Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13

Thomas Boylston Adams to William Cranch, 24 September 1799 Adams, Thomas Boylston Cranch, William
Thomas Boylston Adams to William Cranch
Dear William, Germantown 24 September 1799.

Your favor of the 19th: instt: is before me, with the enclosure for Judge Cushing, which I shall forward with my next letters to Quincy, with request to have it sent on.1 The terms & expressions of your application, strike me as perfectly apt & proper. Judge Cushing, was taken ill on his journey to Philadelphia, and returned home, but the Court met & dispatched business as usual.2 I waited on the Chief Justice, and mentioned to him what I had heard, of the intended resignation of Mr: Bayard, of the Clerkship of the Supreme Court, on the removal of Government to the federal City, & at the same 563 time named you as a competent, well qualified & convenient, Successor to the Office, requesting his influence to promote your appointment. He received the application with flattering deference and promised to lay it before his colleagues, so that if priority of intercession should have an influence on pretentions of equal degree, your’s should claim its rank, which I presume is unquestionably the first. I thought further interference on my part superfluous; nevertheless if occasion should offer, I will follow up the affair yet further, for I am desirous you should obtain this appointment, though its advantages & emoluments may be remote. There is no doubt in my mind that Bayard will resign after the next term, in February.

I am still an exile from Philadelphia & expect to be so at least another month— Within a few days past the fever has increased the number of its victims & the extent of its ravages. The mortality however is not comparable to that of the last season.

We are full of electioneering for Governor in this State; the trial will take place on the 9th: of next month, & I think the Chief Justice will carry the day.

I owe my namesake Tom: Johnson a letter, & intend payment ere long— Present me kindly to the family & tell them that my brother & Sister at Berlin were well on the 13th: July.3

With best regards to Mrs: Cranch & the little ones I am, &ca

T. B. Adams.

RC (OCHP:William Cranch Papers); addressed: “William Cranch Esqr: / George town / Ptmk”; internal address: “W. Cranch Esqr:”; endorsed: “T. B. Adams Sep 24 / 1799— / recd. Octr. 1st.— / Ansd. Novr. 15th.”; notation: “12 1/2.”

1.

Not found.

2.

Owing to a respiratory illness, William Cushing was unable to attend the federal circuit court sessions in New York and Connecticut in the summer and fall. Cushing returned to duty on 3 Oct. in Rutland, Vt. ( Doc. Hist. Supreme Court , 3:380, 381, 385–388).

3.

On 13 July JQA wrote to TBA with further direction on his financial affairs. He also announced plans to travel to Dresden and reported signing the Prussian-American Treaty of Amity and Commerce on 11 July (LbC, APM Reel 131).

Thomas Boylston Adams to John Adams, 26 September 1799 Adams, Thomas Boylston Adams, John
Thomas Boylston Adams to John Adams
My dear Sir. Philadelphia 26th: September 1799.

Your very kind favor of the 14th: instt: has a claim upon my gratitude, not only for the obliging wish it conveys, that I should become one of your family, on your return to Philadelphia, but also for the flattering opinion, you are pleased to express, on the subject of my letters & classical taste.1 I shall make no scruple to accept the 564 invitation to dwell under the same roof with my parents, knowing, and appreciating as I do, the wide difference, between the hospitality, abundance & freedom of a fathers house, contrasted by the usual accommodations and comforts of an ordinary lodging house.

I have already suggested to my Mother, the apprehensions I entertained, of being liable to unpleasant and unprofitable interruptions from my pursuits, by residing in the family, and I still think it, the only inconvenience, to which I should be exposed. The social circles of Philadelphia, are perhaps as improving and instructive in the savoir vivre & plaire, as any of the same nature else where, but science & learning rarely preside them. Though the “mild virtues and literary habits of the Consort of our Chief,” have lately become the subject of flattering comment and I doubt not unerring prediction, that “they will be as permanent as the glories of his administration,” yet even the power of high example, may prove incompetent to the conversion of a drawing room into any thing but the resort of fashionable elegance.2

A taste for classic company will, I hope, supercede the relish I once had for dissipation, for I already begin to feel the satisfaction of such a transition. There is an age & a season, in my opinion, for the indulgence of both these passions & propensities; they partake of a common nature, & the change of object can alone be realized, which in order to be useful, ought to be spontaneous. If I were disposed to enlarge upon this speculative strain, I should add, in spite of provoking your smiles that a young man seldom has a correct taste until he has a Mistress, real or imaginary, in possession or in action, as we lawyers say of other chases. The ladies will claim their privilege, in defiance of all the beauties of Homer, the ribaldry of Horrace or Ovid, the gall of Juvenal, the elegance of Virgil, the philosophy of Lucretius, or all the venerable Mentors, in lawn or buckram, of antient or modern days. The delicate tints & the fine contexture of a florid female skin, produce a much more powerful effect upon the organs of a gentleman, than all the collected wisdom of Socrates, Plato & Cicero, dressed in a splendid type & decorated with a gilt binding, whether of calf or of sheepskin. It is therefore not so much a matter of astonishment, that the living languages should animate the faculties & fire the fancy of youth & vigor and that a taste for the dead dialects should be the attribute of more mature years.

I am unacquainted with the writings of Lucretius and believe he is not among my books; you will confer a favor upon me therefore, by suffering him to travel with you hither, and introducing him to 565 my acquaintance in the course of the winter.3 I derive much more pleasure from the perusal of an antient author in the company of a third person than in reading by myself. I can readily entertain the correctness of your remark, that the philosophy of the modern school is but a copy & a plagiarism from an antique original. Our poets, historians & moralists, are indebted to the same copious source for their chief beauties & excellence. Few of them equal, & none surpass, the models they assume to follow.

With the most ardent wishes for the continuance of your health and that your journey hither may be prosperous, I remain / Your Son

Thomas B Adams

RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “The President of the U.S.”

1.

In his letter to TBA of 14 Sept. JA noted that he looked forward to their residing together. He also endorsed TBA’s reading in the classics and encouraged him in his fledgling law career (excerpt printed in Charles Hamilton Autographs, Catalog No. 57, items 3, 4).

2.

The Walpole, N.H., Farmer’s Weekly Museum, 29 July, offered a tribute to “certain amiable, ingenious, and dignified characters in the female world,” noting the publication of Sarah Wentworth Apthorp Morton’s poem “To Time” and praising AA, as quoted by TBA.

3.

JA’s library at MB includes Titus Lucretius Carus, Of the Nature of Things, transl. Thomas Creech, 2 vols., London, 1714, and the same work in Latin and English prose, London, 1743 ( Catalogue of JA’s Library ).