Adams Family Correspondence, volume 4
1781-08-25
I was yesterday honoured with a Letter from Braintree dated the 25th of May last, and tho' an anonymous one, yet the hand writing, connected with other Circumstances, warranted my subjoining the Signature of the amiable and accomplished Daughter of one of the first Ladies of the Age, to whose Goodness added to your Politeness I am indebted for this mark of Attention. I have embraced the first moment to acknowledge the Receipt of so unexpected a favor, and to assure You of my readiness to commence, renew or “revive” a Correspondence. Indeed it has been so rare for me to converse or even to speak with a Lady, to write to or receive from one a Letter, for these two years past, that I esteem any Civility or attention from them, an Instance of Compassion to one who was formerly very happy with the fair Circle of his female Acquaintance.
My worthy friend Mr. Storer, who forwarded your kind favor, is safely arrived at Gottenbourg, and he is expected in this City every moment. I am impatient to take him by the hand. I can easily concieve that the absence of so amiable a Character will be exceedingly regretted by his Friends, and by the fair particularly. Europe may be 199a good School for an exterior Polish: but Morality is a plant of slow Growth in this quarter of the Globe, where the polite and fashionable Vices of the Age have but too much extinguished the sentiment of it, and given an air of Awkwardness to Virtue. A good Education in our own Country is not an object of difficult Acquisition. An easy deportment and graceful Address are the fine polishes of a polite and may be of a virtuous and good moral Character: but the Graces and Virtues are not always united. When they do harmonize, they add a mutual Lustre to each other, and form one of the most pleasing Spectacles in Life.
The tender the gentle Eliza, “whose Mind is Virtue by the Graces drest,” as your good Mamma has observed, has had a Share of my sincerest and tenderest Pity during her Indisposition. I am very happy to find by your Letter, that She has recovered her Chearfulness and her health to so great a degree—be good enough to wish her affectionately for me a long Continuance of both.
You have informed me that Mr. Rice has at last drawn the Prize in the matrimonial Lottery—the happier he. Of all Lotteries this is the most hazardous. And being at all times unlucky, is a sufficient Objection with me to putting any thing to the Risque. However I am not too envious to wish any one success in this Wheel of Fortune.
You have closed a charming Letter, by calling me off from “my more important Business or
Pleasures to point out the foibles of it.” I am almost tempted to scold at You for
endeavouring to make me a Scrutinizer or critical Reviewer and sarcastically giving me an air
of Importance. My pleasures are few but the most “important” of them is writing to my dear
Friends on the other side of the Atlantic, whom may God bless and preserve. I cannot undertake
the office of a Critic. To point out Foibles and Faults where none exist, is the mark of an ignorant, envious, ill-natured one, a
Character which I hope no one will fix upon me.
If a Correspondence with You can give You the least pleasure or entertainment, I shall be happy to be ranked in the Class of them, and will not suffer another eighteen Months to pass away, without convincing You that You have a Correspondent in the old World. I shall make but an indifferent figure among your others, but that shall not discourage me. As to scores and Ballances of Merit, I make no pretensions.
An abundance of Love to all the young Ladies of my Acquaintance, and particularly to my fair American, if it is yet discovered who She is.
1781-08-31
You may possibly wonder at my Silence in not writing you during so long a period and which might yet have
continu'd from the danger which attends it did not the cruelty and injustice of this Govt.
impel me to sollicit you and Doctor F
There are at present in Forton jayl only, above 500 for whose particular situation I wish to
refer you to the Revd. Thos. Wren at Portsmouth2
who merits the highest praise for his constant and unwearied attendance in distributing the
charitable Contributions hitherto collected for their relief, and in which I have not been
wholly useless, altho' am mortified to find it now grows very cold and languid which requires
your utmost speedy exertions to prevent the consequences in their seduction thro want of
proper necessaries.—I am here much vex'd to find those necessaries considerably abridg'd by
the infamous Peculation of T. D
Dr. Bancroft J. Boylston.”
Diary and
Autobiography
, 1:293–294). By 1771
he had taken up residence in London, and he remained in England for the rest of his life,
though with misgivings because (despite statements commonly made to the contrary, including
notes in the present edition) he seems always to have been more of an American patriot than a
loyalist at heart. His correspondence with the Smith family in Boston (MHi: Smith-Carter Papers) shows that he remained sympathetic with
the American cause and that he continued his charitable activities in Massachusetts, through
intermediaries, during and after the war. In the Franklin Papers are letters respecting his
proposal in 1778 to take an oath and give security in order to return to America (
Cal. Franklin Papers,
A.P.S.
, 4:272, 274), but this did not occur. In a letter to JA,
28 June 1782 (below), Boylston heatedly denied
he was in any sense a loyalist “Refugee,” having “ever been constantly and invariably
attach'd to the cause and interest of my native Country.” In his reply of 5 July 1782 (also below), JA assured
Boylston that “I have long known your Sentiments to be favourable to your native Country, as
well as to Liberty in General.”
When JA and JQA came to England late in 1783, Boylston was
established in prosperous retirement at Bath, where he entertained his relatives handsomely,
as he again did JA and AA some years later (JA, Diary and Autobiography
, 3:151; AA to Mary Smith Cranch, 20 Jan.
