Adams Family Correspondence, volume 4
1781-10-05
I doubt not Madam, you have Letters from Mr. Adams of later Date than what we have received
but that Fact will not prevent your Expectations of Something from me in the Way of retailed
Politicks: — He has sent as I imagine but few duplicates of what are actually on Board Gillon.
He dated May 16 and Augst. 3d. from Amsterdam, July 11. 14. 15 from Paris.1 He thinks Britain altogether insincere as to honorable Peace. He
sees in Holland the almost absolute Certainty of
The other day Mr. Cumberland Dugan sent a Wagon from hence to Boston. He made me hope for a Chance of conveying at least a Part of your Goods, but found it impossible, finally, being obliged to load 400 lb. more than his first Contract. I had the large Chest 224hooped with Iron, and I hope soon to get an Opportunity of sending it.
RC's of the letters mentioned, all addressed to the President of Congress and
including two of the first date (16 May), are in PCC, No. 84, III; LbC's are in JA's letterbooks in use at
the time (Lb/JA/16–17; Microfilms, Reel Nos. 104–105); printed texts are in Wharton, ed., Dipl. Corr.
Amer. Rev.
, 4:419–421, 560–561, 574, 575–576, 619–621.
1781-10-09
This is the first Time, I have been able to write you, since my Sickness.—Soon after my Return from Paris, I was seized with a Fever, of which, as the Weather was and had long been uncommonly warm, I took little notice, but it increased very slowly, and regularly, untill it was found to be a nervous Fever, of a dangerous kind, bordering upon putrid. It seized upon my head, in such a manner that for five or six days I was lost, and so insensible to the Operations of the Physicians and surgeons, as to have lost the memory of them. My Friends were so good as to send me an excellent Physician and Surgeon, whose Skill and faithfull Attention with the Blessing of Heaven, have saved my Life. The Physicians Name is Osterdike.1 The surgeon the same, who cured Charles, of his Wound.2 I am, however still weak, and whether I shall be able to recover my Health among the pestilential Vapours from these stagnant Waters, I know not.3
I hope Charles is well and happy with you, by this Time. He sailed with Commodore Gillon seven Weeks ago. We have no News from Mr. Dana and his young Fellow Traveller, since they left Berlin.
The Pamphlet inclosed, is a Dutch Translation of the Abby Raynals History of the American Revolution. It is a Curiosity for you to lay up.4
Nieuw
Ned. Biog. Woordenboek
, 3:935–936).
The surgeon is unidentified. CA had been ill in the spring, and it was in part for this reason that he was being sent home, but the editors have found no other allusions to a “Wound” he had sustained.
AA did not learn of JA's illness for a long time to come, because this letter was not received for many months; her first reference to the news in it was in her letter to JA of 17 March 1782, below.
JA had returned to Amsterdam from Paris by the end of July. On 24 Aug. he
received a letter from Franklin dated on the 16th enclosing a packet from Congress that contained JA's new joint
commission and instructions to treat of peace as adopted by Congress in June (Adams Papers; JA, Works
, 7:456–457). JA
replied next day, 25 Aug. (Adams Papers; JA, Works
, 7:459–461); but on 4 Oct. he wrote again to Franklin in a letter that began: “Since
the 25th of August, when I had the honor to write You, this is the first Time that I have
taken a Pen in hand to write to any body, having been confined and reduced too low to do any
kind of business by a nervous Fever” (PPAmP:
Franklin Papers; printed from LbC, Adams
Papers, in JA, Works
, 7:465–466). The letter sent to Franklin is, however, actually in John
Thaxter's hand and only signed by JA, as are the two or three other letters sent
over his name during the preceding six weeks.
The illness was severe. In apology for having lately written so little to Congress, JA told Pres. Thomas McKean on 15 Oct.:
“ “Whether it was the uncommon Heat of the Summer, or whether it was the Mass of
pestilential Exhalations from the stagnant Waters of this Country that brought this
disorder upon me, I know not: but I have every Reason to apprehend, that I shall not be
able to re-establish my Health in this Country. A Constitution ever infirm, and almost
half an hundred Years old, cannot expect to fare very well amidst such cold damps and
putrid Steams as arise from the immense quantities of dead Water that surround it.” (PCC, No. 84, III; Wharton, ed.,
Dipl. Corr. Amer.
Rev.
, 4:780Papers
For his later recollection of this illness, see JA, Corr. in the Boston Patriot
, p. 148, in which he
says it resulted from “Anxiety concerning the state of my affairs in Holland,” the
“unwholesome damps of the night,” and “excessive fatigue” from travel and work, and “brought
me as near to death as any man ever approached without being grasped in his arms.”
Abbé Guillaume Thomas François Raynal, Staatsomwenteling van
Amerika. Uit het Fransch, Amsterdam, 1781. Two copies are among JA's books
in MB (
Catalogue of JA's
Library
, p. 208).