Adams Family Correspondence, volume 14

Abigail Adams to Mary Smith Cranch, ca. 18 October 1800 Adams, Abigail Cranch, Mary Smith
Abigail Adams to Mary Smith Cranch
my dear sister [ ca. 18 October 1800]1

It is a great Grief to me my dear sister that I can do so little for you in your trouble when I owe So Much to you. beside being much of an invalide myself Jackson is very sick keeps his Bed—and a 424 thousand cares devolve upon me in concequence of the sudden determination very reluctantly enterd into from a sense at this late period, without any previous arrangment— but all this is small in comparison to leaving Mrs Norten and you Sick— Becky will watch with You to night— I send some Wine for mrs Norten, and pray you to send me your demijohn

Mrs smith and Betsy Howard are gone to Town to day

I have to prepare ten of us to go away—a new coach man to seek— I did not design You should have had any intelligence about it, but mrs Smith says she told You a saturday. pray let me aid You with any thing I have that you want—2

RC (MWA:Abigail Adams Letters).

1.

The dating of this letter is based on AA’s description of James Jackson’s condition in her letter to JA of 18 Oct., above.

2.

AA wrote again to Cranch [ante 27 Oct.] (MWA:Abigail Adams Letters), expressing concern about Cranch’s health and informing her that she had sent apples and pears and would send flour as well. AA also inquired about Cranch’s condition in a series of letters to Lucy Cranch Greenleaf, writing twice [ante 22 Oct.], once [ante 26 Oct.], and three times [ante 27 Oct.]. She also told Greenleaf that she would send supplies to the family and offered to assist with the care of Lucy Greenleaf and John Greenleaf Jr. (all MWA:Abigail Adams Letters).

Abigail Adams to Benjamin Rush, 18 October 1800 Adams, Abigail Rush, Benjamin
Abigail Adams to Benjamin Rush
Dear Sir Quincy October 18th 1800

I acknowledge the receipt of Your two favors one of the 9th and one of the 13th. I am sorry You have felt yourself So much hurt by the report of a Man, whose object is apparent to every candid Mind. he feels himself an appostate, and like the first appostate, he is ready to curse those beams of light and truth which Show the height from which he has fallen.

To be wounded in the House of our Friend’s is a calamity of the Most poignant nature,1 and the President has had, during the present summer an uncommon Share of virulence leveld at him, from those who have been firm Supporters of Washingtons administration, whose voices and pens were employed in holding him, and his measures in the highest estimation. these same Gentlemen have become the most inveterate opposers of the President, and for no other reason, than because he chose to act and think for himself, contrary to their opinion, and those with whom they are in strict, and close alliance— the Embassy to France has been the source of all their enmity. The News papers in this state, particuliarly the Centinal, which upon all former occasions, has been a supporter of 425 government, has upon this,2 become the vehicle of the party denominated the Essex junto. it would be a Hurculian labour to trace all the falshoods which have been made, and propagated for the purpose of bringing into the Government a Man, who as they express themselves “will take Counsel”3 in other words, one whom they can Manage—

The President says he has three times already been tried by his Countrymen upon the Charge of attachment to Monarchy and so far acquited, as to receive their Suffrages. to the World he has publishd his opinions. if in his writings they find truths which they can not realish, as dean swift said of the Maxims of Rouchfoucault in him [“]they argue no corrupted mind, the fault is in Mankind”4

I never distrusted your regard, or attachment to a Friend, of More than “thirty Summers ripening”5 and must have much more credible testimony than Mr T Cox’s to believe any insinuations which could be Made to your disadvantage

If there can be any measures calculated to excite a Wish in the breasts of our Countrymen for a permanant executive Majestrate,6 it must arise from the corruption of Morals introduced by frequent Elections, from the indecent calumny which sports with the purest Characters; and strives to level them with the meanest; which filches from the most Meritorious, that which is dearer than life, their Good Name—that precious ointment which they have stored up to embalm their memory. the prostration of truth and justice has been the cause in all ages, of producing tyranny, More than ambition, and our Country, will in Some future day, smart under the Same Lash.7

Present Me affectionatly to Mrs Rush whom I hope to see in the course of a fortnight, and be assured / My dear sir of the friendship / of Your Humble servant

A Adams8

RC (MHi:Adams Papers, All Generations); addressed: “Dr Benjamin Rush / Philadelphia.” Dft (Adams Papers).

1.

Instead of the previous three words, AA wrote in the Dft, “bitterest kind.”

2.

In the Dft, AA completed this sentence, “occasion devoted to the Party who have wish to Govern the united states.”

3.

In the Dft, AA completed this paragraph, “no falshoods which could effect the purpose, has been thought too grose to palm upon the public.”

4.

Jonathan Swift, “Verses on the Death of Dr. Swift,” lines 1–4.

5.

Edward Young, The Complaint; or, Night Thoughts, Night II, line 586.

6.

In the Dft, AA used the word “Monarchy.”

7.

In the Dft, AA wrote an additional paragraph: “I pray you my dear Sir do not give yourself any further uneasiness upon the subject of Your Letters, which I shall forward to the President, more as proofs of your attachment, than with an intention of removeing any unfavourable impression which the report of mr Cox could excite.—”

8.

Rush replied to AA on 27 Oct., reporting that her letter “afforded me, and my distressed family great Consolation” (Adams Papers).