Letters of Mrs. Adams, | ||
CONTENTS.
Page | |
Memoir | xiii |
1761. | |
To Mrs. H. Lincoln. 5 October. Accepts the offer to correspond with her. Views of life |
3 |
1764. | |
To John Adams. 16 April. Pleasure in writing. Questions about his health |
7 |
To the same. 19–20 April. Wishes to know her faults. Dreams |
8 |
1767. | |
To the same. 14 September. Family well. At her father's | 12 |
1774. | |
To the same. 19 August. Time tedious in his absence. Anxiety for the future. Reading Rollin |
13 |
To the same. 2 September. Popular excitement. Seizure of the warrants for summoning juries. Drought |
15 |
To the same. 14–16 September. Warlike preparations of Governor Gage. The gunpowder in Braintree secured by the people. They force the Sheriff to surrender warrants and burn them. Dismay of the Tories. At Colonel Quincy's. Students at law in her house. |
|
Mr. Thaxter teaches her son. Morals of children. Popular feeling in Taunton |
18 |
To the same. 22 September. Visit to Boston. State of the town. Negro conspiracy |
23 |
To the same. 16 October. Desires his return. Fears for the future. Necessity of economy. General Gage. Departure of Josiah Quincy, Jr., for England |
25 |
1775. | |
To the same. 4 May. Affairs at home. Hutchinson's letters. Mr. Quincy's death |
29 |
To the same. 7 May. Cheering news from North Carolina. Distress of Boston |
31 |
To the same. 24 May. Alarm in Braintree. British foraging party. Arrival of Dr. Franklin from Europe. Fire in Boston. State of her house |
32 |
To the same. 15 June. Arrival of British recruits. Apprehensions. Mr. Bowdoin. Importance of soldiers. Scarcity of pins |
35 |
To the same. 18–20 June. Action on Bunker's Hill. Death of Dr. Warren |
39 |
To the same. 22 June. Answers inquiries. Dr. Tufts. Preparations for removal |
41 |
To the same. 25 June. Particulars of the action on Bunker's Hill. Divine service. Preacher not ardent enough. Condition of Boston. Effect of reports |
43 |
To the same. 5 July. Pleasure of telling news. State of Boston. Not afraid. Scarcity of grain |
47 |
To the same. 16 July. Appointment of Washington and Lee satisfactory. First impressions upon seeing them. State of Boston. British attacked upon Long Island. Braintree elects a representative. Scarcity of foreign goods |
50 |
To the same. 25 July. Boston lighthouse burnt by a party of Americans. Restrictions on the inhabitants of Boston. Generals Burgoyne and Clinton. Visit to Dedham |
57 |
To the same. 31 July–2 August. Inveighs against Britain. Treatment of Dr. Warren's remains. British carpenters attacked at the lighthouse. Four prisoners with whom she converses |
63 |
To the same. 1 October. Death of her mother. In great distress. Prevalence of disease |
67 |
To the same. 21 October. Sickness abated. State of Boston. Dr. Church. Her father's grief. Complains of her long separation from her husband. Want of needles and cloth |
69 |
To the same. 22 October. Describes her mother's death. Effect upon herself. British demand upon Falmouth. Tory satires in Boston |
73 |
To the same. 5 November. Dines in company with Dr. Franklin. Reflections upon Dr. Church. Hopes for her husband's return |
76 |
To the same. 12 November. Renounces attachment to Britain. Skirmish at Lechmere's Point. Her own melancholy |
78 |
To the same. 27 November. Regrets his prolonged stay. Reflections upon government |
80 |
To the same. 10 December. Visits the American camp. Generals Lee and Sullivan. Suggests measures. Scarcity of foreign goods. Congress too timid |
83 |
1776. | |
To the same. 2–9 March. Ridiculous rumor. Desires independence to be declared. Roar of cannon from Dorchester Heights. Disappointment at the result. Movements in Congress |
87 |
To the same. 7–11 April. British troops removed. Funeral of Dr. Warren. Engaged in farming. Capture of a British vessel. News |
93 |
To the same. 7–9 May. Neglect of preparations for defence. Necessity for government. More captures |
