Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13
I received a few days ago with great pleasure your favour of 5
March. the perusal of which affected me with various sensations, some pleasing and
others less so, but all, cordially participating in the circumstances affecting your
welfare and happiness, mentioned in it.1
Neither the length of time nor the distance at which I have been from my Country, nor
yet, any change in my own situation has effected any alteration in the sentiments of
attachment to my 92 friends, with which I parted from them, and
consequently I could not but share with full soul, the feelings, which the occurrences
of your life, whether fortunate or adverse occasion to you. Some of the most precious
comforts I know how to value, because I myself now enjoy the same in an eminent degree;
others I can estimate also for the contrary reason, because I have been disappointed in
the hope of possessing them.— The blessings of wedded love
have been mine, almost a year, but I have not the happiness of being a parent.— The
partner of my life, like your’s adds every day to the ties of affection which united us,
and but for a misfortune of which you will have heard before this time, I might have now
completed all the immediate relations of domestic life and participated in all the
sources of domestic felicity.
I had heard with much concern of Mr:
Greenleaf’s misfortunes, and I have been sincerely grieved upon finding in your letter,
that they have in some measure extended to you. I hope that a more favourable turn of
fortune, may relieve you from all embarassment, and should feel happy if it were in my
power to contribute to it.
At a time when the appearance of peace is returning to Europe,
every symptom announces that our own Country will be involved in unavoidable war. If any
thing could have prevented it before, it is now made impossible for us to escape it, by
the publication of the documents containing the negotiation of our Commissioners at
Paris. They unfold indeed a scene of corruption & venality, which Americans could
scarcely believe, but which is universally known in France, and frequently complained
of, but which cannot be remedied, because the most depraved men, are at the same time
those who hold unlimited power in their hands. They have an absolute controul even over
the press, and not a newspaper in France has dared to intimate the proposals, which our
commissioners rejected, of offering money to the members of the Directory. These facts
however, cannot be thoroughly concealed from the rest of Europe and they will carry the
resentment of the Directory to its utmost pitch of rage. Our Country must expect the
worst that they can inflict upon it, and I hope will be properly prepared for its own
defence. I said the appearance of peace was returning to
Europe, but it is nothing more; a real and permanent peace is yet very distant. It is
impossible that France should for years to come, either be at peace herself or leave her
neighbours so.
Hitherto there has been little done this season, besides making preparations. An immense armament has been gathering in France 93 these eight months, said to be destined for the invasion of England. A large force, forming part of it has embarked and probably sailed from Toulon, but as this is not a place from which an attack upon England can be directly made, there have been numerous conjectures as to the point of its direction. It is commanded by Buonaparte.
The English on their side have attempted a small expedition against Ostend and destroyed a sluice, which affords an internal communication between that place and Dunkirks, but it has cost them 1500 men, who were taken before they could again go on board their ships.2
I am, with the warmest wishes for your prosperity and happiness, ever affectionately your friend.
LbC in TBA’s hand (Adams Papers); internal address: “W. Cranch Esqr:”; APM
Reel 133.
Vol. 12:440–442.
On 19 May the British Navy attacked a French naval installation
at Ostend, Belgium, that was expanding canals in order to admit larger vessels. The
British successfully destroyed the canal locks and sluices as well as several ships in
the harbor, but adverse weather prevented the troops from returning to the ships. The
entire British force of about 1,300 men was captured by the French after a short
battle (Great Britain, War Office, British Minor Expeditions,
1746–1814, London, 1884, p. 27–31).