear them sounding all abt. upon which the Inhab