Adams Family Correspondence, volume 8
r2 1789
I have this morning received your manly letter of 25th
Ult.—1 I had long intended to write you
but as you observe avocations have always intervened. Public business my son, must
always be done by somebody.— it will be done by somebody or other— If wise men decline
it others will not: if honest men refuse it, others will not. A young man should well
weigh his plans. Integrity should be preserved in all events, as essential to his
happiness, thro every stage of his existence. His first maxim then, should be to place
his honor out of the reach of all men: In order to this he must make it a rule never to
become dependant on public employments for subsistence. Let him have a trade a
profession a farm a shop, something where by he can honestly live, and then he may
engage in public affairs, if invited, upon independant principles. My advice to my
children, is to maintain an independant character, tho' in poverty and obscurity:
neither riches nor illustration will console a man under the reflection that he has
acted a mean a mercenary part, much less a dishonest one— Your handwriting and your
style are in my eye and judgment, beautiful— go on my son pursue your mathematics and
your morals. Come with your brother, and be here at the meeting of Congress on the first
of December. Then we will converse upon these and other subjects, mean time write me, if
it is but a line every week.
Your father
LbC in
WSS's hand (Adams Papers);
internal address: “Mr Thomas B Adams / Student Harvard
Colledge”; APM Reel 115. Tr
(Adams Papers).
Not found.