Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13
ry12
the.1799
I received your Letters of Decbr 31
& Jan’ry the 1st I am sorry that it should fall to your
Lot to nominate Col smith again, and that to a lower Grade than, as a soldier he
merrits. I think however that he was placed in a difficult situation. if he had rejected
the offer, those who have stiled him a Jacobin, would have attributed it to motives
unfriendly to his Country, but as a Man particuliarly calculated for the Millitary
department, and having Served his Country with honour and approbation in the Feild, he
deserved [a mu]ch Higher Grade of Rank. the New Modelling the Army [. . .] tend to
reconcile him to the arrangment, but I think as an officer, he ought not to have
submitted to the Nomination, disgraced as he was by the Senate, Some of whom I shall
always remember for their consistancy, of conduct.
The Idea which prevails here, is that Hamilton will be first in
command, as there is very little Idea that Washington will be any thing more than, Name as to actual service, and I am told, that it ill suits
the N England stomache they say He is not a Native, and beside He has so damnd himself
to everlasting Infamy, that He ought not to be Head of any
thing. the Jacobins Hate him & the Federilists do not Love him— Serious people are
mortified; and every Uriah must tremble for his Bathsheba;1 I do not consider G W— at all a happier man,
because he has not Children. if he has none to give him pain, he has none to give him
pleasure, and he has other sources of anxiety, in full proportion. as to conjecturing
what is to be the Lot, and portion 350 of the next
generation; my only anxiety is that they may have good & virtuous Educations, and if
they are left to struggle for themselves, they will be quite as like to rise up virtuous
and distinguished Characters as tho they had been born to great expectations. vicious
conduct will always be a source of disquietude to me. if my wishes are blasted I must
submit to it, as a punishment, a trial, an affliction which I must bear—and what I
cannot remedy I must endure.
Since I wrote you last, mr smith has seen capt Jenkins. He informs him that Thomas a[pplied] to him for a passage on Board his vessel, but captain [Jenkins] advised him not to come in her. tho a fast sailor, she was a very wet ship, and a winters passage in her would have been very uncomfortable. He went with Thomas to examine the vessels there, and found the Alexander Hamilton capt Clark for N york, in which he advised him to take passage, as she was a good vessel, and a Good captain— She was to sail in a few days after Capt Jenkins—
It is now two Months since you left me, and two more I hope, will return you Here again
our General court are in Session we shall see the Govenours Speach
in tomorrows Paper I trust2 I have met
with some of the Numbers addrest to Genll Marshall in the
Chronical.3 they appear to me to be the
common place stuff of the party, the same low invective and abuse of the Government for
which the Faction are distinguishd. They will not injure Marshall so much as he injured
himself— Gallitin and Nicholas have thrown asside, even the veil they used to wear—
Harpers observations were good, but too lengthy, and his sarcasms very pointed.4
after the Dismall cold week we have had, last night came a strong south wind, and with out any rain; Swept away all but our Banks, broke up the sleighing, and left half the ground bare—
we are all well, but your Brother, who has his Eyes constantly Bad—one bunch gathering after an other. I am really affraid he will be Blind. he is too inattentive to the concequences—
I cannot write to day to William—
I send you a Green House—
yours affectionatly
RC (Adams Papers); addressed: “President of the united / States / Philadelphia”; endorsed: “Mrs A. / Jan. 12. 1799.” Some loss of text where the seal was removed.
2 Samuel, 11.
In his 11 Jan. speech opening the legislative session, Gov.
Increase Sumner offered his approbation of the federal government and its efforts to
make defensive preparations in the event of war with France. Sumner 351 specifically noted the measures that had been
taken to protect Massachusetts. His speech was printed in the Boston Columbian Centinel, 12 Jan. (Mass., Acts and Laws
,
1798–1799, p. 632–636).
The Boston Independent Chronicle,
2731 Dec. 1798, 31 Dec. – 3 Jan. 1799, 3–7, 7–10, 14–17 Jan., reprinted the five
letters of Curtius to John Marshall, for which see AA to William Smith Shaw, 3 Jan., and note 3,
above.
See Shaw to AA, 28 Dec. 1798, and note 1, above.