Diary of Charles Francis Adams, volume 7

Tuesday. 27th. CFA

1836-12-27

Tuesday. 27th. CFA
Tuesday. 27th.

A cold, sharp morning. I went to the Office which I do not however succeed in reaching very early, and had barely sat down to work when Mr. Walsh came in to talk and after him T. K. Davis to fulfil an agreement to go and pay a morning visit to Mr. and Mrs. Seaver. This 154being soon done on account of their absence from home, he proposed a walk which was lengthened out far beyond my measurement. We went to Boston line and I got home later than usual. Finished a book of Livy notwithstanding.

Afternoon, read part of Plutarch’s Essay upon Education to Statesmanship but the old French of Amyot is so quaint as to make it difficult to get the sense.1 Also a little German which I desire very much to keep up. Evening a visiting time due to Mr. and Mrs. Sargent. They have a very pretty house indeed, and seem comfortable. Home early, very cold.

1.

The essay is included in Les Oeuvres Morales ... de Plutarque translated by Jacques Amyot; a Paris, 1655, edn. is among JA’s books ( Catalogue of JA’s Library ).

Wednesday 28th. CFA

1836-12-28

Wednesday 28th. CFA
Wednesday 28th.

A very cold morning, glass nearly at zero. I went to the Office and besides writing up Arrears of my Diary I read a good deal of the correspondence between Mr. Forsyth and the Mexican Minister. The former does not appear to much advantage. He is rather wanting even in respectful attention, and very much so in frankness.1

I experienced a disappointment today of a trifling but still vexatious kind. Had a letter in my box at the Post Office and waited for it until near two because as well as I could see it was postmarked New, and had as I thought the appearance of the long expected remittance from New Orleans.2 Lo and behold, it was for C. Fred. Adams and I lost my time and Livy besides my disappointment.

Dine by engagement with E. Quincy. Nobody there but T. K. Davis and myself. A very modest dinner very modestly conducted. Quincy has great merit in the very unassuming manner with which he supports the station he has, particularly as there is some ground for suspicion that he never anticipated it. I like him better, and think better of him for this experience. His wife however looks as if she suffered under it and the family care more than he. She has a sickly and feeble infant.3

Home at sunset. Nothing new. Found my Wife sitting at home and read to her in the evening from Travels in Norway. Not much of a book. Afterwards, I read over very carefully the Pamphlet of Mr. Gallatin on the Currency.4

1.

On 10 May the House of Representatives, in pursuance of the debate in the House of 7 May on the southwest boundaries as fixed in the Treaty of 1819 (a debate in which JQA was a principal figure), voted to request the President to communicate to the House all correspondence and other materials that had 155passed at Washington and at Mexico between the two governments relative to boundaries and military activities since 1 Jan. 1835. The President complied on 14 May. Included were letters and memoranda exchanged between Secretary of State John Forsyth and the Mexican minister, Manuel Eduardo Gorostiza, 9 March – 10 May 1836 ( Congressional Globe , 24th Cong., 1st sess., p. 362–363, 375–377). It seems likely that CFA encountered the material in paging through the printed congressional documents that JQA sent to Quincy with some regularity and that remain at MQA.

2.

From Lt. Thomas B. Adams.

3.

With limited means, Edmund Quincy for some time after his marriage to Lucilla Pinckey Parker in 1833 had lived with her parents, the Daniel P. Parkers (vol. 5:305–306). However, Mr. Parker had purchased for them in 1834, a handsome house at 49 Beacon Street. CFA’s observations on what was apparently his first visit to them in their changed circumstances reflect his long-held antipathy to the airs assumed by other members of the Quincy family (vol. 3:11–12). Lucilla Quincy, as CFA suggests, was not in good health; the infant, John, though he had a long life, was never whole. See Edmund Quincy, Diary, in Quincy, Wendell, Holmes, and Upham Family Papers, MHi, Microfilms, Reel 11:531–599.

4.

Albert Gallatin, Considerations on the Currency and Banking System of the United States, Phila., 1831. CFA returned to a reading of the essay periodically; see vols. 4:36; 5:257–258; 6:279.