Robert Treat Paine Papers, Volume 2
I recd. yo. favo. relating to Cornishs affair & the proposal made by Mr. Hall to give his note for what is due to me from Cornish.1 From the character you give of Mr. Hall I am content it should be settled in that way & should be glad if the note could be taken payable in March as I have been so long out of my mony however shall leave the time of payment to be settled by you. At foot you have the amt. of the debt. & costs of Court. I think the Interest should commence from the time the mony was due which was six months after delivery of the Goods however desire you will do the best you can in finishing this affair for me which will oblige Sir yr. most hume. Servt.
| 1763 | ||
| Feby. 10th | To Sundrey Goods | 38.19. 4 |
| Cost of Court | 2.16. 4 |
Not located. On the long-unsettled debt of Josiah Cornish, see Foster Hutchinson to RTP, Boston, Oct. 18, 1763.
I would as soon undertake to write a compleat history of the Stamp Act, my own life or a Body of Orthodox Divinity as answer in an ample manner one of yr. own Letters. When I got home I recd. your last & have been labring with the thoughts of an Answer ever since, not daring to attempt what must cost me so much time study & expence of Spirits. At last an Opportuyou must tell who understand those things.Ive been in a sort of delirium since I left you, such a kind of state as we may suppose of a Roman Catholic Soul before he gets to H--n H--ll or Purgatory. However I have bought Pomposity cloathed in Horse flesh, but have not yet proved him; & am so far prepared to run away. What still remains to compleat my Wishes is full as modest as yours, the discription of which made me think of this line "and give Humil
In yr. last you told me of Strange Temptations you are under, which put me athinking, but this letter opens to me further grounds of Suspicion; I find you labour with Sentiments & are almost determind to make away with them because you have got no Cloaths for the poor little Rogues. Fye upon your Pride you had better act like
"one of Appollo's little Flirts
And dress 'em up in Doggrel Shirts"1
If Language is unkind to you, I would discard the false hearted wretch, or else sue him for Damages, & if yr. Words fly you, put out an Advertisknow.
If yr. Elbows want Room cut a hole in yr. Gown, or as sailors say take a sheep shank in 'em; you dont seem to want Composure; I think you Compose pretty well tho you nor Jno. Lock could tell how many 2 + 2 make. Thats a flight in yr. mathematical way & not in yr. skill at Composition; I often feell in the same mood of want of Composure, & begin to project this & that & tother, when in comes a Son of the Woods, is Lawyer Pane at home. At the rueful sound, away fly projects, doubts, Prospects & anxietys, & down to a little Consultation of some Body's else troubles, & in short I see so many people happier more miserable than my self that I never complain withhowever but to return your Compliment of Lecturing, I must observe to you that I take your sly insinuation, in recomending to me to hire the Poarch of the Brick Meeting House3 for an office, (to say nothing of the wickedness of the thought, in making the old Brick Meeting House a house of Office ), for as you manifestly compare that Scituation with my392present you plainly allude to the Text "it is better to be a Door Keeper than dwell in the Tents of Wickedness"4; this is giving me a Lecture in Manner & form, for you have taken an appropriated Subject for it, & got as near the Pulpit as you dare. What shall I do on Thursdays? The Author who you say treats of hunting a Metaphor, is one I never Met-a-fore, & so can say nothing about him, nor can I tell what your genuine Bowl contain'd which you say you drank to enable you to write yr. Letter, for I cant read the word & so must suppose it to be some rare liquor which is not known to any but those who dwell in Tents that be taken down & put up again at pleasure, & so I cant return any Effects of the same draught but to invigorate me for this undertaking I took a good hearty Quid of the true genuine hgdrgadkgprwooonstond Tobbacco & think it has produced as much nothing about something as yr. genuine unintelligeable did something about nothing, & think I may now venture to subscribe myself yr. affectionate
Quotation not identified.
Not identified.
Following a fire in 1711, the congregation of the First Church, Boston, erected a new meetinghouse in brick in 1712–1713. Called the New Brick Church until the New North Church was built in 1714, when the First Church then became known as the Old Brick Church (Arthur B. Ellis, History of the First Church in Boston, 1630–1880 [Boston, 1881]).
Psalms 84:10.