Adams Family Correspondence, volume 4
1781-05-02
Your much respected and highly Esteemed favour of the 4th of Septr. last1 we duelly received and after a due acknowledgment for its agreable Contents are not a little sorry to Informe you that it was not in our power to comply with your desire of shipping the articles you are pleased to order by our freind Mr. Smiths Vessell as she putt in at Ferrol and proceeded from thence back to America. However haveing at present the opportunity of the Armed ship Commerce Capt. Ignatius Webber have Taken the freedome of shipping in her directted to the care of Isaac Smith Esqr. a packadge that containes the goods you was pleased to order as you will see by the within Invoice which very cordially wish safe to your hands after a prosperous and pleasing Navigation and that they may merritt your Kind approvation. The bills you was pleased to Inclose have been placed to the Creditt of our very worthy freind the Hble. Mr. Adams Account who have the pleasing satisfaction to hear Enjoys a perfectt Scane of health at Amsterdam on which sincerely congratulate you and beg your Commanding on all occations those who respectfully Subscrive.
111
Not found.
1781-05-10
Upon opening your favour of April 17 my Heart Beat a double stroke when I found that the
Letter which I supposed had reachd you was the one captured2 in the room of that you received which was what I had supposed lost,
but I should have been secure from the knowledge of the writer if Mr. Cranchs Letter and one I
wrote at the same time had not accompanied it.3
The Letter which I would not have chosen should have come to any hand but yours, was in reply
to two of yours and containd some Stricktures upon the conduct of a Friend.4 Least you should imagine it freer than it really was I enclose
the coppy. I risk no more should it be captured than what the Enemy already have.—The Letter
which occasiond some of the remarks I have not yet seen, tho I find it was published in the
Halifax paper as well as Riveingtons.5 If what I
have heard with regard to its contents is true, I cannot open my lips in defence of a Friend
whose character I would wish to justify, nor will I secret from him that it suffers
exceedingly even in the Eyes of his Friends from his so long absenting himself from his
family. How well he may satisfy her who is nearest concernd I presume not to say, but if she
possesses that regard for her partner which I presume she does, she must be exceedingly hurt
even by the Speach of the world, if she is otherways sufficiently convinced of the attachment
and affections of her partner. I write from a Sense of the feelings which under similar
circumstances would harrow up my Soul, and wound with a Bearded Arrow. I have but a very small
personal acquaintance with the Lady whom I esteem and commisirate, those who have speak highly
of her. I have as little personal acquaintance with the Gentleman connected with her; but it
has so happened that I have stood in need of his services, and he has exhibited an assiduity
and Friendship in the discharge of them that has bound me to him in the bond of Friendship.
Add to this he is the particular Friend and correspondent of him who is dearest to me and for
whose sake alone I should Esteem him, but it would mortify me not a little to find I had
mistaken a character and in the room of a philosopher, 112a man of the world appeard. If I could
credit the report
March May 1781.”; see
note 1. Enclosure: copy (not found) of
AA to Lovell, 17 March, printed
above from Dft; see descriptive note there.
Lovell furnished the date of the (missing) RC of this letter in his replies of 29 May and 16 June, both below.
That is, her letter of 17 March, of which the draft text is printed above and a “coppy” was enclosed in the recipient's copy of the present letter. It was only a presumption by AA that this letter was actually captured.
The letters here alluded to (other than AA's of 17 March) have not been found, but see the opening sentences of Lovell to AA, 17 April, above, and 14 May, below.
That is, Lovell himself.
“Lovell's letter to Elbridge Gerry, 20 Nov. 1780, captured by the British and published in
a Halifax paper and in James Rivington's New York Royal Gazette,
27 Dec. 1780. From the cryptic and circumlocutory remarks below, it appears that
AA, although she had not yet seen the text of this letter, had gathered from
common report (“the Speach of the world”) that Lovell had alluded in some demeaning way to
his wife, Mary (Middleton) Lovell. For what Lovell actually wrote, and his plea in
extenuation, see below, Lovell to AA, 16
June, and notes there.