Adams Family Correspondence, volume 8
I thank you my dear Lucy, for writing by mr Jenks tho only a few Lines, but that was
very excusible considering how much she was engaged, both your mamma and you must have
had your hand full. I hope the fatigue was not too much for her, the applause which all
agree, your Brothers obtaind, must be to so benevolent a mind as my dear Neices, be some
compensation for the fatigue an anxiety which she experienced. I thank you most
sincerely for all your Labours of Love, and still solicit the continuance of them to
those who yet call for your friendly assistance— you learnt by Captain Barnard that I
was going a journey. I have given your mamma and sister some account of my late
excursion to Devonshire. we returnd Home through Bristol and took oxford in our way,
from Whence we went to Woodstock and visited Blenheim, the Seat of the Duke of
Marlborough, which was built at the publick expence, and Granted by the crown to the
Duke for the services he had renderd his Country.1 this Castle is upon the Grandest scale of any
thing I have ever yet seen. We enter the park through a spacious and elegant portal of
the Corinthian order, from whence a Noble prospect is opend to the palace, the Bridge
the Lake, with its valley, and other beautifull Scenes.2 the Front of this Noble Ediface which is of
Stone, is 348 feet from wing to wing. on the pediment of the South Front, towards the
Garden is a Noble Busto of Louis the 14th, taken by the Duke
from the Gates of Tournay.3 this the
Gardner told us, he never faild pointing out to all the French Gentlemen who visited the
place and that, they shrugd their shoulders, & mon dieu'd.— but before I describe to
you the Gardens, I will attempt to give you a short, tho 178imperfect account of the palace, it would require a week to view it, & a volm to describe it particularly; I will therefore only collect
from my little journal, the most remarkable objects.— we enterd the palace through a
magnificent Hall supported by Corinthian pillars, over the door going into the Salon, is
a Bust of John Duke of Marlborough and two statues in Bronz, viz the venus of medicis
& a Faun. the Ceiling is painted Allegorically, Representing victory crowning John
Duke of Marlborough, and pointing to a plan of the Battle of Blenhiem. from the Salon we
pass through a Suit of Rooms, all of them containing a most costly & Beautifull
collection of paintings, many of them originals of the first masters. in the dining Room
is a family peice, the present Duke & duchess and six of their Children by sir
Joshua Reynolds.4 the furniture of the
rooms is different couloured damasks. the family being at the House, we saw only the
lower appartments. the winter drawing Room is of Tapestry upon which is represented the
Cardinal virtues, Chairs & curtains white damask. from a series of smaller tho
Magnificent appartments, we were suddenly struck at entering the Library, which is 183
feet long, and the most costly as well as Beautifull place I ever saw. the Doric
pilasters are of Marble, with compleat columns of the same, which support a rich
entablature, window Frames the surrounding basement of black marble, and the Stuccoed
compartments of the vaulted ceiling, are in the highest Taste both of design, and
finishing: there is a person who always attends at these seats, who has by Heart the
whole History of all that is to be seen, and they make very handsome sums of money by
it. This Library was originally intended as a Gallery for paintings but the Late Duke of
Marlborough, chose to have it furnishd with the Noble collection of Books made by Lord
Sunderland, his Graces Father which amounts to 24.000 volums; and is said to be the best
private collection in England: they are kept under Gilt wire lattices: and make a superb
appearence.5 at one end of the Room is
a highly finishd Marble statue of Queen Ann, with this inscription, “To the memory of
Queen Anne under whose Auspices John duke of Marlborough conquerd, And to whose
Munificence, He, and his posterity, with Gratitude owe the possession of Blenheim in A
D. 1746.[”] There are Two marble Busts over the Chimny, one of Charles Earl of
Sunderland, who collected the Books, and an other of Charles Spencer Duke of Marlborough
and at the further End of the room, is a fine Greek Bust of Alexander the Great, and
14teen full length family portraits. 179from two Bow windows in this Noble Gallery, the Eye is delighted with a view of the
declivity descending to the water, and the gradual assent of the venerable Grove which
covers the opposite hill. in short whether we look within, or without, all is on the
