Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13
th[
1799] Saturday Eve.
Yours of the 2d of Feb. I received this
morning— The president says he cannot blame you for not writing oftner because you write
two to him to his one—but could he write as freely as you can and had he as much leisure
he should write you every day.
Last Evening we went to the play. Secrets worth knowing & the children in the woods constituted the entertainment. The plays were good but the actors most miserable. Scenes, in which one would suppose the whole soul would be interested, were recited with all the sang froid of a Dutchman.1 The president had a very severe head ache all the time. You will not hear of my going agan very soon.
Congress have passed one more bill, the 2d only, further to suspend the intercourse between the U.S. & France &c.
& the president’s aprobation of which, I shall go on monday to inform the house.2 They have but three weeks to sit from to
day. On monday the petitions to repeal the Alien and sedition bills & which were
referred to a committe of the whole house. will be called up and it is probable will
occasion considerable debate in the house.3
With affection & esteem / your
m.S. S—
RC (Adams Papers).
Thomas Morton’s comedy Secrets Worth
Knowing and farce The Children in the Wood were
performed at Philadelphia’s New Theatre. Thomas Wignell and Rose Sydney were the leads
in the comedy, which was panned in the Porcupine’s
Gazette, 8 Feb.: “It has neither wit, elegance nor pathos; it has neither
character, plot nor probability; it is a jumble of absurdities shocking to common
sense, conveyed in language the most grovelling and spiritless.” JA’s
expected attendance was announced by the Philadelphia
Gazette, 8 Feb., along with the erroneous statement that AA would
join him. The next day the same newspaper reported that John Darley sang a specially
written ode to the president: “Let distant Wars their thunders roar, / And Europe’s plains be drench’d with gore; / Secure in Peace we
firmly stand, / While Adams guards with you our
Land.”
On 9 Feb. JA signed into law an act continuing the
June 1798 prohibition of American ships from entering French ports and vice versa,
which was set to expire at the end of the current congressional session. The president
was given the power to suspend the law at any time and to grant special clearances
while it was in effect. On 11 Feb. 1799 Shaw appeared in the House of Representatives
and informed members that the bill had been signed (
U.S. Statutes at
Large
, 1:565–566; 613–616; U.S. House, Jour.
, 5th
Cong., 3d sess., p. 472).
Several petitions to repeal the Alien and Sedition Acts were
introduced in the House beginning on 12 February. The first was from “a number of
aliens, natives of Ireland, resident within the United States,” for which see Shaw to
AA, [11] Feb., and note 4, and AA to JA, 25 Feb., and note 1,
both below. This was followed by others from citizens of Pennsylvania and New York.
These petitions were 399 referred to a select committee, which recommended
on 25 Feb. that it was “inexpedient” to repeal the acts (
Annals of Congress
,
5th Cong., 3d sess., p. 2884–2907, 2955, 2957–2959, 2985–2993).