Adams Family Correspondence, volume 13

Abigail Adams to John Adams, 13 November 1798 Adams, Abigail Adams, John
Abigail Adams to John Adams
My dearest Friend Quincy Novbr 13 1798

Mrs Smith appeard so anxious and unhappy tho She Said nothing, that seeing it, I advised her to follow you, & sent Michial to Town hoping she would overtake you tomorrow. she appeard so 269 rejoiced at the proposal, that in half an hour, she was gone. I hope She will overtake you by tomorrow night.

I slept well last night & tho I feel very low spirited, I shall strive to be [co]ntent. I will follow you when I am able if you want me, but must leave it to future contingencies. I congratulate you upon the News which is now thought Authentic of the Capture of the French Fleet by Nelson. I inclose you some Letters received to day. the contents of one of them will remain as tho it had never been seen by me— I think it however, uncandid & severe forgive me that I opend it.1 it was in hopes of finding a Letter from Brisler— mr storer being here on his return to Hingham, I request him to address them and put them into the post office for you to be sent to N york.

Mr Cranch remains very sick indeed the dr says— Love to William Shaw & to all who feel interested / in the happiness of your

A A

RC (Adams Papers). Some loss of text where the seal was removed.

1.

AA presumably read Timothy Pickering’s private letter to JA of 5 Nov. (Adams Papers), in which the secretary of state refused to comply with JA’s request to publish a 20 Oct. letter from Elbridge Gerry. There, Gerry defended his actions in France as represented publicly by Pickering and others. JA, who had advocated publishing Gerry’s entire correspondence from France, thought printing the letter would placate an agitated Gerry. However, Pickering, who favored publishing Gerry’s dispatches only with an accompanying report, replied that printing the 20 Oct. letter would “display, not his pusilanimity, weakness and meanness alone,—but his duplicity and treachery,” and he further recommended Gerry’s impeachment. This difference of opinion between JA and Pickering continued, and it was not until mid-Jan. 1799 that Gerry’s correspondence with Talleyrand was made public (Gerry to JA, 20 Oct. 1798, Adams Papers; JA to Pickering, 26 Oct., MHi:Pickering Papers; Elkins and McKitrick, Age of Federalism , 610–611, 613–614). See also William Smith Shaw to AA, 15 Jan. 1799, and note 8, and 21 Jan., and note 2, both below.

John Quincy Adams to Thomas Boylston Adams, 13 November 1798 Adams, John Quincy Adams, Thomas Boylston
John Quincy Adams to Thomas Boylston Adams
My dear Brother. 13th: November 1798.

I write a line in answer to your’s of the 9th: and to send you the enclosed for J. Hall, though the wind here is easterly since yesterday, and you may have improved it, to sail upon your voyage.1

There are no Russian troops marching towards Pomerania—2 There is a new Edict here against secret Societies, of which I shall immediately forward a translation, though probably not in time to reach you3

You know what the prevailing sentiments concerning the situation of Poland, have long been here— Two days ago, Prince Radziwill’s papers were put under seals, and his apartments shut up, by three 270 Ministers of State.— The cause though not publicly known, is imputed to some suspicious correspondence.— It gives much concern to the Prince’s family and friends.—4 We were last evening at Bellevue, where the family kindly enquired after you as they always do.— Prince Ferdinand is again ill, and for the last fortnight and more has been confined to his room.

The accounts of the fever,5 from America, are deeply distressing.— I would fain hope that some part of the accounts are exaggerated by terror: but at best the disorder must have been this time extremely malignant— God grant, it may be the last of its appearance.

The great Nation continues to plunder our navigation wherever she can find it amidst her ardent professions of peace and friendship.— She resembles too much the Lady of whom Pope says, the only alternative was, to be

“Pox’d by her love, or libell’d by her hate.”6

Ever your’s

A.

RC (MHi:Adams Papers, All Generations); addressed: “T. B. Adams Esqr. / Hamburg.”; internal address: “Mr: T. B. Adams.”; endorsed: “J Q Adams Esqr: / 13 Novr: 1798. / 24 January 1799 Recd”; notation by ECA: “given to Mrs Cumings / April 7th 1 895 / by E C Adams / Niece of J Q. A / & daughter of T Boylston / Adams—” LbC (Adams Papers); APM Reel 133.

1.

TBA’s letter to JQA of 9 Nov. has not been found. JQA’s 7 Nov. letter to Joseph Hall reported on Franco-British engagements in the Mediterranean and France’s failed invasion of Ireland. On the Battle of the Nile, JQA wrote: “To say that it is the most signal defeat that France has suffered during the whole course of the War would be far from doing it full justice.” He also reported the Ottoman Empire’s 5 Sept. declaration of war, the development of the Second Coalition, and the Directory’s introduction of conscription, known as loi Jourdan, on 5 Sept. (LbC, APM Reel 133).

2.

British newspapers had recently reported that as many as 60,000 Russian soldiers had passed the Bug River in September, but such claims were soon refuted (London True Briton, 16, 24 Oct.; London Sun, 19 Oct.; London Observer, 21 Oct.).

3.

On 20 Oct. Frederick William III issued a royal edict, prohibiting the meeting of all “secret companies and associations” that could affect “the general good” or be “prejudicial to the common tranquility, security and order.” Certain Masonic lodges remained legal but were subject to stipulations such as annual reporting of members and of affiliate lodges. Violations were punishable by revocation of lodge status, life imprisonment, or death (M/JQA/46, APM Reel 241; Günter Birtsch, “The Berlin Wednesday Society,” transl. Arthur Hirsh, in James Schmidt, ed., What Is Enlightenment? Eighteenth-Century Answers and Twentieth-Century Questions, Berkeley, Calif., 1996, p. 248).

4.

On 11 Nov. Prince Anton Radziwill’s private papers were seized and his apartments were sealed at the behest of Frederick William III after the discovery of a letter Radziwill wrote in 1796. The letter, found among the papers of a Polish general and written prior to the confirmation of Poland’s 1797 partitioning, included details about a Prussian prince’s assuming control of Poland. Radziwill was subjected to a three-hour interrogation, but after demonstrating that Frederick William II had been privy to such a plan, he was 271 released without charge and later received an apology from Frederick William III (vol. 10:408; D/JQA/24, 12 Nov. 1798, APM Reel 27; Princess Louise, Forty-five Years , p. 162–174).

5.

Here, ECA underlined “fever” and above it inserted “(Yellow Fever).”

6.

Alexander Pope, “The First Satire of the Second Book of Horace,” line 84.