Papers of John Adams, volume 21
I am ashamed when I look at the date of your last
letter1 but knowing how
much you are engaged & the little entertainment I can avoid you by
detailing the publick occurrences wch you have
by the Frence papers, many of which are very good being wrote by men of the
first talents who do not scorn to instruct & inform their fellow
citizens knowing that truth is always productive of good.
but a stronger reason has operated the common conveyance
of 176 the mail is not the best or safest.
tho I have not wrote I have had the satisfaction to hear of you & hope
that your illness is now totally done away & that my amiable friend mrs Adams is perfectly recover’d.
we live in active times & events take place beyond our most sanguine expectations.
You Americans have inflamed the world & as Sergt Glyn said “the spark of liberty will extend
itself”2 it has extended
itself & the French enjoy its genial warmth & obtain strength &
vigor by its animating power The astonishing French revolition is not to be
accounted for by any principle of human wisdom but by the immediate power of
Deity.
that some irregulatities have happend is not to be wonderd at. “oppression drives a wise man mad:” a people having just emancipated themselves from slavery, looking back with horror at what they have sufferd & rejoicing at what they have escap’d, naturally raises all the passions of malice hatred & revenge. to the author or imputed authors of their late intolerable Sufferings, & therefore it must be some time before the mind is calm & sedate enough to digest a plan of government proper for free & rational beings perhaps owing to this, that the constituent assembly was so imperft & trusting more power in hands unequal improper & dangerous; fortunately for the people the powers so trusted discover’d themselves immediately which render’d the 2 revolution of the 2 of August absolutely necessary & brought on the subsequent events.3
The principal persons who formed the constituent assembly
were many of them men of abilities & of good intentions but could not
extend themselves to what is now intended a perfect republick nor give up
what they had labourd so much to effect & some of them tincturd with the
old Leaven & others influenced by pecuniary motives which is now most
certain. The then reigning power armed with the Veto & a great income
conducted themselves extreamly ill, thought themselves secure & drove
furiously wch has proved fatal to them &
their cause.
& there is reason to beleive that had they gaind their point the revenge would have been general & bloody. however it must be allowed tho some horrid massacres yet no revolution has been effected with so little blood— The war with this country which might have been prevented will unite them settle their government & fix them on an immoveable basis the will of the people. to them it seem’d almost necessary to prevent a civil war unless the principles of this country were alterd as to them for being kept in suspense the 177 expence was almost equal to a war & they have nothing to lose having no trade on the contrary the English have nothing to gain & much to lose & it is a war as Fox said [“]of principles.”4 which is nouveau.
you ask me a trying question. Pain has occasioned much uneasiness & his enemies have circulated his book & given opportunities of spreading his principles which are imbibed in France & made subservient to their purpose there is an answer to Pain publish’d by stockdale in the name of John Adams Esqr the publisher wishes it to be thought yours but your friends do not think it is.5
I have inclosed a copy with some other papers to amuse you the press is loaded with much trash
in the life of Pain the Editor has asserted that the far
famed pamphlet, ycleped rights of man was submitted to the revisal of mr Brand Hollis & a committee of Democrates
it was fitted by them for the press after some Struggles between the desires
of the author & the wishes of the Patrons all which is notoriously false
for I never saw the pamphlet till it was printed.
your book is out of print & much sought after.6
let this long letter be a proof how glad I am to talk with you & hope you will not punish me by a long delay before I hear from you.
my best wishes attend mrs
Adams & hope She has recoverd her health & Spirits— I have put a few
papers for her entertainmen with those for you.7
beleive me Dear Sir with real esteem that / I am your Sincere & / affect Friend
RC (Adams Papers); endorsed: “Mr
Hollis Feb. 18. 1793 / ansd Jan. 2.
1794.”
JA’s most recent extant letter to Hollis was of 19 Feb. 1792, above.
John Glynn (1722–1779), of Cardinham, Cornwall,
England, was sergeant at law and served as M.P. for Middlesex, England,
from 1768 to 1779 (Namier and
Brooke, House of Commons
).
For these developments in the French Revolution, see Rufus King’s 30 Sept. 1792 letter, and note 1, above.
Hollis scrambled his parliamentary sources here.
Charles James Fox, M.P. for Westminster, supported the French Revolution
and decried the Anglo-French war as a conflict “of false hopes and false
grounds.” He stood opposed to William Pitt, Edmund Burke, and the Earl
of Shelburne, who called it a “war of principles” (Namier and Brooke, House of Commons
; Albert Goodwin,
The Friends of Liberty: The English
Democratic Movement in the Age of the French Revolution,
Cambridge, 1979, p. 268).
For Thomas Paine’s Rights of
Man and the Publicola controversy that engulfed
JA, JQA, and Thomas Jefferson, see Henry Knox’s 10 June
1791 letter, and note 3, above.
London printer John Stockdale issued a new edition of
JA’s
Defence of the Const.
in
1794.
The enclosures have not been found.