[dateline] Philadelphia January 29. 1796
[salute] My Dearest Friend
Yesterday which was Post Day from the Eastward I was disappointed again of a Letter
and went pesting all the day long against the Post office. But this morning has produced
me yours of the 15th which informs me that you meet with similar Dissappointments. There has not one Post
parted from Philadelphia for Boston Since I have been here without a Letter from me
to You. Wednesdays and Saturdays are the only ones when the Mail is made up for Boston
& Quincy and I make a Point of never Suffering one of them to pass without a Letter.
Your Letters are the greatest Pleasure of my Life here—but in your last not one Word
about the Farm.
M
r Langworthy and D
r Bollman have called upon me this Week and are both intelligent Men
1
I have read this Week D
r styles’s History of Whalley Goffe, Dixwell and Whale
2 and Governor Adams’s Spech to the General Court and I find them both melancholly
Examples of superannuation. In the Speech I see the fruit of old Spite against Washington
Jay and Old England as well as weak Affectation of Popularity. Personal Malice against
Men or Countries, has either no Existence in my
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heart, or they are suppressed & overawed by a decisive sentiment of their Antichristian
and Antiphilosophical and Antimoral Turpitude & Deformity. Yet I cannot answer for
myself that my shaking hands and trembling Lips may not expose to the World Weakness,
folly and Wickedness as gross as this, if I should live to advanced Age. Reflections
like these determine me at all Events to retire from the public stage in good Season.
Pray are our Plymouth Friends become Frenchified as well as Antifederal. If they Avow
such Opinions as you hear, although I shall never disturb their Repose, I shall never
have any Confidence in them. But Doatage appears to me from every quarter among my
Old Friends.—
Our Grand Children are all well thro the
<small> Meazles as Col smith writes me and I hear from Travellers who have lately been entertained
at that Hospitable House—
3 May the Means as well as Disposition be long continued—
You have lost prescious Letters from the Hague and London I doubt not in the late
shipwrecks— I have none since that of the 30 of sept
r which I inclosed to you.
4
We shall have a flood of News at once, by and by from France Holland England and &c
I hope our Mass. House & senate will correct the old Doatard— if they dont they deserve
the Confusion & every evil Work to which his impudent Speech directly tends— Yours
affectionately as ever