Scale of the sublime and the Beautifull. I must not overlook the Chaple which makes one
of the wings of the House, and in which there is a proud monument of white marble to the
memory, of the renouned Duke & dutchess of Marlborough. the Group of marble figures
Large as Life upon this Monument, are the duke and dutchess with two of their Sons who
died young, they Supported by two figures, Fame, and History.6 the Alter peice is the best painting I ever saw,
our Saviour taken down from the cross.—7
From the House we visited the Gardens and here I am lost, not in confusion, but amidst scenes of Grandeur magnificence, and Beauty. they are spacious and include a great variety of Ground. the plain, or as the artists term it, the Lawn before the palace is kept in the most perfect order, not a single spire of grass, rises above an other, it is mowed & swept every other day, and is as smooth as the surface of a looking Glass. The Gardner who has lived 25 years upon the place, told us that he employd about Sixty 3 Hands during the Summer in mowing Sweeping pruning loping, and in ornamenting the Grounds— from this Lawn is a gradual descent to the Water, and you pass through Spacious gravell walks not in strait lines, as Pope expresses it,
but pleasing intracacies intervene, through the winding paths and every step opens new objects, of Beauty which diversified Nature affords, of Hill, Vallay, Water, and Woods, the Gardens finally are lost in the park amidst a profusions of venrable oaks some of which, are said, to have stood, nine hundred years. the Gardens are four miles round which I walkd, the park is Eleven. there is a magnificent Bridge consisting of 3 Arches the Water which it covers, is formd into a spacious Lake, which flows the whole extent of a capacious vallay. this was built at the expence of Sarah dutchess of Marlborough, as well as a column which I shall mention in Turn. The Gardner who was very Loquacious, and swelld with importance, told us that Since his residence there; the present duke had greatly enlarged and improved the Grounds; that he had Beautified 180them by the addition of some well placed ornaments; particularly the Temple of Diana; and a noble cascade, round which are the four River Gods, represented as the Gaurdian Genii of the water
This celebrated park was first inclosed in the reign of Henry the first, his successor Henry ye second resided at this Seat, and erected in this park a palace, and encompassed it with a Labyrinh which was Fair Rosamonds bower, celebrated by Addisson. there are now no remains of it except a spring at the foot of the hill, which still bears the Name of Rosamonds Well—9 this palace, is celebrated as the Birth place of Edmund 2 son of Edmund the first, and of Edmund the black prince Elizabeth was kept a prisoner there, under the persecutions of Queen Mary, and it continued to be the Residence of Kings till the Reign of Charles the first, but it was demolished in succeeding times of confusion.10 there are now two Sycamores planted as a memorial upon the Spot where the old palace stood. the column will close my narative. this is in Front of the palace of Blenheim at about half a miles distance & is 130 feet high, on the Top of which is John Duke of Marlborough on which is the following inscription, Supposed to be written by the Late Lord Bolingbroke
The Castle of Blenheim was founded by Queen
Anne
In the fourth year of her Reign
In the year of the Christian æra 1705
A
Monument designed to perpetuate the Memory of the Signal Victory
obtained over the
French and Bavarians
on the Banks of the danube
By John Duke of
Marlborough
The Hero not only of this Nation but of this Age
whose Glory was
equal, in the Council and in the Field
who, by wisdom, Justice, candour, and
address
Reconciled various, and even opposite, Interest
Acquired an
Influence
which no Rank no Authority can Give
Nor any Force, but that of
superiour virtue
Became the fixed important centre
which united in one common
cause
The principal States of Europe
Who by military knowledge, and Irresistible
Valour
In a long series of uninterrupted Triumphs
Broke the power of France
when raised
the highest, and when exerted the most
Rescued the Empire from
desolation
Asserted and confirmed the Liberties of Europe
Thus is the Gratitude of the Nation expresd, & thus do the Heirs of Marlborough Triumph.11 the present Duke is a man of literary persuits domestick, and a great Astronomer he has a fine observatory & Apparatus, from this observatory he makes Signals to Herschal at Windsor; and they Study the Stars together.
