Papers of John Adams, volume 20

304 From John Adams to Thomas Crafts, Jr., 4 April 1790 Adams, John Crafts, Thomas Jr.
To Thomas Crafts Jr.
Dear Sir April 4th, 90

Your favor of the 31st of January I received in its season. I have at two or three several times had conversation with General Knox upon the subject of Mr Martin Brimmer Sohier; and have the General’s promise to give particular attention to Mr Sohier’s merit and pretensions. As the Secretary at War appeared to be well acquainted with the candidate, and to have the best disposition to serve him I doubt not you will be satisfied with his decission.1 How is commerce and business in general at this time in Boston? Is it more or less brisk than it was a year ago? Is any benign influence felt from the new government or not? Are the Shipwrights employed? What is the price of bills?2 Here exchange is altered twenty per Cent as some say and fifteen as others state it, in favour of the Country in twelve months.

J Adams

LbC in CA’s hand (Adams Papers); internal address: “Thomas Crafts Esqr Boston.”; APM Reel 115.

1.

On 31 Jan. longtime family friend Col. Thomas Crafts Jr. wrote to JA (Adams Papers), soliciting a military post for Martin Brimmer Sohier (1760–1792), who had served in the Continental Army. George Washington nominated Sohier as an ensign on 3 March 1791 (Richard M. Lytle, The Soldiers of America’s First Army, 1791, Lanham, Md., 2004, p. 236, 237).

2.

Crafts replied to JA’s queries on 17 May 1790, below. According to the 1790 port returns from Boston, a total of 1,655 ships entered, yielding $21,027 in tonnage duties between 1 Oct. 1790 and 30 Sept. 1791, in addition to a net sum of $320,430 collected on goods and merchandise. The Columbia Rediviva’s successful circumnavigation of the globe, completed in 1790, reinforced Boston’s status in maritime trade, for which see vol. 19:xiii. Between 1 Oct. and 30 Sept. 1791, Massachusetts ports had collected $420,707 in duties, comprising one-seventh of the nation’s entire collection revenue (Hamilton Andrews Hill, The Trade and Commerce of Boston, 1630 to 1890, Boston, 1895, p. 87–88, 90).

From John Adams to Benjamin Rush, 4 April 1790 Adams, John Rush, Benjamin
To Benjamin Rush
Dear sir New York April 4. 1790

The Tories as you observe in your friendly Letter of 24 Feb. are more attached to each other; they are also, We must candidly confess, more of real Politicians.— They make to themselves more merit with the People, for the smallest services, than the Whigs are able to do for the greatest. The Arts, the Trumpetts the Puffs, are their old Instruments and they know how to employ them. The History of our Revolution will be one continued Lye from one End to the other. 305 The Essence of the whole will be that Dr Franklins electrical Rod, Smote the Earth and out Sprung General Washington. That Franklin electrifed him with his Rod—and thence forward these two conducted all the Policy Negotiations Legislation and War. 1 These underscored Lines contain the whole Fable Plot and Catastrophy. if this Letter should be preserved, and read an hundred Years hence the Reader will Say “the Envy of this J. A. could not bear to think of the Truth”! [“]He ventured to Scribble to Rush, as envious as himself, Blasphemy that he dared not Speak, when he lived. But Barkers at the sun and Moon are always Silly Curs.” But this my Friend, to be serious, is the Fate of all Ages and Nations. And there is no Resource in human nature for a Cure. Brederode did more in the Duch Revolution than William 1st. Prince of orange.2 Yet Brederode is forgotten and William the Saviour, Deliverer and Founder.— limited Monarchy is founded in Nature. No Nation can adore more than one Man at a time. it is an happy Circumstance that the Object of our Devotion is so well deserving of it. that he has Virtue so exquisite and Wisdom so consummate. There is no Citizen of America will Say, that there is in the World so fit a Man for the head of the Nation. from my Soul I think there is not. and the Question should not be who has done or suffered most, or who has been the most essential and Indispensible Cause of the Revolution, but who is best qualified to govern Us? Nations are not to Sacrifice their Future Happiness to Ideas of Historical Justice. They must consult their Own Weaknesses, Prejudices, Passions, Senses and Imaginations as well as their Reason. “La Raison n’a jamais fait grande chose.” as the K. of Prussia says in his Histoire de mon tems.3

