Diary of John Quincy Adams, volume 1
1783-11-24
Genl. Roberdeau, and his Son1 dined with us.
In the Evening, we went with Mr. West to the Academy of Painting sculpture and
Architecture:2 we first went into a Room where
there was a naked man standing and about 25 or 30 students taking his figure, either in
drawing, or in plaister: afterwards we went and heard a very good Lecture upon Anatomy:
these Lectures are Read every monday evening. After the Lecture we went into a Room, where
were a Number of Casts from the most Remarkable Antique Statues. Some of the finest of which
were 1. Apollo Pythonem Jaculans, Apollo is represented as just
having shot his arrow at the serpent Pytho: it is a very much admired Statue. 2dly. the Gladiator Repellens. This Piece is very famous and casts of it are
very Common. 3dly. the Gladiator moriens, where he is
represented as sitting down, to die after receiving the Wound. 4th. An Hercules: or rather a
fragment of an Hercules for the Head and neck, both the arms, and both the legs are
lost—what Remains is said to be very fine by Connoisseurs. 5th.
a Venus de Medicis. This is so well known all over the world as
needs nothing to be said of it. 6th. a Laocoon which is
perhaps, the finest of them all. It is supposed to be about 2500 years old; and Virgil is
said to have taken his beautiful description from it. (Aeneid Book
2. verse. 200, et seq:)3 The institution
was made by the present king and, he made a present of Somerset House a very grand building
to the Royal, and Antiquarian Societies4 and to
the academy of Painting &c.
Adams Family
Correspondence
, 2:352–353; CFA, Diary
,
2:132, 133, 135; 4:130–131 and passim).
The Royal Academy of Arts.
Verses 201–227 (Virgil, Works, in Latin and English . . .,
ed. Joseph Warton, 3d edn., 4 vols., London, 1778, 2:150–153, one of several editions
JQA owned at this time, and now at MQA).
The Royal Society of London for the Advancement of Natural Science, chartered by Charles
II in 1663 and given apartments in the new Somerset House in 1782, and the Society of
Antiquaries of London, chartered by George II in 1751 and given apartments in 1781 (Wheatley, London Past and
Present
).
1783-11-25
Went to the Covent Garden Theatre, and saw the Castle of
Andalusia, with the Devil upon two Sticks.1
Castle of Andalusia, by John O'Keeffe, with music by Samuel
Arnold, first performed in 1782; and Samuel Foote's highly successful comedy first produced
in 1768 (
Biographia
Dramatica
; Hogan, ed., London Stage, 1660–1800
).