Adams Family Correspondence, volume 1
1761-12-30
I was at Boston yesterday and saw your Brother who was well. I have but a moments notice of an oportunity of sending to you the enclos'd which I took at your Unkle Edwards's.2
Here we are Dick and Jack as happy as the Wickedness and folly of this World will allow Phylosophers to be: our good Wishes are pour'd forth for the felicity of you, your family and Neighbours.—My—I dont know what—to Mrs. Nabby.3 Tell her I hear she's about commencing a most loyal subject to young George—and altho my Allegiance has been hitherto inviolate I shall endeavour, all in my Power to foment Rebellion.4
Harvard Graduates
, 11:370–376; and JA, Diary and Autobiography
, 1:231–232, and passim.
Mary's only brother was
The earliest known meeting between JA and AA had occurred in the summer of 1759, when JA was still under the fascination of Hannah Quincy, and his first impressions of the Smith girls were not unqualifiedly favorable. See JA, Diary and Autobiography
, 1:108–109.
George III had acceded to the throne in Oct. 1760.
On the provenance of this letter see JQA's MS Diary, entry of 21 Sept. 1829: “William Greenleaf brought me in the Evening several old Letters, sent me by his Mother, from among the papers of her father....
1762-10-04
By the same Token that the Bearer hereof1
satt up with you last night I hereby order you to give him, as many Kisses, and as many Hours of your Company after 9 O'Clock as he shall please to Demand and charge them to my Account: This Order, or Requisition call it which you will is in Consideration of a similar order Upon Aurelia2 for the like favour, and I presume I have good Right to draw upon you for the Kisses as I have given two or three Millions at least, when one has been received, and of Consequence the Account between us is immensely in favour of yours,
This can hardly have been anyone other than JA himself.
Mary Smith, later Mrs. Richard Cranch. This fanciful name is unmistakably attributed to AA's elder sister in a letter from Hannah (Storer) Green to AA, 23 Nov. 1763 (Adams Papers).
I have taken the best Advice, on the subject of your Billet, and I find you cannot compell me to pay unless I refuse Marriage; which I never did, and never will, but on the Contrary am ready to have you at any Time.
I hope Jemima's Conscience has as good a Memory as mine.
There is no clue to the precise date of this note, the “Billet” to which it is a reply not having been found.