9933 no longer saw redcoat
9934 as brother or as a protector
9935 (Boston about the size of Rapallo)
9936 scarce 16,000,
9937 habits of freedom now formed
9938 even among those who scarcely got so far as analysis
9939 so about 9 o'c in the morning Lard Narf wuz bein' impassible
9940 was a light fall of snow in Bastun, in King St.
9941 and the 29th Styschire in Brattle St
9942 Murray's barracks, and in this case was a
9943 barber's boy ragging the sentinel
9944 so Capn Preston etc/
9945 lower order with billets of wood and 'just roving'
9946 force in fact of a right sez Chawles Fwancis
9947 at same time, and in Louses of Parleymoot ...
9948 so fatal a precision of aim,
9949 sojers aiming??
9950 Gent standing in his doorway got 2 balls in the arm
9951 and five deaders 'never Cadmus ...' etc
9952 was more pregnant
9953 patriots need legal advisor
9954 measures involvin' pro-fessional knowl-edge
9955 BE IT ENACTED / guv-nor council an' house of assembly
9956 (Blaydon objectin' to form ov these doggymints)
9957 Encourage arts commerce an' farmin'
9958 not suggest anything on my own
9959 if ever abandoned by administration of England
9960 and outrage of the soldiery
9961 the bonds of affection be broken
9962 till then let us try cases by law IF by
9963 snowballs oystershells cinders
9964 was provocation
9965 reply was then manslaughter only
[Page 343]
9966 in consideration of endocrine human emotions
9967 unuprootable, that is, human emotions---
9968 merely manslaughter
9969 brand 'em in hand
9970 but not hang 'em being mere human blighters
9971 common men like the rest of us
9972 subjekk to
9973 passions
9974 law not bent to wanton imagination
9975 and temper of individuals
9976 mens sine affectu
9977 that law rules
9978 that it be
9979 since affectu in 1770, Bastun.
9980 Bad law is the worst sort of tyranny. Burke
9981 disputed right to seize lands of the heathen
9982 and give it to any king, If we be feudatory
9983 parliament has no control over us
9984 We are merely
9985 under the monarch
9986 allegiance is to the king's natural person 'The Spensers'
9987 said Coke, hatched treason denying this
9988 allegiance follows natural, not politic person
9989 are we mere slaves of some other people?
9990 Mercantile temper of Britain
9991 constitution ... without appeal to higher powers unwritten
9992 VOTED 92 to 8 against Oliver
9993 i.e. against king's pay for the judges instead of
9994 having the wigs paid by the colony
9995 no jurors wd/ serve
9996 These are the stones of foundation
9997 J. A.'s reply to the Governor
9998 Impeachment of Oliver
9999 These stones we built on
[Page 344]
10000 I don't receive a shilling a month, wrote Mr Adams to Abigail
10001 in seventeen 74
10002 June 7th. approve of committee from the several colonies
10003 Bowdoin, Cushing, Sam Adams, John A. and Paine (Robert)
10004 'mope, I muse, I ruminate' le
10005 personnel manque we have not men for the times
10006 Cut the overhead my dear wife and keep yr/ eye on the dairy
10007 non importation, non eating, non export, all bugwash
10008 but until they have proved it
10009 in experiment
10010 no use in telling 'em.
10011 Local legislation / that is basic /
10012 we wd. consent in matters of empire trade, It is
10013 by no means essential to trade with foreign nations at all
10014 as sez Chas Francis, China and Japan have proved it
10015 weekly in Boston Gazette from '74 until Lexington
10016 wrote Novanglus, then shooting started
10017 allus them as putts off taking a side
10018 and lastly in superintending the preparation of
10019 bills of credit, to serve as dollars durin' the struggle
10020 then moved for a navee
10021 which he got, after some ridicule
10022 Guided pubk mind in formation of state constitutions
10023 e.g. N. York and N. Carolina
10024 retain what experience has found good,
10025 central authority, war, trade, and disputes between states
10026 republican jealousy which seeks to cut off all power
10027 from fear of of abuses does
10028 quite as much harm as a despotism
10029 9th Feb to end of that year probably very laborious
10030 Birth of a Nation
10031 privateers not independence, what is?