I have made a very long Letter of it I hope it may prove an amusement to you;
Remember me kindly to all inquiring Friends and believe me my dear Neice / your ever affetionate
RC (MWA:Abigail Adams Letters); addressed by
WSS: “Miss Lucy Cranch / Braintree”; notation by WSS: “To
the care of / Isaac Smith / Esqr. Boston.”
The land on which Blenheim
Palace sits and its original manor house, called Woodstock, were given by the English
government to John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough (1650–1722), in 1705 in
recognition of his services at the Battle of Blenheim in Bavaria. Marlborough hired
the architect John Vanbrugh to build the castle, which was started in 1705 but not
completed until 1724 (Karl Baedeker, Great Britain, 8th
edn., Leipzig, 1927, p. 222;
DNB
).
The entrance to the home,
called the Triumphal Arch, was designed by Nicholas Hawksmoor and built at the
direction of Sarah Jennings Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough (1660–1744), John's
wife, in tribute to her husband the year after his death. On the arch, she had
inscribed, in part, “The services of this great man to his country the Pillar will
tell which the Duchess has erected for a lasting monument of his glory and her
affection for him” (Christopher Hibbert, The Marlboroughs:
John and Sarah Churchill 1650–1744, N.Y., 2001, p. 341).
This giant bust of Louis XIV,
which weighs 30 tons, had originally stood on top of the fortress at Tournai, Belgium.
Marlborough apparently admired it during the siege of Tournai in June 1709 and
arranged to have it brought across the English Channel to Blenheim (Hibbert, The Marlboroughs, p. 239–240).
In the fall of 1777, Sir
Joshua Reynolds came to Blenheim to paint George Spencer, 4th Duke of Marlborough
(1739–1817), his wife Lady Caroline Russell, and six of their children. Reynolds
completed the portrait in 1778. The palace also contained paintings by numerous other
important artists including da Vinci, Titian, Holbein, Rubens, and van Dyck (
DNB
;
William Eccles, A New Guide to Blenheim Palace, 5th edn.,
Woodstock, Eng., 1852, p. 21–30).
Charles Spencer, 3d Earl of
Sunderland (1674–1722), a noted bibliophile, married Anne Churchill, Marlborough's
daughter, in 1700. Blenheim Palace received in 1749 a portion of Sunderland's library,
to which his son, Charles Spencer, 3d Duke of Marlborough and 5th Earl of Sunderland
(1706–1758), subsequently made additions. The library was sold at auction by the 6th
Duke of Marlborough for £30,000 (
DNB
; Hibbert, The
Marlboroughs, p. 339). For a listing of titles in the library at the time of
its sale, see Bibliotheca Sunderlandiana: Sale Catalogue of
the . . . Library of Printed Books Known as the Sunderland or Blenheim Library,
London, 1881–1883.
The Marlboroughs had two
sons, both of whom died young: John Churchill, Marquess of Blandford (1686–1703), and
Charles Churchill (1690–1692). They also had four daughters—Anne, Elizabeth,
Henrietta, and Mary (Hibbert, The Marlboroughs, p. 340;
Virginia Cowles, The Great Marlborough and His Duchess,
N.Y., 1983, p. 122, 133, 136).
This piece, Our Saviour Taken Down
183
from the Cross, was
by Jacob Jordaens (1594–1678), a Dutch painter from Antwerp (A
Description of Blenheim, 12th edn., Oxford, n.d., p. 44; John Corner, Portraits of Celebrated Painters, London, 1825,
n.p.).
Pope, Moral Essays, Epistle IV, lines 117–118.
A palace known as Woodstock
existed in some form on this site as early as 866. Henry I was responsible for
enclosing the park and establishing the town. Henry II was allegedly responsible for
erecting the labyrinth to allow his mistress, “Fair Rosamond” (Rosamond Clifford, d.
