Adams Family Correspondence, volume 12
I believe it is almost three months since I wrote you last. The
interval has been a disastrous and distressing period to me, and as while our
misfortunes were pressing upon me, I had not the time to write even to my dearest
friends, so now that as I hope they are past, I feel little inclination to give you pain
by a minute recital of them. It may suffise to say that soon after the date of my last
Letter I sailed with my little family from London for Hamburg which place 338 we reached after a stormy but not a long passage.1 From Hamburg we proceeded hither by—Land, I was
going to say; but it is rather an ocean of a different description, or what Milton would
call a windy sea of Land—2 That is
abo[ut] 200 miles of continued sand-banks, converted by the wetness of the season into
bogs of mu[d.] We reached Berlin on the 7th: of last month,
and three days after began my severest affliction[s.]3 My wife and brother one after the other were
seized with violent and dangerous illnesses.— At a tavern—in a strange
country—unacquainted with every human being in it, and ignorant in a great measure of
the language, you can judge what we all suffered, though in the midst of all our
mischances we had the good fortune to find a good physician, an Englishman who has for
many years been settled in the Country.—4
My wife and brother thanks be to God, are now both recovered, though with regard to the
former a remainder of anxiety must rest upon my mind untill time shall discover whether
her Constitution has suffered any injury.— She is now well and desires me to present her
duty to my parents. It will I am very sure give you pleasure when I assure you that I
find her every day more deserving of all my affection.
You will hear of other untoward circumstances relative to my public business, such as the time of my arrival when the Sovereign to whom I was accredited was at the point of Death, and his decease a few days after which deprived me of an Audience to deliver my credentials, together with the consequent necessity of waiting some months for new ones.
I have hitherto seen nothing of the Country, and very little even of the City. Great part of the time have been confined and engrossed by domestic concerns as well as by the sickness in the family. And having had an Audience of the reigning king, I have found it necessary to conform to the usage of being formally presented to all the Princes and Princesses of the royal family, who are at Berlin, and they are numerous.5 It has introduced me to a large circle of Company; but from whom little information of any sort is to be obtained.
Among the inconveniences which I find myself subjected to by this
residence is a separation from my library which I had assiduously collected in Holland.
I had embarked them for Lisbon, before I was acquainted with the change of my
destination; there they safely arrived as I have lately learned, and there for the
present they must remain. I have now but a very few, that I brought from 339 England, and have purchased here. There will be enough of them no doubt to employ all
the time I have to spare.— But to be without books seems to me as it seemed to the
famous Dr: Clarke when he had lost his wife. He imagined
that his soul had parted from him.
While I am writing, I receive a Letter from my father, dated
East-Chester, 25. October. I was in hopes of one likewise from you.— With respect to my
appointment here, I feel properly grateful for the intentions with which it was
conferred upon me.— I cannot and ought not discuss with him the propriety of the measure.— I have undertaken the duty and will discharge it to
the best of my ability, and will complain no further. But I most earnestly entreat, that
when there shall be deemed no further occasion for a Minister here, or for me to remain
here, I may be recalled, and that no nomination of me to any public office whatsoever,
may ever again proceed from the present chief magistrate. I willingly allow that merit in one family has as good a right to notice and
employment as in another. But the President is the constitutional judge of merit in
general, for the purpose of nomination to Office, and as it respects me, I know that he is a
favourably partial judge.— I am certainly not disposed to disqualify his judgment with
regard to any other man on earth but myself.
