Adams Family Correspondence, volume 15
I am much delighted to learn that you intend making a visit to the old mansion. I wish you could have accomplished it So as to have been here by this time, which would have given You an opportunity of being at commencment, meeting many of your old acquaintance, and visiting the Seat of science where You received your first Rudiments;1 I shall look daily for you You will find your Father in his Feilds attending to his Hay makers, and your Mother buisily occupied in the domestic concerns of her Family. I regreet that a fortnight of sharp drought has Shorn of many of the Beauties we had in rich luxurence, the verdure of the Grass is become a brown—the flowers hang their heads droop & fade, whilst the vegetable world languishes— Yet still we have a pure air, the crops of Hay have been abundant upon this Spot where 8 years ago, we cutt Scarcly Six Tons. we now have thirty; “We are here among the vast and noble Scenes of nature, where we walk in the light and open ways of the devine bounty, and where our Senses are feasted with the clear and genuine taste of their objects.”2
at this Season it is best to take the packet by way of Providence. Sally came so, and was in Boston in two days—
dr Welch has a Letter from his son of 12 of May, in which he says he shall leave Berlin in a few days, but that mr Adams will be obliged 110 to remain some time longer. he has calld his Son George Washington.4 this I think was ill judged. I feel that it was wrong; Children do not know how much their Parents are gratified by the continuation of their Name in their Grandchildren. I was not myself sensible of it, and neither of my own Children bear the names of their Grandparents by the Maternal side. Yet I now recollet, when you was named, that your Grandfather appeard hurt by it—
I am sure your Brother had not any intention of wounding the feelings of his Father, but I see he has done it— had he calld him Joshua, he would not have taken it amiss—
I have received mr Ingersolls Play. it is better executed than I
believed him capable of performing; as a youthfull Specimin of Genius, it has merit.5 I presume William Shaw has Sent you mr
Paines oration upon july the 4th—6 I think You will be pleased with it.
I am my dear Thomas / affectionatly / Your Mother
RC (Adams Papers).
Harvard commencement took place on 15 July. Gov. Caleb Strong was
escorted to Cambridge for the ceremonies, which “were peculiarly chaste, correct, and
elegant; and though devoid of party spirit, and personal invective, were nevertheless
spirited and commanding” (Boston Commercial Gazette, 16
July).
Abraham Cowley, Several Discourses by Way
of Essays, in Verse and Prose, Essay IV, par. 2.
Same, Essay V, stanza v, lines 12–17.
In a printed passage identified as an excerpt from a letter from
JQA to TBA, JQA discussed GWA’s
naming: “President Washington was, next to my own father, the man upon earth to whom I
was indebted for the greatest personal obligations. I know not whether upon rigorous
philosophic principles it be wise to give a great and venerable name to such a
lottery-ticket as a new-born infant—but my logical scruples have in this case been
overpowered by my instinctive sentiments.” The passage was possibly from
JQA to TBA, 5 May, not found (Bobbé, Mr. and Mrs. JQA
, p.
113).
For Charles Jared Ingersoll’s play Edwy
and Elgiva, see
TBA to William Smith Shaw, 5 April, and note 3, above.
Charles Paine warned against “the wide spreading roots of
domestic faction” in a 4 July oration that was published on 7 July. Paine (1775–1810),
Harvard 1793, who was the fourth child of Robert Treat Paine and Sally Cobb Paine,
sent a copy of the oration to JA. On 27 July JA wrote to him
(LbC, APM Reel 118), “I
take the liberty to say that I observe with sincere pleasure the many proofs of genius
and accomplishment in the Family of one of the most ancient of my friends, Judge
Paine, both among the Males and Females” (The Papers of Robert
Treat Paine, ed. Stephen T. Riley and Edward W. Hanson, Boston, 2005– , 3:85;
New-England Palladium, 7 July; Charles Paine, An Oration, Pronounced July 4, 1801, Boston, 1801, p. 17,
Shaw-Shoemaker, No. 1086).