Adams Papers
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John Adams to Abigail Adams, 25 February 1799

John Adams to Abigail Adams

Phyladelphia Feb. 25. 1799

My dearest Friend

I have just recd yours of 14th.— it has laid in the Post office I suppose Since saturday.

The subjects of Mr J. Q. A.s Agents are horrible to me. I will therefore dismiss them.

Thomas’s Predilection for Phyladelphia, I suppose will determine him.— Alass! Nelly is married poor Boy!1 and I suppose some of the Six sisters will catch the Child in the Trap without a Groat and without Connections! This is to be my fate, throughout.— Three are gone already that Way—the fourth will go. blind thoughtless, Stupid Boys & Girl—!

Frederic, Franklin and other Soidisant Phylosophers, insist that Nature contrives these Things with others to reconcile Men to the thought of quitting the World. If my Phylosophy was theirs I should believe that Nature cared nothing for Men, nor their follies nor their Miseries, nor for herself.— She is a mighty Stupid Wretch, according to them. a kind of French Woman, sometimes beautiful and clever but very often diabolical. A kind of French Republic, cunning and terrible: but cruel as the Grave and unjust as the Tempter and Tormentor.

I believe nothing like this of Nature; which to me is a Machine whose Author and conductor is wise kind and mighty. Believing this I can acquiesce in what is unpleasant expecting that it will work out a greater degree of good. If it were possible that I should be mistaken, I at least shall not be worse than these profound Phylosophers. I shall be in the same case hereafter, and a little, a great deal better here.

The Report, was not at last as it should have been: But it is very different from the Report made to me. I Scratched out, a little.— I wanted no Report. in short it is one of those Things, that I may talk of, when I see you.— After I sent that Report to Congress, I recd a Letter, which has favoured Mr Gerrys opinion and made against the Report— I have instituted a new Mission: which is kept in the dark, but when it comes to be understood will be approved.2 Oh how they lament Mrs Adams’s Absence!— she is a good Counseller! If she had been here Murray would never have been named nor his Mission instituted! This ought to gratify your Vanity enough to cure you. Love to Thomas, Brothers Cousins &c Louisa especially

J. A

RC (Adams Papers); internal address: “Mrs A.”; docketed: “JA to AA Feb 25th / 1799.”

1Eleanor Parke Custis married Lawrence Lewis at Mount Vernon on 22 Feb., prompting JA’s playful elimination of her as a potential spouse for TBA (Washington, Diaries description begins The Diaries of George Washington, ed. Donald Jackson and Dorothy Twohig, Charlottesville, Va., 1976–1979; 6 vols. description ends , 6:335).

2Along with his 18 Feb. nomination of William Vans Murray, JA submitted to the Senate a 28 Aug. 1798 letter from Talleyrand to Louis Andre Pichon, the secretary of the French legation in the Netherlands, in which Talleyrand unequivocally stated that a U.S. minister to France would be received. Murray enclosed the letter with his private letter to JA of 7 Oct. (Amer. State Papers, Foreign Relations description begins American State Papers: Documents, Legislative and Executive, of the Congress of the United States, Washington, D.C., 1832–1861; 38 vols. description ends , 2:239–240; Repertorium description begins Ludwig Bittner and others, eds., Repertorium der diplomatischen Vertreter aller Lander seit dem Westfälischen Frieden (1648), Oldenburg, 1936–1965; 3 vols. description ends , 3:144; Murray to JA, 7 Oct., Adams Papers).

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