Adams Family Correspondence, volume 4
1781-05-13
As you may possibly not come here before the 18th I write to know, if I must leave these lodgings at that time, as the month will then be up, and if I stay any longer I must begin another month.
I have finish'd Phaedrus's fables and the lives of Miltiades, Themistocles, Aristides, Pausanias, Cimon, and Lysander; and Am going next upon Alcibiades in Cornelius Nepos, I shall begin upon Alcibiades next.1 I transcribe and learn also a Greek verb through the Active, Passive and Medium Voices every day.
We have no news here, though as you know Sir, this is a barren place for that. Please to write me them if you have any. I saw Mr. Luzac last evening he desires his respects to you.
P.S. I hope brother Charles has got entirely well. Dr. Waterhouse says he gets flesh. I should be very glad if he would write to me.
Cornelius Nepos was a Roman biographical writer in the first century B.C. JQA
was doubtless reading some school text of Nepos' De viribus
illustribus, of which he acquired his own copy of a Latin and French edition, Paris,
1771, in St. Petersburg later this year (
Catalogue of JQA's Books
, p. 114).