1176?), to reach the palace secretly. Their relationship was celebrated in Joseph
Addison's Rosamond, an Opera, Humbly Inscrib'd to Her Grace
the Dutchess of Marlborough, London, 1707 (Description
of Blenheim, p. 104–107;
DNB
).
Edmund of Woodstock,
youngest son of Edward I, was born here in 1301, as was Edward III's eldest son,
Edward (1330–1376), known as the Black Prince. Others who spent time at Woodstock
include Chaucer and the future queen Elizabeth, imprisoned there by her half-sister
Queen Mary (Description of Blenheim, p. 111–117;
DNB
).
For the “Column of Victory,”
see Descriptive List of
Illustrations, No. 5, above. Henry St. John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke, wrote
the inscription but only after Alexander Pope refused the work. AA's
transcription is missing a single line; she left out the words “Near the Village of
BLENHEIM” after the phrase “obtained over the French and Bavarians” (Hibbert, The Marlboroughs, p. 341; Eccles, Guide to Blenheim Palace, p. 58–59).
By mr̃ Cutting I have an opportunity of acknoleging the receipt of your favor of Sep.
10th. inclosing one for my daughter Polly.1 when she received it she flushed, she whitened,
she flushed again, & in short was in such a flutter of joy that she could scarcely
open it. this faithful history of her sensibility towards you must stand in lieu of her
thanks which she has promised me she will write you herself: but at this moment she is
in the convent where she is perfectly happy. by mr̃ Cutting you will also receive the 5.
aunes of cambric which Colo. Smith desired me to have
purchased for you at 12. livres the aune. I am sorry you were put to the trouble of
advancing the money for mr̃ Sullivan's bill:2 I thought myself sure that mr̃ Grand's bill
would reach you in time, and did not know he had omitted to advise mr̃ Teissier of it.
he is always afraid to give to any body a complete power to call on him for money. mr̃
Littlepage is here under a secret commission from the King of Poland. possibly it may
become a permanent one. I thank you for the American newspapers, and am glad to find
that good sense is still uppermost in our country. great events are I think preparing
here: and a combination of force likely to take place which will change the face of
Europe. mr̃ Grenville has been very illy received. the annunciation by mr̃ Eden that
England was arming, was considered as an insult: after this & the King of Prussia's
entrance on the territories of Holland, mr̃ Grenville's arrival with conciliatory
propositions is qualified with the 184title of “une insulte
tres gratuite.” I am not certain that the final decision of this country is yet taken.
perhaps the winter may be employed in previous arrangements unless any thing takes place
at sea to bring on the rupture sooner. the Count de Gortz told me yesterday that the
Prussian troops would retire from Holland the moment the states of Holland should make
the expected reparation of the insult to the Princess. may not the scene which is
preparing render it necessary for mr̃ Adams to defer the return to his own country?3
I have the honor to be with very sincere sentiments of esteem & respect Dear Madam—your most obedient & most humble servant
RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “mrs̃ Adams.”; endorsed:
“Mr Jefferson / ocbr 4th 1787.”
Not found.
On 29 May, Gen. John
Sullivan, president (governor) of New Hampshire, had written to Jefferson asking him
to reimburse WSS for money Sullivan had drawn in the United States
against WSS's account (Jefferson, Papers
, 11:384).
Prussia under its new king, Frederick William, had hesitated to become involved in
the revolt in the Netherlands. But when the king's sister, Princess Wilhelmina, was
arrested, confined, and apparently insulted while attempting to enter The Hague in
late June, he finally resolved to invade in support of the Orangists, although it was
more than two months before troops actually crossed the border. Some believed that
France too would invade in support of the Patriots— which would have drawn Britain
into the war as well—but a visit by William Grenville to the Netherlands convinced
Frederick William, rightly, that France had no intention of becoming involved, and
Britain accordingly also pulled back. By 10 Oct., the Prussians had conquered the last
of the Patriot resistance and temporarily restored William V to power (Schama, Patriots and
Liberators
, p. 126–132).
Johann Eustach, Baron von Görtz, was the Prussian envoy extraordinary to the
Netherlands (
Repertorium
, 3:333).