Papers of John Adams, volume 14
J’aurois vivement desiré monsieur d’avoir l’honneur de vous voir avant mon depart de Paris et je me Suis a cet effet presenté chés vous inutilement Je m’etois chargé dans l’esperance de Vous y trouver de vous remettre moy même des lettres que M. James Jay m’avoit recommandées et que je m’empresse de vous faire passer ci jointes.1 Recevés monsieur tous mes regrets de n’avoir pû vous demander vos commissions2 pour la haye et vous renouveller l’assurance des Sentiments inviolables de consideration très distinguée avec lesquels j’ai l’honneur d’être, Monsieur, votre très humble & très obéissant Serviteur
Translation
I very much hoped, sir, to have the honor of seeing you before I left Paris and called on you with this in mind, but in vain. Hoping to find you at home, I intended to deliver the letters Sir James Jay entrusted to me and 189which I hasten to enclose.1 Please accept my regrets at being unable to request your commissions2 for The Hague, and to assure you of the inviolable sentiments and most distinguished consideration with which I have the honor to be, sir, your very humble and very obedient servant
RC (MHi:Adams-Hull Coll.); internal address: “M. Adams.”; endorsed by Charles Storer: “D. de la Vauguyon / 12th. Jany. 1783.”
Only one letter from Sir James Jay, that of 21 Nov. (Adams Papers), can be identified as having been carried by La Vauguyon from the Netherlands. In that letter, to which no extant reply from JA has been found, Jay referred JA to La Vauguyon as a person who could allay any doubts about Jay's support for the American cause. For the basis of the suspicions regarding Jay, see vol. 13:187–188;
AFC
, 3:14–15.
That is, JA's requests to carry letters or other items to The Hague.