Adams Family Correspondence, volume 4
1780-12-22
I have this day received two letters from you of the 20th. in one of which you say you would have me attend all the lectures in which Experiments are made, but I shall have to attend two lectures upon 45law, and therefore shall have no time. As to the lecture upon Greek; there is but one, and the Gentlemen with whom Mr. Thaxter has consulted, think that it is necessary, to have made some proficiency in the Greek Language, to be able to attend it.
I have this day seen the master who is to teach us greek and Latin.1 He is to come to us twice a day; from twelve to one oclock and from five to six in the afternoon, so that I shall be two hours occupied with our master an hour at each lecture is two more and the rest of my time I shall be writing from Homer, the Greek testament, of Grammar, and learning lessons for our Master.2
This is a famous day in new England. The anniversary of the landing of our forefathers at Plimouth.3
Our master is to begin with us to morrow.
We are all invited to drink tea with Mr. Luzac to day.
The scene in which Shakespear speaks of Brownist is in the third volume page 121. in Twelfth night or what you will, Act 3 Scene 4th. If you borrow Mr. Searle's Shakespear you will see it there.4
JA on 11 Jan. 1781
“Was present
John Thaxter in his letter of this date, following, gives the tutor's name as
“Wensing.”Diary and
Autobiography
, 2:451).
Punctuation as in MS.
See note 3 on Mrs. Warren's letter to AA of 21 Dec., above.
Sir Andrew Aguecheek: “An't be any way, it must be with valour; for policy I hate. I had as
lief be a Brownist as a politician” (Twelfth Night, Act III,
scene ii, in modern editions). The volume- and page-reference furnished by JQA
is to an edition of The Works of Shakespeare published at
Edinburgh in 8 vols., 1769–1771, Alexander Donaldson printer.