Papers of John Adams, volume 20
r16 1789
Your friendly letter of the 23 of April, has laid me under obligations to you which it shall be my endeavour to discharge.1
It will ever be a pleasure to me to hear of your health and
happiness: and perhaps you may have a curiosity to hear of mine.— I have been here about
five months, and without missing a single day, (excepting one when my own salary was
under consideration, and delicacy induced me to absent myself) have constantly attended
the Senate. Such constancy in attending to the deliberations of such an assembly, on
such a variety of buisiness, and the continual exercise of speaking, are laborious
service, and will endanger my health. Hitherto, however, by good air at home, and
regular daily exercise at vacant hours, I have preserved a good share of health and
spirits.— We are very anxious about the state of Europe, and that of France in
particular. Will the states general claim authority to controul the crown, or will they
be contented to advise it? Mixed in one assembly 155 with the commons,
will not the nobles be lost? Out numbered and out voted on all occasions? If in earnest
a constitution is to be established you must separate the Nobles by themselves and the
Commons must be placed in another assembly; and the Clergy divided between the two. In
short your legislature must have three branches, and your Executive and Legislative must
be ballanced against each other, or you will have confusions: Let my acquaintance the
Marquis of Condorcet say what he will. But my friend, you may take the word of one who
speaks from experience, dear bought experience! when a man suffers himself to be drawn
in by the current which leads to a revolution, he knows not where he is going. He will
soon find himself in a torrent which he can neither resist nor guide. Winds, tides and
waterspouts which no wisdom could foresee will occur. Ignorace, if not knavery will
intervene, and by means of passions, imagination, superstition or enthusiasm carry away
the confidence of the people from truth virtue and the public good— Humiliations and
mortifications innumerable if not total ruin will be his lot.— If however humanity on
the whole is a gainer, a Philosopher will find some consolation. You will oblige me
always by your letters as well as by presenting my most affectionate respect to M Le Duc
and Me La Duchess de lu Vauguion and by accepting the
compliments of my family as well as the repeated assurances of the sincere friendship
of
LbC in CA’s hand (Adams Papers); internal address: “Le Comte Sarsefield”; APM Reel 115.
Vol. 19:427–428.