10032 sovereign state
10033 acknowledged of nations and all that
10034 sovreign state and all that
[Page 345]
10035 by other nations acknowledged
10036 when his Brit. majesty lords commons have excluded from
10037 crown protection
10038 May 12th, 'as 12 months ago shd/ have been'
10039 regards independency being moved and accepted June 7th
10040 spies and persons counterfeiting---or abetting in same---
10041 our continental bills of credit
10042 or knowingly passing the same to be punished
10043 no word, orationem, probably not elegantissimam
10044 Routledge was elegant
10045 'said nothing not hackneyed six months before'
10046 wrote J. A. to his wife
10047 I said nothing etc/ letter to Chase from John Adams
10048 the people are addicted, as well as the great, to corruption
10049 Providence in which, unfashionable as the faith is, I believe
10050 Schicksal, sagt der Führer
10051 with pomp bells bonfires on the 2nd day of July
10052 than any social community has ever yet carried out
10053 reasonable act only by its geography
10054 INadequate concession by England,
10055 always too late (sero)
10056 Britain never in season, reciprocation by trade
10057 Cavalier, sentiment rather than principle
10058 TO serve liberty at a higher rate than tyrants wd/ pay 'em
10059 you shd/ have numbered yr/ regiments, you never
10060 send me
10061 accounts e.g. of guns, numbers, their weight of metal
10062 I never know of what size (frigates etc/)
10063 Impassible moderation of Washington
10064 saved us by stoppin' catfights between officers
10065 For proportional representation---
10066 Clearest head in the Congress
10067 (John's was)
10068 THUMON
10069 we want one man of integrity in that embassy
[Page 346]
10070 Bordeaux, and passed on to Paris
10071 the ethics, so called, of Franklin
10072 IF moral analysis
10073 be not the purpose of historical writing ...
10074 Leyden Gazette, Magazine Politique Hollandais, Calkoen,
10075 Amsterdam bankers, directed to Mr A. by Gen. Washington
10076 (Cornwallis' surrender)
10077 De Ruyter still cherished memories of Dutch freedom
10078 doivent tousjours crier la Liberté,---amis de la France shd/
10079 remarked Flassans
10080 and especially the consonance of Van Capellen
10081 personal visits to deputies at der Haag
10082 Leyden, Harlem, Zwol were petitions
10083 Zeland, Overyssel, Gronye, Utrecht and Guilderland
10084 so on the 19th of April
10085 John got his answer and recognition, categoric
10086 Mr Adams has demanded a categorical answer
10087 for the U.S.N.A. letters of credence / we say that he is
10088 to be now
10089 admitted as envoy 1782 Birth of a Nation
10090 corps diplomatique
10091 His literary connections sans which was no opening
10092 a stranger to language and manners so in his correspondence
10093 with
10094 Dumas, without money, friends, against intrigue
10095 to pecuniary advances
10096 in fact from Willink, van Staphorst and Fynje
10097 5,000,000 guilders to maintain our overstrained credit
10098 till 1788 relations
10099 His relations with bankers in Amsterdam
10100 in October a treaty of commerce, by no arts or disguises
10101 no flatteries, no corruptions
10102 who to the age of 40 years
10103 had scarce crossed the edge of his province
[Page 347]
10104 transferred to Adam Street in the Adelphi
10105 suspecting the post boy of humour in taking him there
10106 Magazines, daily pamphlets in hands of men of no character
10107 in fact one bookseller said to me: can get 'em at a guinea a day
10108 to write pro or con anything. Hired!
10109 Found archery still being practiced
10110 Credit till I returned to America
10111 Ice, broken ice, icy water
10112 500 miles on a trotting horse in dead winter
10113 but never as on that journey to Holland
10114 (England to Holland)
10115 Struck down our men, shattered our mainmast
10116 never as on that going to Amsterdam,
10117 fundamentals in critical moments
10118 literature and philosophy are the rage in even
10119 fashionable circles
10120 and Frederick's treaty of commerce
10121 toward mitigation of maritime law
10122 considerably in advance of world standards
10123 philanthropy not wholly free from suspicion that
10124 the new states cd/ profit
10125 The Duke said that John wd/ be stared at,
10126 to make gain out of neighbor's troubles
10127 secondary misfortune of Britain.
