Diary of Charles Francis Adams, volume 8

Monday. 12th.

Wednesday. 14th.

Tuesday. 13th. CFA

1838-03-13

Tuesday. 13th. CFA
Tuesday. 13th.

A very fine morning, but the weather soon came round to the Eastward wind feeling which is the sign of our spring. I went to the Office. Received today a letter from Mr. T. B. Johnson inclosing a power of Attorney as I had desired. I immediately wrote to the various persons concerned to that effect.1 Letter from Washington also,2 but nothing new. My Wife is becoming better, but the first nurse will not do and we are to have another.

Sophocles and coins in the afternoon. Evening I went to a party at Mrs. Lawrence’s, given to Lord Gosford3 whose presence here seems to have turned the heads of half the Bostonians. This is a peculiarity of our national tastes singularly at variance with our professed principles. The number invited was large and the party very dull.

1.

Although the letter from T. B. Johnson and those written by CFA upon its receipt are missing, CFA, in a letter to LCA, 15 March (Adams Papers), gives 7“the sum and substance of [Johnson’s] remarkable letter”:

“He complains of the physicians upon whom he expends most of his substance in vain, and of his health. He says living in England and France is detestable, and he must come to America, but not to seek the crowded haunts of men. His wish is a retired spot in the vicinity of Washington or Baltimore, to which he desires his friends to direct their attention for him. He has tried to get Shepherd to do so without success, that he and his relations have tried to frighten him out of this plan by bug-a-boo terrors of the blacks, but that he is not convinced, inasmuch as he finds the whites in Europe to be not a whit more honest and a great deal more impudent. Finally he has conceived a violent dislike of the absurd vanities of rank &c. in the old countries and wishes to return home soon, for after all he concludes ‘America is the only country, where man is seen to advantage.’ ... I know what allowances are to be made for the unfortunate position he occupies in life and therefore I will not allow myself even a smile at the extraordinary revulsion of feeling here betrayed.”

2.

LCA to CFA, 8 March, Adams Papers.

3.

Archibald Acheson, 2d earl of Gosford, lord lieutenant of Armagh and governor-general of Canada. His visit is the occasion of extended comment in the letter from CFA to LCA referred to in note 1, above.