96 |
To the same. 17 June. At Plymouth. Goes on board | |
the brig Defence. Account of the capture of two transports. Confidence in the future |
100 |
To the same. 29 September. Anxious for news. High prices paid for drafted men. Great number in the public service, and in privateers. Willing to reap the harvests |
105 |
1777. | |
To the same. 30–31 July. Bad news from the north. Distrust of foreign officers. Female mob in Boston |
107 |
To the same. 5 August. Alarm in Boston. Proves unfounded. Mourns her separation from him |
110 |
To the same. 17 September. Letter from Mr. Lovell. Horrible apprehensions |
113 |
To the same. 25 October. General Burgoye's surrender. Generous terms offered to him. Reflections upon her wedding anniversary |
114 |
1778. | |
To the same. 8 March. Rumor of Dr. Franklin's assassination. Apprehensions at her husband's departure for Europe. Directions to her son |
116 |
To the same. 18 May. Anxious for intelligence of him. Attachment to her native country. Opposite conduct of France and of Great Britain. Depreciated currency |
119 |
To John Quincy Adams. June. Advice | 122 |
To John Adams. 30 June. Receipt of his first letter from abroad. Begs for more. Defective female education in America. Shebbeare's Letters |
125 |
To the same. October. Officers of the French fleet. Visits the ship of Count d'Estaing. Is displeased with the brevity of her husband's letters. Paper money |
129 |
To the same. 27 December. Her lonely situation this winter. Effect of a Scotch song |
132 |
1779. | |
To the same. 20 March-23 April. Letters intercepted. | |
Paper money. Public news. Capture of British vessels | 134 |
To the same. 8 June. Depreciated currency. Death of Dr. Winthrop |
138 |
To the same. 14 November. Her house looks disconsolate at his departure |
142 |
1780. | |
To John Quincy Adams. 12 January. Advice. Advantages of travelling. Great necessities call out great virtues |
143 |
To the same. 20 March. Religion the only foundation of virtue. Self-knowledge recommended, and self-government |
146 |
To John Adams. 16 July. Receipt of letters. Sacrifices to support the war |
151 |
To the same. 15 October. Arnold's plot. Prices current | 154 |
1781. | |
To the same. 28 January. Repeal of the tender law. Heavy taxes. British employ Arnold |
157 |
To the same. 25 May. Beauty of the season. Hopes he may make a treaty with Holland. The currency has lost all value |
160 |
To the same. 9 December. Marquis de la Fayette. The surrender of Cornwallis. Anxiety about the return of her second son. Has the heart-ache for want of letters. Requests assistance for townsmen in British prisons. Hopes for his return. Affairs of business |
163 |
1782. | |
To the same. 25 October. Eighteenth anniversary of her wedding. Reflections. Return of the prisoners |
168 |
To the same. 13–25 November. Regrets his long absence. Her confidence in him |
172 |
To the same. 23 December. Expresses her feelings. Willing to sacrifice them for the common good |
175 |
1783. | |
To the same. 28–29 April. Joy at the news of peace. Amused by his journal. Movement in Congress. Doubts about accepting his invitation to join him in Europe |
177 |
To the same. 20 June. Uncertainty as to his course. Doubtful state of the country. Would prefer his return to going to join him |
182 |
To the same. 19 November. Decides not to cross the ocean this winter. Anxious about his health |
186 |
To John Quincy Adams. 20 November. Rejoiced to hear at last from him. Advice |
188 |
To John Adams. 18 December. Attends divine service in Boston. Feelings occasioned by the Thanksgiving sermon of Dr. Clarke. Arrival of, and interview with, Mr. Dana. Answers her husband's pressing invitation to join him |
192 |
To John Quincy Adams. 26 December. Comparison of Russia and America. Causes of the rise and fall of nations. Advice |
196 |
Letters of Mrs. Adams, | ||