10128 AS of a demonstration in Euclid:
10129 system of government
10130 Immediacy: in order to be of any effect
10131 perceive taste and elegance are the cry
10132 which I have not
10133 Libertatem Amicitiam Fidem
10134 a new power arose, that of fund holders
10135 fond of rotation so that to remove
10136 their abuse from me to the President (Washington)
10137 TO be punctual, to be confined to my seat
10138 (over the Senate)
[Page 348]
10139 to see nothing done (by the senate)
10140 to hear nothing said, to say and DO nothing
10141 borrow for trading very unmercantile
10142 by thought, word, never encourage a war ...
10143 horror they are in lest peace shd/ continue
10144 will accumulate perpetual DEBT
10145 leading to yet more revolutions
10146 He (Adet) announced to the President the entire
10147 annihilation of factions in France (18 June '95)
10148 He (Jay) returned yesterday to N. York
10149 very sociable and in fine spirits
10150 no Chief Justice yet named to succeed him
10151 happily he is elected before the
10152 treaty was published
10153 as factions
10154 against him wd/ have quarrelled whether right or
10155 the contrary
10156 to colour their opposition
10157 elegance of J. Q. A.'s style is admired
10158 properties of serenity in OBservation
10159 but where shall be found (1795) good men and true to fill offices
10160 Washington's cabinet posts go a-begging
10161 to four senators, and to more whom I do not know nominatim
10162 King, Henry, Cotsworth (?) and Pinckney
10163 all have refused it (similarly for the War Office)
10164 expenses here so far beyond salaries
10165 Integrity rewarded with obloquy
10166 I believe the President will retire
10167 Dangerous that President and V.P. be in opposite boxes
10168 persons highest class of ability enlisted
10169 habitually in elaborate discussions
10170 assiduously read by the people
10171 I hate to live in Philadelphy in the summer
10172 hate speeches messages addresses levees and
10173 drawingrooms
[Page 349]
10174 been 30 years among these rocks whistling
10175 (Amphion) and none wd/ ever move without money.
10176 Had I eloquence humour or irony, if Mr Jefferson be elected I
10177 believe I must put up for the House
10178 believe I
10179 might be of some use in that body, retirement
10180 (Washington's) removed all check upon
10181 parties
10182 Mr Jefferson, Mr Hamilton
10183 the latter not enjoying the confidence of the people at large
10184 to oppose Ham to Jeff wd/ be futile
10185 whereon Ham set to undercut Adams
10186 '96 till 1854 no president chosen against Pennsylvania
10187 'the old man will make a good president' remarked Mr Giles
10188 'but we shall have to check him occasion'lly'
10189 'manoeuvres that wd/ surprise you' wrote John to Abigail
10190 a love of science and letters
10191 a desire to encourage schools and academies
10192 as only means to preserve our Constitution.
10193 Elleswood administered the oath with great energy.
10194 Napoleon's conquest of Italy
10195 created a paradise for army contractors.
10196 whereon Senor Miranda
10197 was for making great conquests and Hamilton ...
10198 Talleyrand ... Mr A. not caught asleep his cabinet
10199 so that on the 18th of Feb. the senate recd/ the nomination
10200 of Murray
10201 and a communication of Talleyrand's document
10202 assuming no risk in trusting
10203 the professions of Talleyrand.
