Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13
th:August 1799
I thank you for your kind letter of the 4th: instt: which came to hand last evening,
accompanied by one from Dr: Tufts, enclosed by William. My
letters are left usually at Mr: Wistar’s and Sarah when she gave me those of last evening—say’s “Thomas, I
expect I have got a rich treat for thee; from the number of packets addressed to thee, I
should judge thee a favorite among thy friends”— I enclose for your amusement a specimen
of poetic talent in this lady, which though humble is not entirely destitute of
merit.1 To explain the occasion, which
produced it, you must understand, that during the excessive heat of the weather, for
several days after I came to the Country, I found it pleasanter to read under a shade in
the open air than in the house—accordingly I explored the adjoining g[rove] &
finally pitched upon a little thicket of shrubs & bushes, in which I made a
comfortable seat, on the land belonging to the Wistar family— My retre[at] was secret
for some days, but at length was discovered by some one, and the enclosed verses
attached by a drab colored ribband to a tree, were found
one morning on entering my arbor— I only guess at the author, but think it probable I am
right in my conjectures on that head. I have returned no answer to this invocation as
yet, nor do I expect the muses will gain a votary at my age, since they have deferred
their Courtship to so late a period. Yet I some times threaten to make an effort in
their service, and am only restrained by pride, which whispers in my ear this wholesome
advice— You had better stick to humble prose in which you have some experience, than
venture upon hobbling verses, which can do you little credit and may detract from it
much— The counsel is salutary & I let it govern me.
I received the letter with the extracts, you enquire for, and thought I had noticed them casually since—however, I was amused by the communication.2
You will observe how full of electioneering all our papers are— The
friends of Mc.Kean have come out with a fresh manifesto, as
have 537 those of Ross— Each party is sanguine in
expectation of triumph, but McKean’s friends say that a
schism will happen in the County of York, & that will turn the scale in their favor.
I am doubtful of the event, but from former experience of this State, I believe it will
go contrary to my wishes.3
Your present society at Quincy is very enviable, and I should
delight to participate in it on some accounts, though on others I am better here. It is
so common a thing for people to take up their abode in the Country at this Season, that
when you meet an acquaintance in town, the question is, well where abouts are you? The Country has in fact become so thickly settled within
ten miles of the City in every direction, that one need never to be at a loss for
society if disposed to frequent it. I feel more inclined to seclusion than I ever did
before, & I hope the same disposition will strengthen rather than diminish. When you
come on in the fall, I shall be able to determine how far a compliance with your kind
proposal, will coincide with my advantage— It will subject me unavoidably to more
company and more invitations to idleness, dissipation & interruption, than if I
lodged in another place & family, besides terrifying clients, who would never think
of going to the Presidents house for a young lawyer— It seems to me that this is one
serious disadvantage under which I shall labor for some time, that most people think I
am not in want of business or the reward of doing it, for
my support, and they will rather favor a poor man’s son, than me on that account. This
is a very serious error & one I am much interested in removing.
With best love to all friends, I am, Your
RC and enclosure (Adams Papers); internal address: “Mrs: A Adams.” Some loss of text where the seal was
removed.
For the enclosed poem by Sarah Wister, see Descriptive List of Illustrations, No. 8, above.
Sarah’s father, Daniel Wister (1739–1805), was a grandson of John Wuster, a Palatine
German who emigrated from Heidelberg to Philadelphia in 1727 (John W. Jordan, ed., Colonial and Revolutionary Families of Pennsylvania, 3
vols., N.Y., 1911, 1:264–266).
Not found.
In the weeks preceding the Oct. 1799 Pennsylvania gubernatorial
election, electioneering in the press was rife. In the Philadelphia American Daily Advertiser, 12 Aug., Democratic-Republican
supporters of Thomas McKean claimed that their candidate was being subjected to “the
grossest slanders” by Federalist supporters of James Ross but that “the incessant
efforts, that have been made to discolour his actions, or to pervert the meaning of
his words, have only served to shew how little can be adduced against him by all the
activity of Party Zeal.” On the same day supporters of Ross offered their own
commentary in the Philadelphia Gazette of the United
States, alleging that McKean sought votes from those “whom not long since he
would have trampled in the dust.” The Philadelphia Universal
Gazette, 1 Aug., suggested the importance of York County in the election,
describing plans by McKean’s supporters to hold campaign events there.