Adams Family Correspondence, volume 8
th.89.
Mr. Duerr, as you pronounce
it, and my Wife seem to think alike as to the Powers of an Ambassadress when placed as
an Helpmate to the Ambassador. Mr D. had an Idea of an
handsome Face Mrs. L thought only of the Good Sense of the
Lady. If this is ambiguous, yr.
best Friend can make it plain so far as relates to Duerr.1
As to Mrs. L I will show her to you in a Minute, just as
She appeared the first Instant her Eyes were opened this Morning “Well Mr: Lovell I think as others do, you are too confident about
your office;— you ought to go to New York;— One of your main Expectations has failed you
already;— your Friend Portia is not going on to Congress.”
Good Morning Ma'am, replied I, “I am sorry for that.”—a
Pause—
Indeed, Portia, there was not so much Compliment in my Reply as a Stranger would guess
there was. “I am sorry,” because I could say twenty Things to you which I would not dare to trouble your Husband with. I could talk to you about Insurgents, and the Tools of the Tools of
Insurgents, down to the Successor of the Successor of your
humble Servant late a Naval officer, for the Port of Boston. But really I should not
have thought of this Subject if I had not heard it said Yesterday by one of the veriest
of that Tribe “my Friends have spooken to Mr. Adams about me.” Curses on
their 332Impudence! it makes no Odds to them whether Virtue
or Vice is in Rule; they hope with good Grounds under the
latter and they dare to ask Patronage of the former. In
this Commonwealth, I have seen them have every Advantage. Vice triumphant, they have
turned out of Place whom they would; and upon a Change in Government they held their
Offices because the virtuous would not take the vicious
Mode of turning any Man out who did his Duty let him have
gotten into office how he might. By being the accidental but Kidney,— Deputy of Nat. Barber for 3 Months only,
the present Naval Officer was preferred before John Rice who had served 3 years, with me faithfully scientifically & amiably. But I
would only be understood here as remarking who ought not to
have the Naval office of this Port. leaving it totally with my Betters to say who shall
have it.2 The present Incumbent may have one advocate at Head
Quarters if Mr. O should be chosen Clerk of the Senate.
“Scratch now for me and I will always scratch for you,” has been the perpetual Rule of that republican Electioneering Set, to which the Two in Question
belonged— A caucasing-Town-Meeting Bulldog like Barber or one of a more sly least like
his Successor, must have had many Promises of future
Friendship from would-be Representatives Senators & Governors in this Town, who
thought that the Road of Promises was the broad one to Preferment.
I am Madam, yours respectfully
RC (Adams Papers).
James Lovell and AA briefly revived their correspondence for three letters after a five-year hiatus. He also wrote to JA on this same date seeking an office in the new government (Adams Papers). For more on Lovell's unusual letter-writing style, and his correspondence with AA, see vol. 3:xxxiv–xxxv.
Lovell had been appointed naval officer for the port of Boston in July 1784,
succeeding Nathaniel Barber, with John Rice serving as his deputy. Lovell remained in
that position until 1787 when he was replaced by Barber. The state again named Lovell
to the post later in 1789 (vol. 5:355, 357–358; Fleet's Pocket Almanack, 1785, p. 26; 1786, p. 20; 1787, p.
39; 1788, p.55;
Sibley's Harvard Graduates
, 14:45).