Adams Family Correspondence, volume 4
1781-02-05
I have not had the pleasure of a line from you since your arrival in Holland. I fear I have lost Letters by a missing vessel call'd the Fame, if so I regret the loss of much pleasure and entertainment, which your pen always affords me. I flatter myself you will continue to pay a particular regard to my amusement, by a recital of whatever you meet with worthy of communication.
Rousseau some where observes, “that Science in general may be considerd as a coin of great value, but of use to the possessor only in as much as it is communicated.” His maxim is founded upon a liberal and social plan, which might be improved to the advantage of the 75Fair Sex to whom little indulgence is shewn in this way. Possess'd at least with an equal share of curiosity with the other sex, little or no care is taken to turn it into a channel of usefull knowledge, or literary endowments.
In America we have heretofore had so little connextion with other countries, and so few
Ladies have a taste for Historick knowledge, that even their own Country was not much known to
them untill the present revolution, which
Tho it is a path which has been repeatedly trod, it ought not to discourage a Gentleman of
penetration through apprehension that he can observe nothing New. Sir William Temple observes
“that Mankind are a various
creature,” that at different periods they differ, from themselves, as much as they do
from other Nations.
This you may easily see, by turning your Eye towards a Nation which not half a century ago was famed for her justice, Humanity, Bravery, and her Equitable Goverment—but now! how Arbitary, How cruel, how venal, how prostitute! Other Nations who have not experienced a like misirable change may not furnish so horrid a tale to the Historick page, yet they are ever changeing for the better or worse, and will supply something new in Science, Arts, or Arm's to a critical observer.
I do not remember to have read any History of the united provinces, except Sir William Temples, and that written a Century ago.2 From his account of the Genious and Manners of the people at that period, I should suppose they had made great improvements of every kind. A writer observes that
Sir William observes in his day and a more modern writer confirms the observation upon the
manners of the people, that they are not airy enough for joy, nor warm enough for Love—a fine
climate for a young fellow to repair to after having been an Inhabitant of Paris for twelve months.
But as an Inhabitant of a climate where all the softer passions dwell, where they are born
of Honour, nursed by virtue, and united by Liberty, I would not wish to exchange it for a
Mexico or Peru, if they possesssd the temperature of the united provinces. For Sir William
observes that he never knew a man amongst them, that he thought at Heart in Love, or susceptable of the passion—and what is
still more incredible—a woman that seem'd at all to care, whether they were so, or not.
Horrid Horrid place! What defy the power of the sex at this rate? Rob us of more than half our talents. Never never will we become inhabitants of such a frigid country, where Mercury the patron of Merchandize and the God of Gain, by inventing Contracts, weights and measures, and teaching the Arts of Buying and Selling and Trafficking, has formed a League against Cupid and the Graces.
I hope to forward this to you by the Alliance, in which Col. Laurence has taken passage. I knew not that she was designed for Europe till a few days ago, and she is now expected to sail the first fair wind.
Present my complements to Mr. Dana. How will he relish the cold Regions of the North? If he goes3 to Russia, tell him I shall ask permission to become one of his correspondents. I have not heard from Mrs. Dana, since his appointment, but fear she will be in affliction about it. Every body seems to think that they have a better right to our Husbands, than their partners, and monopolize them accordingly without asking our consent.—This too in a land of Liberty.—O! for absolute power. I would soon be the mistress of mine.4 I am apprehensive for his Health in Holland. Those sudden changes to which the climate is subject will not suit his constitution. I hope their will be no necessity of his resideing there longer than the winter. If you should find his Health impaired I beg of you to urge his return to Paris.
As to politics, they are a subject that I am not in a humour to write about at present, so refer you to other correspondents. Not that they are less interesting—they are too much so to be lightly considerd. If I had reflected upon them when I first began my Letter, it would have imbibed a tincture of Depression from them.
77The young Ladies of your acquaintance remember you with affection, especially the Fair American who is much gratified at your residence in Holland, where she is not like (from the
character of the Ladies) to meet a Rival. She is not quite so secure at Paris, tho she builds
some security upon the difficulty of forming an acquaintance with unmarried Females, and she
has too much reliance upon your honour, to suppose you would form any other.
Supplied from LbC.
Temple's Observations upon the United Provinces of the
Netherlands, London, 1672, a work which JA characterized as “elegant and
entertaining, but very brief and general” (to AA, 21 July 1777; vol. 2:286>, above).
LbC ends abruptly here, although the next-to-last paragraph below, on “The young Ladies of your acquaintance,” had been incorporated in LbC text following the paragraph above that ends “against Cupid and the Graces.”
Dft ends here, at the foot of a single sheet folded into four pages; a further page or two of Dft may therefore have been written but later have become separated and lost.
1781-02-08
I fear you will think Mamma is unmindfull of you if she does not write you a few lines by so good an opportunity. I wrote to both of you by Mr. Beals of this Town about a week ago,1 and my notice by this vessel is very short. I can only find time to tell you that tis a very long time since I heard from your Pappa, and much longer since I had a Letter from either of you. I think Dr. Lee brought the last.
I hope you are both well and very good children which is the best News I can possibly hear from you. I cannot prevail with your Sister to write—I believe she is affraid you will shew her Letters and she is so proud that she thinks she cannot write well enough. I do not 78like it that she is not more socible with her Brothers. Thommy would write if he could. He sends Love, is a very good Boy, and wants to know if you cannot send him some present from Holland.
Is my Charles grown as fat as his Brother? Can he talk French, Dutch, &c.
Ask Mr. Thaxter to write me word whether he bought Mr. Trottes and Mrs. Welchs things. I
know nothing about them. Tell Pappa I am like to have a fine Neighbour. General
W
We have had a fine pleasent winter, as mild as the last was severe. How has it been in Holland, have you learned to skate finely?
Master Samll
Some day or other, I wish it may not be far distant when I shall embrace my dear Sons in their Native land. Till that period arrives I would have them ever mindfull of writeing to their affectionate Mother,
Letter, or letters, missing.
Former Governor Thomas Hutchinson built his countryseat on Milton Hill, often called
Neponset Hill, overlooking Boston Harbor, in 1743. He regularly occupied it during summers
from 1754, and occasionally during winters after his Boston house was sacked in 1765, until
June 1774, when he abandoned it to sail for England. Seized and sold at auction as tory
property in 1779, this fine estate was purchased by James Warren in Jan. 1781 for £3,000. The
Warrens lived there from May 1781 until sometime in 1788, when they returned to their
Plymouth home. The house survived in radically altered form into the present century but was
torn down in 1946. The most detailed and authoritative account of this once celebrated
countryseat is in Malcolm Freiberg's Thomas Hutchinson of Milton
(Milton Hist. Soc., 1971). A water color of the house is reproduced in this volume. For the
Warrens' occupancy, see Alice Brown, Mercy Warren, N.Y., 1896,
ch. 12;
Warren-Adams
Letters
, vol. 2: passim.
Diary and
Autobiography
, 2:417–418. In a
letter to JA of 9 Feb. 1780 [i.e. 1781], Samuel Cooper explained: “Colonel
Johonnot who sails in the Frigate Alliance, I expected would have tarried with us a day or
two longer. His sudden and unexpected Call to go on Board this Ship which now lies at some
Distance from the Town allows me 79but a
Moment to write you....