Diary of Charles Francis Adams, volume 7

Thursday. March 2.

Saturday. 4th.

Friday. 3d. CFA

1837-03-03

Friday. 3d. CFA
Friday. 3d.

Clear day but continuing remarkable cold for the season. I went to the Office and was occupied there some time in Diary and Accounts. Mr. Dudley, the Lessee of one of the Stone Quarries in Quincy came 196here, to make application for a long lease of the place near where he now works, which joins on to what is called the Bunker hill Quarry. I told him that we had effected our object in opening the Quarry lands and therefore felt no great wish to bind them any further by long leases. I should not refuse to let on any terms, but I should be rather more difficult about terms and was not at present prepared to mention any. He asked me to think of it and so left me.

I made a call upon Mr. Curtis and so home. Greek Grammar. A letter from Mr. Everett1 qualifies the statements of yesterday or the day before and states that Mr. Dallas will not be Secretary of the Navy. In the afternoon, I wrote him a letter in reply which may not have been wise but which is certainly honest.2 If he keeps it to himself, no harm will have been done. If he shows it to others, why my feelings will be understood, and I for one am very desirous they should be.

Evening, to the Play. Miss Tree’s benefit night—the Provoked Husband3 and Perfection.4 Her Lady Townley I think decidedly better than Miss Kemble’s. Indeed I thought that the worst thing she did. Barry made a good Lord Townley. Mrs. Richardson as Lady Grace appeared to me a failure. And the Wronghead family were quite as coarse as the play. I think it must be one of the oldest Comedies now on the Stage and is made out of very thin materials. Perfection is a very good Afterpiece and Miss Tree performed remarkably well. On the whole much pleased.

1.

Missing.

2.

CFA to A. H. Everett, 3 March, LbC, Adams Papers. CFA in the letter expresses in unguarded and detailed terms his disquietude at the course being taken by the Van Buren administration as evidenced by the appointments given to such pronounced Freemasons as Poinsett and Dallas, by the President’s placing in the War Department a person with Poinsett’s unfriendly views on Mexico, and by the continuing influence of Jackson.

3.

By Cibber and Vanbrugh.

4.

By Thomas Haynes Bayley (Odell, Annals N.Y. Stage , 3:485).