10204 Not vindictive that I can remember
10205 though I have often been wroth
10206 at any rate staved off a war
10207 roused the land to be ready
10208 a pardon for all offenders
[Page 350]
10209 (i.e. poor dutch Fries and companions)
10210 formed own view of Hamilton's game (and his friends')
10211 which wd/ certainly have tangled with Europe
10212 wont to give to his conversation
10213 full impetus of vehement will,
10214 charged course of Ham and his satellites
10215 to disappointment that they hadn't
10216 got us entangled with Britain
10217 defensive and offensive
10218 Snot, Bott, Cott left over from
10219 Washington's cabinet
10220 and as for Hamilton
10221 we may take it (my authority, ego scriptor cantilenae)
10222 that he was the Prime snot in ALL American history
10223 (11th Jan. 1938, from Rapallo)
10224 But for the clearest head in the congress
10225 1774 and thereafter
10226 pater patriae
10227 the man who at certain points
10228 made us
10229 at certain points
10230 saved us
10231 by fairness, honesty and straight moving
10232 ARRIBA ADAMS
[Page 351]
LXIII
10233 Towards sending of Ellsworth
10234 and the pardon of Fries
10235 25 years in office, treaties put thru and loans raised
10236 and General Pinckney, a man of honour
10237 declined to participate
10238 or even to give suspicion of having colluded
10239 deficiency in early moral foundations (Mr Hamilton's)
10240 they effect here and there simple manners
10241 true religion, morals, here flourish
10242 i.e. Washington 4th March 1801
10243 toward the newly created fount of supply (Mr Jefferson)
10244 in ardour of hostility to Mr Jefferson
10245 to overlook a good deed
10246 If Pickering cd/ mount on
10247 wd/ vote for J. Adams
10248 whose integrity not his enemies had disputed
10249 ... rights
10250 diffusing knowledge of principles
10251 maintaining justice, in registering treaty of peace
10252 changed with the times, and not
10253 forgetting what had suffered
10254 by the sedition laws
10255 Obt. svt. Chas Holt
10256 Honoured father
10257 (signed John Quincy Adams (in full)
10258 1825 (when elected)
10259 Scott's fictions and even the vigorous and exaggerated
10260 poetry of Ld/ Byron
10261 when they wd/ not read him anything else
10262 property EQUAL'D land in J. A.'s disposition
10263 From Fancy's dreams to active Virtue turn
10264 The cats thought him (Franklin) almost a catholic
[Page 352]
10265 The Church of England laid claim to him as one of 'em
10266 Presbyters thought him half presbyterian
10267 friends, sectaries,
10268 Eripuit caelo fulmen
10269 and all that to ditch a poor man fresh from the country
10270 Vol Two (as the protagonist saw it:)
10271 No books, no time, no friends
10272 Not a new idea all this week
10273 even bagpipe not disagreeable
10274 for amusement reading her (Mrs Savil) the Ars Amandi
10275 1758, around half after three, went to the Court House
10276 With Saml Quincy and Dr Gordon....
10277 And saw the most spacious room and
10278 finest line
10279 of ladies I ever did see, Gridley
10280 enquired my method of study
10281 and gave me Reeve's advice to his nephew
10282 read a letter he wrote to Judge Leighton: follow the study
10283 rather than gain of the law, but the gain
10284 enough to keep out of the briars, So that I
10285 believe no lawyer ever did so much business
10286 for so little profit as I during the 17 years that I practised
10287 you must conquer the INSTITUTES
10288 and I began with Coke upon Littleton
10289 greek mere matter of curiosity (in the law)
10290 to ask Mr Thatcher's concurrence
10291 whole evening on original sin and the
10292 plan of the universe
10293 and lastly on law, he thinks that the country is full
10294 Van Myden editio terza design of the book is
10295 exposition
10296 [Image]
10297 of technical terms
[Page 353]
10298 as of Hawkins' Pleas of the Crown. Bracton,
10299 Britten, Fleta on Glanville, must dig with my fingers
10300 as nobody will lend me or sell me a pick axe.
10301 Exercises my lungs, revives my spirits opens my pores
10302 reading Tully on Cataline quickens my circulation
10303 Ruggles grandeur in boldness of thought honour contempt
10304 of meanness
10305 was practising law and running a tavern in Sandwich
10306 died Novascotia 1788 and a tory.
10307 Read one book an hour
10308 then dine, smoke, cut wood
10309 in quella parte
10310 dove sta memora, Colonel Chandler not conscious
10311 these crude thoughts and expressions
10312 are catched up and treasured as proof of his character.
