Adams Family Correspondence, volume 14
ry17 1800
I thank You my Dear Mrs Smith for your obliging Letter,
and for Your care of mine & mrs smiths Cloaths, which came safe to
hand.1 the Trunk I
presume is Yours. it shall be duly returnd to You— Mrs Otis and Mrs Lee have
just left me. Mrs Lee is innoculated for the small pox, so that she will not
be able to go into company very Soon. she appears a pleasent amiable Woman.
mr Lee is much esteemed 106
here.2 I have never had
so little leisure time for writing any session of congress that I have been
here. the Philadelphians think it will be the last opportunity they will
have to Shew their personal respect, and I have received visits from those
who never before visited me, and all who ever did. I cannot get a morning to
write to a friend, unless I deny myself to company. all these visits must be
returnd, and what with dinning company always twice a week, frequently three
times, I find My time altogether occupied; I can read only newspapers enough of them, in all
conscience, but I find leisure for little else and My Friends have reason to
complain that I do not write to them. I have great cause for thankfullness
that my Health is so much restored that untill last sunday, I have not been
absent from meeting since I came to the city, or once been obliged to lie
down upon my Bed in the Day Time. last week I was attackd with a turn of the
old intemitting which unstrung me, deprived Me of my sleep, and made me
quite sick I was bled immediatly, and find myself much releived, my sleep
restored—and I hope the fever banishd. the Weather of 1800 has been
unusually mild and dry—too warm I fear for future Health before this reaches
You, you will have seen and admired mrs Washingtons answer to the Letter of
the President, so expressive, so dignified so pathetic that either adding or
diminishing a word would have derogated from its excellence yet there are
persons who will not allow her the Merrit of having pen’d it. I know the
contrary. it bears the strong marks of a heart deeply wounded and
penetrated, still holding up to view the bright example & disinterested
conduct of her Dear departed Friend, and striving to emulate it, by
relinquishing the only consolatary hope left her, of Mingleing her Ashes in
the same Melancholy Tomb with his; not only her last Letter to me, but many
others which upon different occasions and subjects I have received from
her—show her to be not only a Good a virtuous a Religious woman, but of a
Dignified mind. Such was however the agitated state of it, that she could
not see mr shaw whilst he staid. she endeavourd it several times, but
perhaps the flood of Grief which had not flowd in the common course previous
to her opening, and reading the Letters, and sympathy of private Friendship,
gave vent and poured forth in such copious streams that She said she could
not behave as she ought, and excused herself by sending particular messages
of Regard respect and attachment to the Family— I inclose You the Letter
that you may preserve it, as I have Done as an honour to our Sex3
You kindly my Dear Friend inquire after my son and Family
at Berlin— Thomas has received a Letter from him of sepbr 7th dated at Dresden.4 he says that he had been visited
with an intermitting fever, but that he was quite recoverd, and his Health
good, that the Baths had proved very benificial to Mrs Adams health who was
much recoverd from her last illness: this is very agreable intelligence to
me tho his Letter was four months old. we have not any since his return to
Berlin—
I pray You to present my Love to cousin Betsy. I wish she could pass some weeks with us this Winter. the gayety of the city has been much overcast by the universal mourning, and the real grief felt upon the great National dispensation of Providence. as to the fever, or the calamities in concequence of it, except to the personal mourners, little notice is taken of it; and the love of pleasure and amusement, overbalancis the calamities of Life— I fear there is too much levity of Character in this picture, tho drawn from the Life— In the Day of adversity consider, is judicious advice—
Mrs Smith desires to be kindly rememberd. caroline has
been threatned with a dissorder very prevelent with Children here, the
Hives. she is taking an Emetic to day. I must bid you adieu to dress, for
tis after three oclock. I must sit down to day to a table of Antis, the
members of this state and N york— but as I am you know the Servant of these good people, I must endeavour
to discharge my Duty to them. they will at least manifest as much politeness
as citizen Jonny Randolph. I may be allowd however to say that I should
follow My present employment with more pleasure to myself.
I am my Dear Friend affecionatly / Yours
RC and enclosure (MHi:Smith-Carter Family Papers); addressed:
“Mrs Hannah Smith / Boston”; endorsed: “A. Adams / Phila. 1800.”
Not found.
Anne Lucinda Lee Lee (1770–1804) was the wife of U.S.
attorney general Charles Lee (vol. 11:167; Washington, Papers,
Presidential Series
, 6:485–486).
AA enclosed a clipping from the New York
Daily Advertiser, 11 Jan., reprinting
Martha Washington’s letter to JA. Among the condolence
letters Washington received was one from the Marquis de Lafayette, 28
Feb., in which he wrote: “I would think it for me a Sacred and Solacing
duty to go Over and Mingle my tears with Yours” (ViMtvL:Peter Family Archives). The role of
George Washington’s secretary, Tobias Lear, in crafting Martha
Washington’s letters is unclear, but the manuscripts offer clues. The
RC of her 31 Dec. 1799 letter to JA is in
her hand (DNA:RG 233, Records of the U.S. House of
Representatives, Messages from the President), though a Dft
with several cancellations and interlineations (ViMtvL:Martha Washington Manuscript Coll.)
and a FC (DTPF: Martha Washington Papers) are in Lear’s hand. Lear
certainly assisted in responding to other condolence letters, writing to
Alexander Hamilton and Peleg Wadsworth on Washington’s behalf and
drafting FC’s of 108
letters to others (vol. 8:380; Hamilton, Papers
, 24:213; Lear to Wadsworth, 5 April 1800;
Washington to Maria S. Ross, 10 Jan., both ViMtvL:Peter Family Archives).
JQA to TBA, 17 Sept. 1799, for which see vol. 13:560.