The more Extracts you Send me from your Journals, the more will you oblige me— I beg especially a Copy of my Character. I know very well it must be a partial Panegyrick.— I will send You my Criticisms upon it. You know I have no affectation of Modesty.— My Comfort is that such vain folks as Cicero, Neckar Sir William Temple & I are never dangerous.4

If I Said in 1777 that [“]We Should never be qualified for Republican Governments till We were ambitious to be poor” I meant to express an Impossibility.— I meant then and now Say that No Nation under Heaven ever was, now is, or ever will be qualified for a Republican Government, unless you mean by these Words, equal Laws resulting from a Ballance of three Powers the Monarchical Aristocratical & Democratical. I meant more and I now repeat more explicitly, 306 that Americans are peculiarly unfit for any Republic but the Aristo-Democratical-Monarchy; because they are more Avaricious than any other Nation that ever existed the Carthaginians and Dutch not excepted. The Alieni Appetens Sui profusus5 reigns in this nation as a Body more than any other I have ever Seen.

When I went to Europe in 1778 I was full of patriotic Projects like yours of collecting Improvements in Arts Agriculture, Manufacture Commerce Litterature & science. But I Soon found my Error.— I found that my offices demanded every moment of my time and the Assistance of two or three Clerks—and that all this was not enough. I was obliged to make it a Rule never to go out of my Road for any Curiosity of any kind. J. J. Rousseau understood it very well when he Said that Ambassadors “doivent tout leur tems á cet Objet Unique, ils sont trop honnêtes gens pour voler leur Argent.[”] Emile Tom. 4. p. 361. 6 if he meant this as a Sarcasm, he was in the Wrong. I never knew one who attempted or affected Philosophy, that was good for any Thing in the Diplomatique Line—and I know that every Hour that I might have employed that Way would have been a Robbery upon the Duties of my Public Character.

Your Family pictures are charming; and the tender Piety you express for your Mother, is felt by me in all its force, as I have a Mother living in her Eighty Second Year, to whom I owe more than I can ever pay. This Mother and a Father who died 30 Years ago, two of the best People I ever knew formed the Character, which You have drawn. alass! that it is no better! I Said before that Vanity is not dangerous. a Man who has bad designs is seldom or never vain. it is such modest Rascals as Cæsar, who play tricks with Mankind. read his Commentaries—what consummate caution to conceal his Vanity! contemptu famæ, fama augebatur.7 This Tyrants and Villains always know.

Adieu Mon Ami,

John Adams

Pray can you recollect a Feast at Point no Point in the Fall of 1775 and the Company that returned with You and me in a Boat and our Conversation. I want a List of the Names of that Party who returned in the same Boat with Us to Philadelphia.

RC (ICN:Herbert R. Strauss Coll.); internal address: “Dr Rush.” LbC (Adams Papers); APM Reel 115.

1.

For JA’s reflections on Benjamin Franklin’s legacy, see his “Dialogues of the Dead” of [ca. 22 April], below. See also Descriptive List of Illustrations, No. 4, above.

2.

Dutch statesman and military leader Hendrik van Brederode (1531–1568) petitioned for greater toleration of Protestants and raised troops to aid William I, Prince of Orange, in preparation for the Eighty Years’ War of 1568–1648, the revolt of the Netherlands against 307 308 Spanish rule (Biografisch Portaal van Nederland).

3.

Often attributed to Frederick II, this was one of Rush’s favorite maxims, although it did not appear in the king of Prussia’s Oeuvres Posthumes, Berlin, 1788: Reason has never done much (Rush, Letters , 1:547).

4.

JA esteemed the diplomatic work of Sir William Temple (1628–1699), the English statesman who concluded the Triple Alliance of 1668 among Great Britain, the Netherlands, and Sweden (vols. 4:336; 12:245).

5.

Greedy for another’s possessions; extravagant with one’s own.

6.

JA quoted from Jean Jacques Rousseau’s Émile; ou, De l’éducation, Amsterdam, 1762, a copy of which is in JA’s library at MB. Rousseau observed that ambassadors “spend all their time on this sole purpose, as they are too honest not to earn their pay” ( Catalogue of JA’s Library ).

7.

To act contemptuously of fame is to increase it.