Adams Family Correspondence, volume 15
br.23
d1804
I recieved last night your charming letter of the 16 and was much distressed to learn that your mother had again been unwell1 the weather here is quite cold winthin this few day, and we all seem to revive I hope e’re this you have had a change as favorable and that you may all soon enjoy the blessing of health—
I was so unwell when I last wrote I scarcely answer’d any part of your letter assure yourself it did not proceed from indifference or want of proper attention to your concerns but I was so completely exhausted by illness & loss of blood (for Weems was under the necessity of taking above a pint) that my spirits seem’d to fail me entirely and I lost all power of exertion— I am sincerely rejoiced to hear that you have rented your house so well I never could endure the idea of your parting with it you have now so little property in Boston and it appears to me so much more valuable than any other I think it would be wrong to part with it while there is a possibility of retaining it the situation is such that there is a prospect of its encreasing in value every year and—a few years hence it may not be so easy to acquire property in Boston when perhaps you may stand in need of it I shall never cease to regret the house in Franklyn Place & most sorely our poor old house in Hanover St as I much question ever being mistress of one so comfortable again old & much as it wanted repair however these things can’t be help’d and as you say “whatever is is right—”2
The Spanish Minister & his Lady are down here they say upon
business of importance the President returns on Tuesday to meet him3 I understand he intended staying three weeks
longer we have nobody here at present but Mr. Galatin he has
return’d about a week
Mr. Sheldon was here a few days since
he has been on a visit in Connecticut the greatest part of the Summer—
I understand that the affairs in Louisianna occasion the greatest
440 inquietude & Mr.
Livingston is become an object of terror although his conduct has been so disgraceful he
has left such security it is not in their power to seize him and he is likely to prove
so troublesome they are placed in a very disagreeable predicament.4
I wrote you that the Marines were very much dissatisfied I understand they are Station’d in a little town at some distance from New Orleans and almost entirely excluded from society which has very much disappointed them as they expected to have enter’d into all the dissipation of New Orleans and perhaps of forming connections with the natives which might not only have proved agreeable but profitable—5
I am extremely sorry to hear that Mrs
Sullivans Child is so ill I hope however she will be more fortunate than she you seems to anticipate—6 I thank God ours are both well and I fondly
flatter myself they will continue so our poor little John has had so many drawbacks I
believe he will talk before he walks we must not be impatient my belov’d friend but
return thanks to the father of all mercies for sparing him to our prayers— I intend
sending George to School the beginning of next Month—7
Adieu my best friend six long weeks must yet elapse e’re we meet if you will permit me and write what time you expect to be there I will meet you in Baltimore it would indeed afford me the greatest pleasure as it shorten the period of absence one day and after such an absence each day is a year to your / impatient but fondly attached
P. S. I am anxious to know if Mrs.
Whitcomb recieved the letters I wrote her by the post and if you recieved a paper
enclosed with your letter directed to her8 if you did I hope you deliver’d it soon I fear
you will think me extravagant but I am in such want of linnen &ce. I must thank
you for some money your mother will tell you when a Woman wants these sort of things
how much it takes— I have bought none since I left Leipsic
RC (Adams
Papers); addressed: “John Q Adams Esqr.”;
endorsed: “Louisa— 23. Sepr: 1804. / 2: Octr: recd:.”
See JQA to LCA, 23 Sept., and note 1, above.
Alexander Pope, Essay on Man,
Epistle I, line 294.
That is, Carlos Martínez de Irujo and Sarah Maria Theresa McKean Irujo. For the controversy that preceded the Spanish minister’s 24 Sept. visit to Thomas Jefferson at Monticello, see JQA to LCA, 30 Sept., and note 3, below.
Former U.S. representative Edward Livingston resigned as U.S.
attorney for the District of New York in Aug. 1803 following a federal investigation
into the embezzlement of tax money by a clerk. In October he also resigned as mayor of
New York City and 441 placed his property in trust to reimburse the
federal treasury for its losses. Livingston moved to New Orleans in Feb. 1804 and
began practicing law (
ANB
).
For the military force in New Orleans, see JQA’s 15 March letter to JA , and note 2, above. LCA commented on the subject in her 28 Aug. letter to JQA: “Marines who were sent there are very much dissatisfied and very troublesome and all who went to make fortunes are most woefully disappointed” (Adams Papers).
JQA in his letter of 16 Sept. reported that he and
TBA had dined with Boston attorney William Sullivan. Sullivan’s wife,
Sarah Webb Swan (1782–1851), was absent, having taken their son James (1803–1829) to
Nahant, Mass., “for the benefits of the Sea Bath” (vol. 11:483; Thomas Coffin Amory, Materials for a History of the Family of John Sullivan of
Berwick, New England, Cambridge, 1893, p. 152).
LCA reported to AA on 27 Nov. that GWA attended school daily and JQA wrote on 19 Dec. that their son “has regularly been to school, for the last six weeks, and learns to read, though not very fast” (both Adams Papers).
No letters between LCA and Elizabeth Epps Whitcomb have been found. The “paper,” also not found, was enclosed in her letter to JQA of 28 Aug., for which see JQA to LCA, 2 Sept., note 1, above.