Abigail Adams to Elias Boudinot, post 15 June 1801
Abigail Adams to Elias Boudinot
[post 15 June 1801]1
Dear Sir
My Son having Sent me a coppy of your valuable Book, the President
has read it with great satisfaction and pleasure; I have not as yet been able to go
through the whole of it, myself having resignd it into the hands of miss Hannah Adams
the Authoriss of a Work entitled “a veiw of Religious opinions.” She is about
republishing the third Edition of that Work with considerable additions, and Some
Questions arrising in her mind upon which she is seeking information She has stated them
in the inclosed paper and I have undertaken to be the organ of communication to you in
her behalf. being sensible from the well known benevolence of your Heart, that you will
take pleasure in aiding a Lady who has discoverd such close application and intence study in giving to the world Labouriuss
investigation the proof in the accomplishment of a
work highly usefull to the world. in this singular
pursuit of a Lady.2
In works of fancy and imagination, several of my Fair Country-women
have shone, nor have they unsuccessfully courted the Muses. but this Lady has struck out
upon a new and untroden path; with an industery, and perseverence which few could equal;
You will perceive that in stateing all the various Religious opinions, and different
Sects which have existed, she has avoided giving any judgment of her own, cautious of
giveing offence to any. She is a woman of uncommon diffidence, modest and unassumeing
plain & unaffected in her manners.— decent and modest in her apparal, silent in
mixed company, never speaking upon literary Subjects but when drawn out by others. her early Education was in a Country Village, under a Father
who3 She has an uncommon tallent
of collecting the sense of an Author, and comprising it in few and comprehensive
words—
If a Letter under cover to the
Late President of the United States addrest to miss Hannah Adams, Medway—shall be
carefully conveyed to her—
I embrace this opportunity Sir of presenting my respectfull and affectionate regards to Mrs Boudinot and Mrs Bradford, in whose Friendship and Society I have enjoyed many pleasurable hours; and whose continued regard and esteem I hold as one of the choicest blessings left me— I have had experience “that Friends grow not thick on every bow, nor every Friend unrotten at the core”4
In the Rural shades of Quincy: and the domestic occupations of a
Farm; we enjoy a tranquility which unruffeld by
party Spirit, hopeing for peace upon Earth, and breathing good will to Man—
With sentiments of / Respect I subscribe / Your Friend
A Adams
Dft (Adams Papers); notation by CFA: “Copy. E. Boudinot—”
1. The dating of this letter is based on AA’s receipt of Boudinot’s new publication, for which see her 12 June letter to TBA, and note 11, above. In May Boudinot published The Age of Revelation; or, The Age of Reason Shewn to Be an Age of Infidelity, Phila., 1801, , No. 219. In a letter to JA of 13 July (Adams Papers), carried by TBA, Boudinot presented a copy of the book to JA (Philadelphia Gazette of the United States, 4 May).
2. Enclosure not found. Hannah Adams, A View of Religions, in Two Parts, 3d edn., Boston, 1801, , No. 12, was published on 21 Oct. (New-England Palladium, 23 Oct.).
3. Adams was the daughter of JA’s distant cousin Thomas Adams (1725–1812), of Medfield, Mass. A bibliophile known as “Book Adams,” he possessed a personal library that gave Hannah access to a wide range of literary and foreign-language materials ( , 20:xvi; , 3:243).
4. Edward Young, The Complaint; or, Night Thoughts, Night II, lines 563–564.