The present period is considered as very important by the accession
of the present king, who is a young man about twenty-seven years old. But I do not
imagine it will be followed by any immediate important effects or by any alteration that
will have an influence upon the affairs of Europe. The Prussian dominions have profited
by the Peace which they have now enjoyed nearly three years, and the young king though
of a military turn, has too much good sense to begin his reign by involving his People
in a War.—6 He has certain qualities in
his character, which are not very common among kings, but which may serve if any thing
in the present times can serve both to support and adorn a throne.— He is distinguished
for private and domestic virtues, and makes not his high station a shield to protect a
dissolute life, or to indulge himself in luxurious indolence and dissipation.— He is
active, industrious, constantly attentive to business, and exhibits an uncommon
simplicity of manners, habits and personal appearance. The Queen is a Princess of
Mecklenburg Strelitz, about twenty-two years old, very beautiful, and said to be equally
amiable.— Her Sister is widow of the king’s brother who died an year ago. She is only
nineteen, and is also very handsome.—7
The 340 king has also two younger brothers the Princes
Henry and William, and one Sister here, the hereditary Princess of Orange.—8 There are further the famous Prince Henry of
Prussia, brother of the great Frederic, and his Princess.— He does not however reside at
Berlin, but at Rheinsberg about 30 miles off. He came here however on the occasion of
the present king’s accession, which procured me an opportunity of being presented to
him.9 Another brother of Frederic the
second, Prince Ferdinand, and his Princess now reside at Berlin, and a daughter of
their’s who is married to a Polish Prince Radziwill.10 The dowager of the late Landgrave of
Hesse-Cassel, is likewise a Prussian Princess and now lives here.— To all these persons
it is customary for all foreign Ministers to be introduced, which I have been
accordingly as well as to the Queen dowager, widow of the late king. I have also met in
company the Duke of Brunswic and the present Landgrave of Hesse-Cassel; not without some
little satisfaction, and recollections which became the more lively as the former was
accompanied by the General Baron de Riedesel, who made many
enquiries about America, and in particular after General Schuyler, of whose treatment to
him at the time when he was taken with Burgoyne at Saratoga, he spoke with much
gratitude and satisfaction.11
I am placed at a distance too remote from the great scenes which
are acting in Europe, to give you a good account of them. You know that the Emperor and
France have made Peace by sacrificing between them the State of Venice, and perhaps some
of the German States. A Congress is assembled at Rastadt to treat of a Peace between
France and the German Empire.12
Buonaparte is the first of the french Plenipotentiaries, and after that is to take the
command of the army destined for the conquest of England.—13 Buonaparte affects great splendor and
magnificence every where out of Paris, and as great meekness and simplicity there.— The
Emperor and the English Government want to make him king of Italy, or at least of the
new Cisalpine Republic, and probably most of the monarchical governments in Europe would
favour such a design. Buonaparte himself, who if not quite so great a General as Ceasar,
is as genuine a democrat, has no objection to the exercise of sovereign power, as he has
proved by his rescripts which have been obeyed as laws
throughout his Republic ever since its establishment, and by his appointment of the
whole legislative and executive powers, for this time
only.—14 He has already become
almost too great for his 341
342 masters of the french Directory. If he should go to
England and succeed he will be too great for a french
Republic.— England is weak enough and ill governed enough to be conquered, and they have
not a single military character of any reputation to command their armies in case of an
invasion. If the Frenchmen can land, I would not venture any great stake upon the
efficacy of defence against them, and yet I think if Buonaparte has his wits about him,
he will not undertake the expedition.— I say nothing of our own affairs with the terrible Republic. We shall find her to the last, what she
has been to us from the first moments of her existence; a domineering, captious,
faithless, and tyrannical sister; but of one thing I have no doubt: it is that her open
enmity will be less pernicious to us, than her perfidious pretended friendship. As long
as the earth is curst with such beings as Sieyes and Merlin of Douai, we are not to look
for any thing like Justice or candour or honesty from the ruling power of France.
Ever affectionately your’s.
RC (Adams
Papers); endorsed: “[Mr Adams?]”; notation by TBA: “No 32 / 31. October 7th:.”
LbC (Adams Papers); APM Reel 130. Tr (Adams Papers). Text lost due to wear at the
edge has been supplied from the LbC.
JQA to AA, 7 Oct., above.
Milton, Paradise Lost, Book III,
line 440.
JQA, LCA, TBA, and Tilly
Whitcomb departed Gravesend on 18 Oct. and arrived at Hamburg on the 26th, remaining
there until 2 November. They arrived at Berlin on 7 Nov. and stayed at the Golden Sun
Hotel (Hôtel de Russie) on Lindenstrasse (D/JQA/24, APM Reel 27). For LCA’s account
of the journey, see LCA, D&A
, 1:53–55.
LCA was treated by Dr. Charles Brown, for whom see
LCA, D&A
, 1:55. She was pregnant when they left London and miscarried
shortly after their arrival in Berlin (LCA,
D&A
, 1:xxx, 53;
D/JQA/24, 16–19 Nov., APM Reel 27). For her account of her illness, see LCA, D&A
, 1:66–67.
