Adams Family Correspondence, volume 4
1781-12-18
I send you a Volume of Politics. A Second Volume will be ready in 6 or 7 Weeks.—You will hear more about this Paper, in time.1
I have received several kind Letters from you. Pray continue to write me, altho you should be disappointed of my Answers. I have noted your Desire, in one of them and have taken such measures as I could, but fear you have received nothing as yet, although some have been sent.2 Little can be done in this Way. This Country begins to think seriously of Us but they must think a long time, you know.
There is no Prospect of Peace. Let our Country men look to their Trade and Privateers, for I
suspect the English will strain every Nerve, to hurt them in this Way finding so many Caudine
Forks in 267the Land War. The English are amuzing the Dutch
with insidious Proposals of a seperate Peace. But I am perswaded no such Thing can take Place.
A Quadruple Alliance would be much more for the Honour and Interest of this
Rep
The Emperor has acceeded to the armed Neutrality: so that all the Powers of the World, are either at War with England or pledged to be Neutral. The King of Prussia acceeded sometime ago.
The Brit
Our Allies have at last found the true Method of obtaining Tryumphs. If they pursue the Plan the War will be easy.
The British Navy will be much weaker next year than this. Their Army is not proposed to be stronger, and they will not find it in fact, near so strong.
Let Dr. Cooper read the Politique Hollandais, and tell him that I will send him his sermon
and the Governors Speech and the Massachusetts Constitution, translated into Dutch, as soon as
I can. The Translation is published with an elegant Comparison between the
Mass
Evidently the “Volume” sent was the first volume of Le politique
hollandais, issued at Amsterdam late in 1781 and mentioned by name in the last
paragraph of this letter. The editor of this proFrench, pro-American, anti-Orangist weekly
periodical was JA's friend A. M. Cerisier, identified above in this volume; for
a fuller account of him and his journal, see JA,
Diary and Autobiography
, 2:453–454.
JA alludes to a collection of documents relative to the American Revolution
translated and edited pseudonymously by the Patriot writer and clergyman Diary and Autobiography
, 2:456. Entitled Verzameling
der Stukken tot de dertien Vereenigde Staeten van Noord-Amerika betrekkelijk, Leyden,
1781, it contained among other things (in part furnished by JA) a text of the
Massachusetts Constitution of 1780; Rev. Samuel Cooper's Sermon
Preached ... October 25, 1780, Boston, 1780; and Governor John Hancock's speech at the
opening of the first session of the Massachusetts legislature under the new constitution, 31
Oct. 1780. JA's copies are in MB
(
Catalogue of
JA's Library
, p. 255). See also Van der Kemp to JA,
26 Nov., and Jean Luzac to JA,
10 Dec. 1781, both in Adams Papers; and Van
der Kemp, Autobiography
, p. 44–45, 214.