Adams Family Correspondence, volume 15
br.4
th.1801
I recieved your very kind letter late last night and hasten to answer it although I have already written by this post.1
You need be under no apprehension about your dear Boy as it is
impossible for a child to be in better health and the terrible
eruption proved to be nothing more than bug bites he has taken his weaning like a
little hero and continues to grow very stout and hearty I talk 134 to him continually of his papa but he looks in my face and laughs and seems to care
very little about either of us I wish most cordially you were here to see him I think I
should then be completely happy if it is possible for you to come to this place I
entreat you will as the disappointment of not seeing you would prove almost too much for
papa in his present state of health he his indeed very very much broke but I sometimes
flatter myself that he looks a little better and seems more chearful than when I first
arrived you will find the family in general much alter’d but they will all give you a
sincere welcome—
Mr. &. Mrs: Hellen request you to pass a week at their house Nancy is not the least
altered and you know she was always your friend your little God Son is a very fine Boy
his leg is very weak owing to the accident which happened at his birth but I am in great
hopes he will outgrow it if it is properly taken care of. Mrs: H. is in a fair way to have another in the Spring and they would fain
pursuade me that I shall follow her very shortly but I know they only do it to teize
me.
It will not be in Toms power to leave the office and I cannot think of undertaking any part of the journey by myself I hope however you do not need this inducement as papas great desire to see you will be sufficient to pursuade you to visit the family
Adieu my beloved friend be assured of the sincere and everlasting affection of your very faithful wife
RC (Adams Papers).
JQA
to LCA, 23 Sept., above. LCA wrote to
JQA on 2 Oct., reporting that she was anxious to hear from him and
noting AA’s invitation to visit Quincy. She also described her health and
said that she had weaned GWA. LCA wrote to JQA
again on 15 Oct. (both Adams Papers),
requesting $20 to purchase mourning clothes following the death of Mary Johnson
Hellen, LCA’s aunt and Walter Hellen’s mother (George A. Hanson, Old Kent: The Eastern Shore of Maryland, Baltimore, 1876,
p. 50).
r:1801.
The day after I last wrote you,1 I received your favour of 22d: Septr: and am much distress’d
to find that you had again been ill with the cramps, and continued to suffer the pain in
your hands which has so much afflicted us heretofore— I hope with you it is not
imputable to the cause our friends apprehend, and that it will subside when the
agitation upon your spirits occasioned by our tedious voyage, and your journey shall
pass off.
My mother’s health, God be praised, is much better than upon my first arrival here, and I indulge the pleasing hope that by the 135 time when you get here with me, it will be perfectly restored— I have found here great alterations among my friends; in the lapse of seven years, many have drop’d in mellowness or been plucked immature from the tree of social life, while on the other hand a forest of young plants are shooting up, which at the time of my departure were not even in the kernel.— I should without the aid of a census have perceived the progress of population in my country, for the first question I have to ask of my old companions whom I left here bachelors, is how many children they have?—and the answer is generally from three to seven.
I have purchased the house I mentioned to you in my last, but have hitherto bespoken no furniture but a bed— There is a tenant in it2 who will not be obliged to quit before new-year’s day, and as I expect we shall be here by the middle or latter end of next month, there will be time enough to procure furniture, while you stay at this house
Captain Lewis is at last arrived after a passage of ninety days from Hamburg, and our things sent by him are safe—3 Four or five days before he got here, Whitcomb tried to get insurance, and could not have obtained it under 75 per cent— The vessel from Philadelphia with our trunks has likewise arrived, so that we have nothing more afloat upon the ocean.
Our dear George—how I long to kiss even his slavering lips!— As for those of his mother I say nothing— Let her consult
my heart in her own and all that pen can write or language express will shrink to
nothing.
This day week—the 15th:—I purpose to
take the wings—alas! not of the wind, but of that very earthly vehicle the Providence
sta[ge] [. . . .] and thence by land or by water creep or wade or swim with all […] that
motion can give to this sluggish lump of matter my body, untill I can more than in
wishes and imagination, fly to the arms of my best beloved, under her paternal roof— In
the mean-time with my best affections to her father, mother, sisters, brothers, and our
cousins Cranch, not forgetting the godson Johnson, I remain for this world and the next
her devoted friend and husband.
RC (Adams
Papers); addressed: “Mrs: L. C. Adams. /
Washington.”; internal address: “Mrs: L. C. Adams.” Some
loss of text where the seal was removed.
JQA to LCA, 29 Sept., above.
That is, Lt. Col. Samuel Bradford.
The schooner Three Brothers, Capt.
Lewis, carrying the Adamses’ luggage from Hamburg, landed at Boston on 1 Oct. (Boston
Columbian Centinel, 3 Oct.).