Adams Family Correspondence, volume 4
1781-01-31
I have received, by the Way of Bilboa, a Letter from your Mamma, of the 8th of October, in which She presents her tender Affection to you and your Brother, as well as her Respects to her agreable Correspondent Mr. Thaxter. Your Sister was at Boston, your youngest Brother at School learning fast.
You should write me a few Lines, now and then, to inform me of your Health and of your Progress in Literature. I have a Set of Popes Works but I am so glad to see an old Acquaintance that I cannot part with him yet.
73I hope We shall now, soon have some further News from our dear native Country.
By the Accounts hitherto received, Things are in a good Way, and I have strong Hopes, that We shall not experience so many Mortifications, the ensuing Summer as the last. Our Ennemies will have their Hands too full to do Us much Mischief.
1781-02-01
I have waited on Mr. Luzac with the Crisis, who is much obliged to You for it, and will either translate it into Dutch or French, as shall be most agreable to You, and as soon as possible. You will be so good as to acquaint me, which of the two Languages is your Choice.1
I waited a few days agone on the Rector Magnificus with Charley, and was informed by him, that his Matriculation was consented to by the Curators.2
The Letter You was so kind to forward me, was from America, dated the 1st. and 16th. of September. I am at a loss how it came, as I hear of no Arrival.
It seems rather difficult to determine upon the various News from the Southward. The
American Papers and Accounts differ exceedingly from the English. One knows not what to make
of such Contradictions. If it
The young Gentlemen are well and desire their Duty to You.
In a letter from Brussels, 28 Jan. (Adams Papers), William Lee wrote JA: “I
send you a Crisis which perhaps you may think worth being translated and publish'd in
Holland.” This was quite possibly Thomas Paine's The Crisis
Extraordinary, published in Philadelphia in Oct. 1780 (Evans 16918), but no Dutch or French translation published in the
Netherlands has been found.
During a visit to his sons in Leyden early in January, JA recorded that
JQA was approved for matriculation (he and John Thaxter were formally admitted
on 10 Jan.), but that “Charles was found to be too young, none under twelve Years of Age
being admitted” (
Diary and
Autobiography
, 2:452). In his letter
74to JA of 23 Jan. (above), Thaxter reported that he would wait again upon the
Rector to obtain special consent, and on 11
Feb. he wrote JA (letter below) that this had been done and
CA had matriculated on 29 January.