Adams Family Correspondence, volume 4
1782-08-05
I know not any pleasure equal to that which arises from feeding the Hungry, cloathing the Naked and making the poor prisoners Heart sing for Joy. All the Honours which your Country has conferd upon you has never excited in my mind half the Satisfaction which your Benevolent exertions and generous aid to the poor prisoners which I recommended to you, has given me. I am sorry not to have learnt any thing from your own pen with regard to them, but they have not been deficient in manifesting their gratitude to you, and making mention of your kindness, to their Friends here by every opportunity, nor could I help feeling the Lamentation of a Milton prisoner to his Friends, that it was his misfortune not to be a Brain-357tree Man. Your Benevolence would lead you to do all in your power for the releaf of all those unhappy persons who are in confinement, yet those who were your towns Men and Neighbours have a particular claim to your attention.1 I expect a Letter to inclose from the Father of Lewis Glover. If you could forward it to him they will consider it as an additional favour and further let them know that all their Friends are well, which I suppose may be done through the commissary of prisoners. They frequently send Letters to their Friends here, but how I know not.
I yesterday saw Mr. Foster, as I hope he will tell you in a months time, I gave him Letters which he has promised to deliver safe. You so seldom acknowledge the recept of any Letters from me, that but for many of the vessels arriveing safe, I should suppose they never reachd you. There are Letters in Boston from Mr. Ingraham I am told so late as May, by the Ship Thomas from Nants. How happy would it have made me to have learnt by a line from you that you was well. What greater hazard would your Letters meet with by way of France than mine, especially coverd to the Consul Le Etomb.
You will find in one of the Letters a memmorandom for prog
3 a little too
if I thought you could afford it. I will not disown having already done it in some things, but
tis but a little. I sent for a compleat set of china for a dining table some time ago, I know
not whether you received the Letter and if you did whether you will know what a set is. Now I
take it to consist in a doz. of dishes 6 different sizes, 3 doz. of table flat plates and 2 of
Soup, 6 pudding dishes, 2 pr. Butter Boats, to which I should like 2 pr. of double flint cut
Salts—all to set my table “neat and trim” when dear Collin returns.4 Perhaps you are house keeper enough allready to know what is necessary
but I fancy you must have been often imposed upon before you got your Learning. They tell me
you have purchased a House at the Hague and some have gone so far as to say you have sent for
all your family. I wish you were with your family. I hear Mrs. Jay5 is unhappy. Is Mrs. A
Thus far I wrote with an intention of sending by the Amsterdam 358vessel, but she has given me the slip. I laid by my paper but tho I do
not know of a present opportunity I feel a new Inducement to write. Dr. Waterhouse yesterday
made me a visit. He tell
Thus did this gentleman run on whilst I had not a wish to stop the musick of his tongue for the sweetest of all praise is that which is given to those we best love. Had my dear Friend been half as earnest with me to have taken passage with him as this Gentleman has been that I should go to him, he would have prevaild over my aversion to the Sea. But great as I feel the Sacrifice is I believe he8 judged best that I should remain where I am.
But will you can you think of remaining abroad? Should a peace take place I could not forgive you half a years longer absence. O there are hours, days and weeks when I would not paint to you all my feelings—for I would not make you more unhappy. I would not wander from room to room without a Heart and Soul at Home or feel myself deserted, unprotected, unassisted, uncounseld.—I begin to think there is a moral evil in this Seperation, for when we pledged ourselves to each other did not the holy ceremony close with, “What God has joined Let no Man put assunder.” Can it be a voluntary seperation? I feel that it is not.9
For JA's “Benevolent exertions” in behalf of captured Braintree seamen, see above, AA to JA, 9 Dec. 1781, and note 3 there.
Enclosure in AA to JA, 17–18 July above.
See
OED
under
Prog, verb, 2, obsolete except in dialect: “To poke about for
anything that may be picked up or laid hold of; ... to forage ...; also to solicit, to
beg.”
“When dear Collin returns”—from a Scottish song—alluding of course to JA's prospective return.
Sarah (Livingston) Jay had accompanied her husband on his long and dangerous voyage to
Spain in 1779–1780, had shared his diplomatic frustrations there, and had borne him a
daughter in 1780 that died three weeks after birth. See Monaghan, John Jay
, and Morris, Peacemakers
.
Here AA heavily inked out four lines in Dft. Their content can be sufficiently reconstructed to suggest that she blotted them after conveying their sense in a briefer and better way in the last paragraph of Dft:
“Critical as the Situation of a Lady is separated from the dear
Letter not found.
That is, JA.
Text of Dft does not fill the page, and there is no leavetaking; so Dft may be incomplete. From JA's answer of 16 Oct. 1782 (Adams Papers) to AA's letters of 3 and 5 Sept., both below, it would appear that he did not receive the present letter.
1782-08-14
Yours of 22d ulto. arrived a few days agone. I acknowledge myself much in Arrears, tho' I
have by no means forgotten you. For three Months past I have been miserably tormented with the
Tertian Ague, and have been a more useless being than common. However I hope the Game is
nearly up at present. I had no Idea that your Climate was so bad—but you must remember that
this has been an uncommon Season throughout Europe. At this Moment I am writing by a good
Fire. I have had one for many days past both on account of my Indisposition and the cold.
Curious Dog-Days these. We have incessant Winds and Rains: When they will end I know not.
Patience, Patience. —You tell me you are home-sick. I can easily conceive of it, and that you
are very anxious about your future Education. A young Gentleman of your studious, thoughtful
turn of mind cannot be otherwise than anxious considering the disadvantage of Education in
your City. This Sentiment does you much honour, and shews that you put a just Value on Time.
But you must not consider your Boreal Tour as lost Time. It was
an Opportunity few young Gentlemen enjoy, and you travelled with a Gentleman from whose
Observations and Instructions you must have derived great Advantage. When you return to our
dear Country, you will be in a Situation to make Comparisons, and run your Parallels between
the Advantages of the old and new World. 360If your
European Travels have produced the same Effects upon you that mine have upon me, You are much
more attached to your own Country than when you left it. I have seen much in mine that I hope
will never be transplanted into America. We have Vices enough in our own Country without aping
or adopting those of the old World: However there are many valuable things in Europe which I
wish to see in America. Many Improvements in Mechanism, but few in Government or Laws. Such
however is the unfortunate Condition of human Nature, that in attempting to acquire what is
good and valuable from other Countries, We open a Communication to all their vices and
Defects—that is, we are quite as apt to adopt the latter as the former, and perhaps rather
more. But I must not be uncharitable.
My best respects to Mr. D