1787 [ MWA ]). As the present and later
letters relate, Boylston was active in efforts to relieve the distresses of American seamen
imprisoned in England. See further, Adams Genealogy.
On the whole subject of American seamen in British prisons during the war, particularly
Forton Prison at Portsmouth and Mill Prison at Plymouth, their treatment, British policy
relating thereto, and humanitarian efforts by both Americans and British, see the
authoritative and well-documented articles by John K. Alexander, “'American Privateersmen in
the Mill Prison during 1777–1782': An Evaluation,” Essex Inst., Hist. Colls.
, 102:318–340 (Oct. 1966); and
“Forton Prison during the American Revolution ...,” same, vol. 103:365–389 (Oct. 1967).
On JA's activities in behalf of captured American seamen in general, and of a number of Braintree men at Mill Prison in particular, see below, AA to JA, 9 Dec. 1781, and note 3 there.
Hist. Colls.
, 103:383 [Oct. 1967]).
Franklin, with whom Wren corresponded, recommended that Congress officially thank “this good
Man” and that he be given an honorary degree by “some of our Universities.” Congress did
thank him, and the College of New Jersey awarded him a doctorate of divinity in 1783 (Franklin, Writings, ed.
Smyth, 9:72, 124;
JCC
, 25:588, 619, 632). There is correspondence between JA and
Wren in the Adams Papers; and in the Gentleman's Magazine for Nov. 1787 there is a long and eulogistic
obituary (57:1026–1027).
PMHB
, 77:381–438 (Oct. 1953). Although Digges has long been
condemned as a double agent as well as an embezzler of funds raised to aid American prisoners
in England, Clark has established that he was never in the pay of the British and that his
embezzling was the last resort of a man in great difficulties and by no means on the grand
scale that Franklin and others believed. Digges was a secret correspondent of JA
under a 202great variety of pseudonyms.
Letter not found.
No earlier communication from John Boylston to JA has been found. There can be
no certainty whether the Boylston arms which Boylston “formerly sent” was in the form of a
seal or on paper. However, by 1782 JA did have in his possession a seal bearing
the Boylston arms and perhaps a drawing or engraving as well. Following American recognition
by the States General in April 1782, JA as minister plenipotentiary had occasion
to frame a form of passport for issuance. He chose to imitate closely the one devised by
Franklin in Passy in 1780, substituting for the coat of arms Franklin had used to give the
document an official character, the coat of arms of the Boylston family (the woodblock of the
coat of arms he had made is in MHi and is
illustrated in Boston Athenaeum,
Catalogue of JQA's Books
, facing p. 136; the
passport utilizing it is reproduced in the present volume). In November of the same year in
affixing his signature to the Preliminary Treaty with Great Britain, JA used a
seal in cornelian and gold of the Boylston arms, thenceforward known in the family as the
Treaty Seal (the seal, now a part of the family memorabilia at the Adams National Historic
Site, Quincy, was given by JA to JQA and by JQA in
trust to CFA on the baptism of JQA2; the seal is illustrated in
Catalogue of
JQA's Books
, facing p. 135).
AA had used a seal of the Boylston arms, presumably left in her care in
Braintree, on the cover of her letter to JA aboard the Sensible, 14 Nov. 1779; see vol. 3:234,
note. This tends to support HA2's assertion that the seal had come to
JA from his mother, Susanna Boylston (Boston Athenaeum,
Catalogue of JQA's Books
,
p. 136). However, it seems unlikely that AA would have sent the seal to
JA in Europe in the interim, and no instances are presently known of
JA's employment of a Boylston seal in Europe before the use in 1782 described
above. One possible explanation is that the Boylston seal that JA affixed to the
Preliminary Treaty may have been the “Boylston Arms” sent to him by John Boylston, who was
unmarried and in 1781 over seventy years of age. There would then have been two seals of the
Boylston arms in the possession of the Adams family, but only one remains.
Between 1783 and 1785, JA, in devising a seal to commemorate his signing of
the treaties, adapted the Boylston seal by having the three roundels, earlier blank, replaced
with roundels bearing respectively a lion, a fleur-de-lis, and a lion. Later Adamses
incorporated the Boylston arms, as adapted, in a variety of ways in their seals and
bookplates (Boston Athenaeum,
Catalogue of JQA's Books
, p. 136–148; see also
JQA, Diary, 26 Oct. 1827, 3 Sept. 1836, 4 Nov. 1841; JQA to
CFA, 28 Feb. 1831, 27 Oct. 1833 [ Adams
Papers ]). When a bookplate for Ward Nicholas Boylston's benefactions to the Boston
Medical Library was devised, the coat of arms used was in the form as adapted by
JA.
In the Boylston arms the shield consists of six silver (white) crosses crosslet fitché,
arranged 3, 2, 1, on a red field, above which, in chief, on a field of gold or yellow are
three black roundels or pellets. The crest above shows a lion, passant guardant, holding in
his dexter paw an angled cross crosslet fitché of the type on the shield (Charles K. Bolton,
Bolton's American Armory, Boston, 1927, p. 1, 20.