10313 Not finding them (Rhine grapes slips) in that city
10314 sends to a village 70 miles away
10315 and then sends two packets
10316 one by water and lest that miscarry, the other by post
10317 to Mr Quincy to whom he owes nothing
10318 and with whom he is but little acquainted
10319 purely for the purpose of
10320 propagating Rhine wine in these provinces
10321 (one up to Franklin) I
10322 read Timon of Athens, the manhater
10323 must be (IRA must be) aroused ere the mind be
10324 at its best
10325 la qual manda fuoco
10326 dirty and ridiculous litigations been multiplied
10327 proverb; as litigious as Braintree
10328 fraud and system of bigotry
10329 on which papal usurpations are founded, monument of priestly
10330 ambition
10331 guile wrought into system
10332 'Our constitution' 'every man his own monarch'
[Page 354]
10333 all these boasting speeches have heard (1760)
10334 and never failed to raise a hoarse laugh
10335 An inferior officer in Salem
10336 whose name was Cockle petitioned
10337 the justices for a Writ of Assistance
10338 to break open ships, shops, cellars and houses
10339 Mr Sewall expressed doubt of legality,
10340 Oxenbridge Thayer with Otis,
10341 a contest appeared to be opened.
[Page 355]
LXIV
10342 To John's bro, the sheriff, we lay a kind word in passing
10343 Cromwell was not prudent
10344 nor honest
10345 nor laudable.
10346 Prayer: hands uplifted
10347 Solitude: a person, a NURSE
10348 plumes: is she angel or bird, is she a bird or an angel?
10349 ruffled, rumpled, rugged ... wings
10350 looks down
10351 and pities those who wear a crown
10352 meaning (query) George, Louis or Frederick?
10353 Beautiful spot, am almost wholly surrounded by water
10354 wherein Deacon (later General) Palmer
10355 has surrounded himself with a colony
10356 of glass-blowers from Germany
10357 come to undertake that work in America, 1752,
10358 his lucerne grass
10359 whereof 4 crops a year, seed he had of Gridley of Abingdon
10360 pods an odd thing, a sort of ramshorn of straw
10361 about 70 bushel of 1/4th an acre of land
10362 his potatoes
10363 sub conditione fidelitatis
10364 is it known that Oliver ever advised to lay internal taxes
10365 upon us?
10366 or solicited office of stamps?
10367 to be dragged through the town only in pageantry
10368 to be burnt on a hill, and his house broken open ...
10369 but has not the Lieutenant Governor
10370 a near relation etc/
10371 a son etc/
10372 in one family etc/
10373 BY 40 towns, verbatim, their instrument
[Page 356]
10374 to their representatives Sam Adams has taken some
10375 paragraphs
10376 Stamp Act spread a spirit from Georgia
10377 to New Hampshire
10378 with honour, more inquisitive as to their liberties
10379 even the lowest
10380 Your courts are shut down, justice VOID
10381 I have not drawn a writ since the 1st of November
10382 if this authority be once recognized
10383 ruins America
10384 I must cut down my expenses.
10385 For my ruin as well as America's ...
10386 To renounce under tree, nay under the very branch
10387 where they hang'd him in effigy ...
10388 UNANIMOUS for Gridley, Jas Otis, J. Adams
10389 pray that the Courts may be opened
10390 (original of this is preserved)
10391 If what I wrote last night
10392 recall what Lord Bacon
10393 wrote about laws ... invisible and correspondences ...
10394 that parliament
10395 hath no authority
10396 to impose internal taxes upon us.
10397 Common Law. 1st Inst. 142
10398 Coke, to the 3rd Inst. Law is the subject's birthright
10399 Want of right and of remedy are all one.
10400 CONSTRUED that no innocent
10401 may by literal construction be
10402 damaged actus
10403 legis nulli facit injuriam
10404 Governor in council as supreme court of probate
10405 ... by more ravenous sort of ambition
10406 or avarice ...
10407 avoid as the plague
10408 tendency of the act to reduce the body of people
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