JQA presented his credentials to the Prussian
ministers of foreign affairs on 9 and 10 Nov. but was prohibited from an audience with
King Frederick William II. The king died on 16 Nov. and was succeeded by his eldest
son, who was crowned Frederick William III. On 23 Nov. JQA learned that
the ministers had requested an audience with the king for JQA prior to
the arrival of his new credentials. The king agreed on 3 Dec., and JQA’s
presentation was scheduled for the 5th, prior to which it was suggested that he
request audiences with the royal courts of the two queens and the various princes and
princesses. He sent ten such inquiries on 4 and 5 Dec.; see, for example, his letter
of 4 Dec. to Monsieur de Massow (LbC, APM Reel 132), requesting an audience with Queen Louise
Auguste Wilhelmine of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. Over the next week, JQA
endured what he described on 15 Dec. as the “cross of presentations” (LCA, D&A
, 1:56; D/JQA/24, APM Reel 27).
For the Franco-Prussian treaty signed on 5 April 1795, see vol. 10:422.
That is, Frederica Sophia Carolina of Mecklenburg-Strelitz, the
widow of Prince Louis Charles (1773–1796). For LCA’s impressions of the
queen, her sister, and many other members of the Prussian court, see LCA, D&A
, 1:58–61.
The king’s siblings were Prince Friedrich Heinrich Karl
(1781–1846), Prince Friedrich Wilhelm Karl (1783–1851), and Princess Frederica Louisa
Wilhelmina (1774–1837), the future queen of the Netherlands (George F. Nafziger, Historical Dictionary of the
343
Napoleonic Era, Lanham, Md., 2002, p. 125, 127; Daniel
Rosenfeld, ed., European Painting and Sculpture, ca.
1770–1937: In the Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence,
R.I., 1991, p. 52).
JQA was presented to Wilhelmina of Hesse-Cassel, Princess Henry, on 7 Dec. 1797 and to Frederick Henry Louis, Prince Henry, on the following day (D/JQA/24, APM Reel 27).
That is, Prince August Ferdinand and Louise of
Brandenburg-Schwedt, Princess Ferdinand; their daughter, Frederica Dorothea Louise
Philippine, Princess Radziwill (also Princess Louise); and her husband Prince Anton
Radziwill (LCA, D&A
, 1:58, 61).
On 5 Dec. JQA was presented to Frederica Louise of
Hesse-Darmstadt, the dowager queen, and three days later to Philippine Auguste Amalie
of Brandenburg-Schwedt, Countess of Hesse-Cassel and the widow of Count Frederick II
(1720–1785). JQA was invited to dinner following the latter presentation,
and the guests included Count William IX of Hesse-Cassel (1743–1821); Karl Wilhelm
Ferdinand, Duke of Brunswick; and Friedrich Adolf Riedesel, Baron Eisenbach
(1738–1800), who had commanded Hessian troops for the British Army during the
Revolution, surrendered at Saratoga in 1777, and who had been held by the Americans
until 1780 (vol. 9:306;
D/JQA/24, APM
Reel 27; LCA, D&A
, 1:56, 61; Princess
Louise, Forty-five Years
, p. 418; The Writings of Theobald Wolfe Tone, 1763–98, ed. T. W.
Moody, R. B. McDowell, and C. J. Woods, 3 vols., N.Y., 1998–2007, 3:80; Washington, Diaries
, 3:362–363).
Under the terms of the Treaty of Campo Formio, a congress was
convened in late 1797 at Rastatt, Germany, to negotiate peace between France and the
German empire. Although French intimidation of Austria and the German states led to
the cession of the left bank of the Rhine, the negotiations, riddled with intrigues
and territorial machinations, ultimately proved futile. The congress dissolved in
April 1799 amid the resurgence of war (
Cambridge Modern Hist.
, 8:634, 641–642,
654–655).
Wary about the return of Napoleon and his troops to the French
capital, the Directory appended an announcement to its proclamation of the
Franco-Austrian peace on 26 Oct. 1797, directing troops not to disband but to set
their sights on Britain. They also named Napoleon commander of the Army of England. In
Feb. 1798 he made a brief tour of the northern coastline to assess the feasibility of
a naval invasion, recommending instead that the appearance of an invasion be used as a
diversionary tactic for other military efforts, namely securing the mouths of the Elbe
and Rhine Rivers or disrupting British commerce with the East Indies by invading the
Levant (Biro, German Policy of Revolutionary France
, 2:942–943;
Cambridge Modern
Hist.
, 8:594–595).
For Napoleon’s proclamation of the Cisalpine Republic, see Descriptive List of Illustrations, No. 7, above.