Papers of John Adams, volume 21
I seize with avidity the opportunity presented to me by
the Bearer of recalling to your remembrance a man, who has been constantly
nourishing, these nine years past, the pleasing feelings of esteem and
attachment which accompany his daily remembrance of you and who will ever
retain a deep and grateful impression of the kind marks of attention with
which you honoured him during your residence at the Hague. Indeed, Sir, I
think of you every day, both as a man and a statesman with the highest
veneration,—and I peruse your learned labours with new pleasure in these
calamitous times, which exhibit terrible and afflicting proofs of the truth
of your doctrine.— But alass! what can doctrine or science do, when virtue
and principle have, (astrea-like!) returned to heaven, and left, for a time, the 488 affairs of our continent (with the
wise but awful permission of Providence) to the
fury and frenzy of the greatest of all tyrants—the passions of men?
I do not pretend to inform you of the Situation of
affairs here, as you must derive much better instruction, on that head, than
I can give, from the worthy american Minister here, who cannot apply to his
Diplomatick Situation the words of David, when he said the Lines are fallen to me in pleasant
places.—1 I will
only Say that the State of this Country for three years past cost me my
health, and temporal happiness,—because I loved the country, received many
marks of friendship and esteem from its inhabitants, and enjoyed, in their
Society, during a long Series of years, great Satisfaction and comfort.— All
that is now blasted,—and I have at last resolved to pass the Channel, please
God, in the Course of this month and set myself down at Bath, for the few
remaining days of my chequer’d life.2
Will you, honoured Sir, add to former marks of your
goodness to me one more, in favour of the bearer of this letter, Mr. John Bikker, a young man of merit, of one of
the best families in Amsterdam, whose father, was in the Government there
and left a large fortune to his children.3 I don’t mean, that he should
obtain from your goodness and condescension any thing farther than the
honour of making you his bow and the precious advantage of your good advice,
to enable him to travel with profit thro’ the American Provinces,—where he
will see true liberty. He goes there to get out of the reach of its Counterfeit here, and its infernal antipode elsewhere.
I am Sure you will pardon the freedom I take of
refreshing your remembrance of your old Parish Priest and asking an audience
for Mr. Bikker.— I have a secret persuasion that
I shall obtain your indulgence when I consider the Sentiments of veneration
and affection which are constantly visiting you across the Atlantic and with
which I shall be, dum spiritus hos reget
artus
4 / Honoured
Sir! / your most respectfully affectionate / and devoted Servant
P:S: I was chosen some years ago a member of the
Boston Academy, & received my Diploma with a Letter from Eliphalet Pearson; whose venerable Prænomen, gave a Solemn-Old-Testament-Zest
to my Literary Promotion. I was and will always be proud of this
honourable distinction, but not knowing how it could find out an obscure
man at such a vast distance, my first thoughts were and still 489 continue to be, that I owed it to
your recommendation. I however wrote a Letter of humble thanks to the
academy; addressed to the Gentleman above-mentioned, & accompanied
with a Theologico-Philosophical Dissertation;—which I hope was received,
tho’ at that time the means of correspondence were not so easy as they
have been since.
RC (Adams Papers); endorsed: “Dr
Maclaine / June 26. 1796.”
Psalms, 16:6.
This is MacLaine’s final extant letter to
JA. He died in 1804 (
AFC
, 7:320).
These were Dutch politician and merchant Jan Bernd
Bicker (1746–1812), whom JA socialized with in Amsterdam in
1782, and his son Henric (1777–1834) (vol. 12:313;
Catalogue of the Pictures . . . in the
Rijks-Museum at Amsterdam, Amsterdam, 1905, p. 397; Isabella
Henriette van Eeghen, Inventaris van het
familie-archief Bicker, Amsterdam, 1956, p. 48; JA, D&A
, 3:25).
“While breath still sways these limbs” (Virgil, Aeneid, transl. H. Rushton Fairclough,
London, 1930, Book IV, line 336).
th:July 1796.
Desirous of contributing efficaciously to the advancement
of a Branch of Science which has long employed my Attention, and which
appears to me to be of the highest Importance to Mankind, and wishing at the
same time to leave a lasting Testimony of my respect for the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences,—I take the liberty to Request that the Academy
would do me the Honor to accept of Five Thousand Dollars Three per Cent
Stock in the Funds of the United States of North America, which Stock I have
actually purchased, and which I beg leave to transfer to the Fellows of the
Academy, to the end that the Interest of the same may be by them, and by
their Successors, Received from Time to Time, for ever, and the Amount of
the same applied and given once every Second Year as a Premium to the Author
of the most Important Discovery or useful Improvement which shall be made
and Published by printing, or in any way made Known to the Public, in any
Part of the Continent of America, or in any of the American Islands, during
the preceeding two Years, on Heat or on Light, the preferance always being given to
such Discoveries as shall in the Opinion of the Academy tend most to promote
the good of Mankind.—1
With regard to the formallities to be observed by the
Academy in their Decisions upon the Comparative Merits of those Discoveries
which in the Opinion of the Academy may intitle their Authors to be
Considered as Competitors for this biennial Premium, the Academy 490 will be pleased to adopt such
Regulations as they in their Wisdom may Judge to be proper and necessary—
But in Regard to the Form in which this Premium is conferred, I take the
liberty to Request that it may always be given in two Medals, struck in the same dye, the one of Gold, and the other of Silver, and of such Dimensions that both of them together may be
just equal in intrinsic Value to the Amount of the Interest of the aforesaid
Five Thousand Dollars Stock during two Years;—that is to say, that they may
together be of the Value of Three hundred Dollars.—
The Academy will be pleased to Order such Devise or Inscription to be Engraved on the Dye they shall cause to be prepared for Striking these Medals, as they may judge proper.—
If during any term of two Years, Reckoning from the last
adjudication, or from the last period for the adjudication of this premium
by the Academy, no new Discovery or Improvement should be made in any part
of America, Relative to either of the Subjects in Question, (Heat or Light,)
which, in the opinion of the Academy, shall be of sufficient Importance to
deserve this premium, in that case, it is my desire that the Premium may not be given, but that the Value of it may
be Reserved and being laid out in the Purchase of Additional Stock in the
American Funds may be employed to Augment the Capital of this premium, and
that the Interest of the Sums by which the Capital may from time to time be
so augmented may Regularly be given in Money
with the two Medals and as an Addition to the Original Premium, at each
succeeding adjudication of it.— And it is farther my Particular Request that
those Additions to the Value of the Premium arising from its occasional
Non-adjudications may be suffered to increase without limitation—
With the highest Respect for the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the most Earnest Wishes for their Success in their labours for the good of Mankind—
I have the Honor to be, with much Esteem and Regard,— / Sir / Your Most Obedient / Humble Servant
RC (MBA:American Academy, Letters, 1792–1803);
internal address: “To / the Honourable John Adams Esqr:— / President of the American Academy of
Arts and Sciences”; endorsed: “Count Rumford’s / Letter / 12 July 1796 /
Ansd. Nov. 11. 1796”; notation: “Read
Novr 9th
1796.”
Originally from Massachusetts, Benjamin Thompson
(1753–1814) was made a Bavarian count in 1790. For his title, he chose
Rumford in honor of the original name of Concord, N.H., where he briefly
resided. Thompson became a prominent patron of scientific research and
technology, establishing lucrative annual prizes for innovation at the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the Royal Society (Jefferson, Papers
, 32:4, 5).