![]() |
| Previous Letter (by date) | Next Letter (by date) |
My dearest Friend
I last Evening received
your kind Letters of Jan'ry
18
[John to Abigail, 18 January 1794]
,
20
[John to Abigail, 21 January 1794]
and 22d
[John to Abigail, 22 January 1794]
accompanied with the Negotiation's. I have
read the two pamphlets You sent me before. If the American pamphlet is the
production of the person to whom report ascribes it, I think very little
honour is due to his Head, and none to his Heart. I am
sorry he is calld to fill so important an Office, as
the one to which he is lately appointed. His Ideas are many of them derived
from the Gambling Table and his allusions from a Brothel which he
coarsly distributes without respect to his readers.
He might not imagine that his subject would draw the attention of a Female
reader Yet he who respected himself would have been more delicate, if the Ideas
had not been too Familiar to him, and his uncloathed Negroes had blackned his mind. I cannot give free credit to his
representations respecting the Banks and funding systems, nor can I ascribe
such dreadfull plats to those who have the
management of them as this Modern Argus sees. That multiplied
Banks are productive of many of those evil consequences which he
enumrates I both see and feel, that many persons
are making fortunes from them I believe, that they are an indirect tax upon the
community, I fully credit, but his proposed remidy
would be worse than the disease. His attempt at Wit and his affected ridicule
upon the balance of power, proves his grose ignorance
of a subject, upon which his Ideas, are all bewilderd, and Incoherent. It is plain however that
this pamphlet is the continuation of the system adopted last Winter and
Breaths the same spirit with Giles
and his veterans.
The warning to Great Britain I have not read. Our Son brought it up one Saturday Evening but not having read it himself and being obliged to return it on Monday prevented my reading it. I wish it might be a sufficient Warning to us to continue our Nuetrality unimpared.
The dull and gloomy weather I recieve had influenced Your Spirits, and the
Politicks of the day had made You sick. You wanted
the repose of your Family and the Bosom of your Friend. I know how it was by
your letter.
You can do much service to your Sons by your Letters, and advice. You will not teach them what to think, but how to think, and they will then know how to act. I am glad You have read Barnevelt, and do not think him too roughly handled. His Age only intitled him to any respect. He evidently felt himself in the back ground, and sunk out of sight, but secretly from the dark shoots a poisond Arrow.
I shall attend to Your wishes with respect to every
thing which can be done. The winter has been unfavourable for busines.
The pond is hard enough frozen, if we had but sufficient snow to cover those
parts of the Ground which are bare. The wood we get when practable, but I have made an important discovery viz
that an old man is not a Young man. Belcher however is in
every respects preferable but cannot be so active as when Young. He is not
devoted to the Rum bottle. I informd You that I had
recieved the Bills, and have dischargd the accounts of Phipps Samil
and bought an other load of Hay. Paid to
Mrs. Brisler ten
I received a letter last Evening for Mrs. Brisler which I sent to her. She was finely to day the Boy is stout and strong.
[Endorsement -- see page image]
| Previous Letter (by date) | Next Letter (by date) |