Diary of John Quincy Adams, volume 1
1783-08-22
This forenoon at 11 o'clock, I went, in Company with My Lord Ancram, Mr. Stewart1 and my father to see the Academy of the Abbe L'epée,
2 who has
undertaken to teach, people born deaf and dumb, not only to converse with one another very
fluently, but also, to read and write, and he has succeeded entirely. It is astonishing to
see how fast and how easily they make themselves understood, to one another, and still, more
so to see them write, whatever he pleases, by the signs he makes them; there is not a word
in the French Language which he has not found some way of expressing, and making them
understand. He does it all gratis and receives whoever chooses to come to his Lessons. When
the present Emperor of Germany3 visited Paris
this was what pleased him the most in the whole City. He sent afterwards his Picture set in
Diamonds to the Abbé, and accompanied it with a Letter written with his own hand; praising
this humane institution.
I Dined at the Duke de la Vauguyon's the French Ambassador at the Hague, here by Congé
4 at present. In
the Evening I went to the French Comedy, where were represented Le
Philosophe sans le savoir, and La Maison de Campagne;5 The first piece seems to be very Confused; all I
could make of it was, that it was Calculated to show the foolishness and the wickedness of
the Custom of Duelling: which have been shown many and many a Time; but always without
effect and will be always so: as long as the laws which subsist about Duelling, have force
in this Country. A Person here who fights a Duel is condemned to Death, and if any body is
provoked and refuses to fight he is regarded as infamous, and if in the Army, he is broke
and declared incapable of serving the King. This is exposing every one who is insulted by a
scoundrel to the cruel alternative of infamy or Death.
The
Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom,
Extant, Extinct, or Dormant by G[eorge] E[dward] C[okayne], ed. Vicary Gibbs and
others, London, 1910–1959, 8:154–155; Benjamin Vaughan to JA, 8 Aug., Adams Papers;
DNB
).
Charles Michel, Abbé de L'Epée, celebrated French philanthropist (Hoefer, Nouv. biog. générale
).
Joseph II.
On leave.
Michel Jean Sedaine, Le philosophe sans le savoir, Paris,
1766, and Florent Carton Dancourt, La maison de campagne,
Paris, 1691 (Brenner, Bibliographical List
; Cioranescu,
Bibliographie du dix-septième siècle
).