Adams Family Correspondence, volume 15
br.7
th1804
More fortunate than yourself my beloved friend I last night
received your very kind though somewhat too philosophical
letter1 when we are distant and a
beloved & suffering object is not constantly before our eyes imploring for relief we
find it impossible to afford it is easy to advise, reason has full power to act and we
are not 449 exposed to those dreadful alarms excited by every
change & produced by excessive tenderness. I would it were possible fore me to reap
advantage from your advice but you know I cannot yet my beloved friend should it please
the Almighty to inflict on us so severe a punishment to that God in whom I put my whole
trust I look for strength and support and he will in his great mercy enable me to bear
such a dreadful calamity with fortitude and resignation
My Dear Sister is safe in her Bed and has a fine large Boy it was Born yesterday morning after an illness of ten hours2 poor Nancy was in so delicate a state of health we were apprehensive it might terminate unhappily either to herself or child but she is now as well as can be expected and I make no doubt will soon regain her strength for the little Gentleman he is as strong as George was and three times as large—
Mr. Hellen requests Mr. Shaw or yourself will purchace a cask of the best Sherry
wine and send it on by the first Vessel for which Mr. H says
you may draw on him at sight or he will pay you here the Alert was advertized to sail
three weeks since and there is a Vessel called the Hope that trades between George Town
and Boston3 I know you are not fond of
trouble and your constant residence at Quincy prevents your learning of frequent
opportunities Mr. Hellen has been uniformly polite and
affectionate to me and mine
during my residence here I therefore make it my particular request that you will attend
to this commission I know little of the world but it appears to me that to pass our
lives in comfort it is necessary to reflect that we are not the only beings in it and
that attentions which are in themselves trifling sometimes prove of more consequence
than might be expected in the acquirement of friends.
I am very solicitous about a letter I enclosed to you for Mrs. Whitcomb and I sent her a couple of letters by the Post
which I wish you to mention to her—4
Adieu my best & most esteemed friend the time approaches fast which will reunite us yet I cannot help feeling some degree of terror lest some unforeseen circumstance should occur to delay your return and prevent my enjoying the extreme felicity of clasping you to a heart devoted entirely to you
P.S. Mr. Hellen has purchaced the
horse for me at fifty three Dollars
RC (Adams
Papers); addressed: “John Q Adams Esqr.”;
endorsed: “Louisa— 7 Octr: 1804. / 16. Octr: recd: / 21. Octr: Ansd—from New-York.”
JQA to LCA, 30 Sept., above.
Ann Johnson Hellen gave birth to a son named Walter (d. 1806) ( JQA to LCA, 19 Dec. 1806, Adams Papers).
The schooner Hope, Capt. R.
Hamilton, offered freight service from Boston to Alexandria, Va., Washington, and
Georgetown, D.C. (Boston Commercial Gazette, 27 Aug.
1804).
Not found.
I congratulate You my Dear Louissa, that our loss is to be your gain. Mr Adams leaves us on twesday for Washington, where I hope he will arrive in Safety, and have a joyfull meeting with his family.1 I know from frequent experience how painfull it is to be thus Seperated— I hope when he returns next Spring that You will be able to come with him, and that we may make Quincy an agreable residence to you— I am happy to learn that you have enjoyed so much health Since you left us. I hope you will grow firmer as you grow older, and get more ennured to the climate— How is your good Mamma and all your Sisters—? not forgetting Thomas your Brother. George has grown a Stout Boy I presume. I have Sent him some Socks to keep his feet warm this winter—and a peice of calico for a Slip for John— not for the Value of these things, but merely as a remembrance from their Grandmamma—
I have had frequent ill turns this Summer and fall, and am very thin, but hope I Shall be firmer as the Winter approaches— You must let me hear from You as often as you can this winter. I know you have been very good through the Summer in writing every week to mr Adams, by which means I have heard from you, and the children— My Love to Caroline
Your affectionate Mother
RC (Adams Papers); notation by CFA: “To the same—”
JQA left Quincy on 16 Oct. for Boston, where the following day he boarded the stage to Providence, R.I. Traveling by stage to New York City, he arrived on the 21st and spent a few days visiting with AA2 and attending to some business affairs. He resumed his journey on 24 Oct. and traveled by stage and packet, arriving in Washington, D.C., at sunset on 29 October. JQA wrote to LCA on 14 Oct. (Adams Papers) to alert her to his departure. He also described a recent storm that caused significant property damage in Boston and Quincy and agreed to her purchase of a horse (D/JQA/27, APM Reel 30).