Writings from the new nation, 1784-1826

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1. Verfasser: Adams, John 1735-1826 (VerfasserIn)
Weitere Verfasser: Wood, Gordon S. 1933- (HerausgeberIn)
Format: Buch
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: New York, NY Library of America 2016
Schriftenreihe:The library of America 276
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Datensatz im Suchindex

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adam_text Contents TREATY COMMISSIONER AND MINISTER TO THE NETHERLANDS AND TO GREAT BRITAIN, 1784.-1788 To Joseph Reed, February 11, 1784 Washington’s Character............................ 3 To Charles Spener, March 24, 1784 ccThree grand Objects”............................ 4 To the Marquis de Lafayette, March 28, 1784 Chivalric Orders.................................. 5 To Samuel Adams, May 4, 1784 *Justice may not be done me”...................... 6 To John Quincy Adams, June 1784 “The A.rt of writing Tetters...................... 8 From the Diary: June 22—July 10, 1784............... 9 To Abigail Adams, July 26, 1784 “The happiest Man upon Earth”.................... 10 To Abigail Adams 2nd, July 27, 1784 Keeping a Journal................................ 12 To James Warren, August 27, 1784 Diplomatic Salaries.............................. 13 To Benjamin Waterhouse, April 23, 1785 John Qgincyys Education.......................... 15 To Elbridge Gerry, May 2, 1785 “Kinds of Vanity”................................ 16 From the Diary: May 3, 1785.......................... 23 To John Jay, June 2, 1785 Meeting George III............................. 24 To Samuel Adams, August 15, 1785 “The contagion of luxury”...................... 28 xi 1 Xll CONTENTS To John Jebb, August 21, 1785 Salaries for Public Officers.................... 29 To John Jebb, September 10, 1785 ccThe first Step of Corruption”................. 33 To Thomas Jefferson, February 17, 1786 The Ambassador from Tripoli..................... 38 To William White, February 28, 1786 Beligious Liberty................................. 41 To Matthew Robinson-Morris, March 4—20, 1786 Liberty and Commerce.............................. 42 To Granville Sharp, March 8, 1786 The Slave Trade................................... 45 To Matthew Robinson-Morris, March 23, 1786 American Debt...................................... 46 From the Diary: March 30, 1786...................... 49 Notes on a Tour of England with Thomas Jefferson, April 1786......................................... 49 From the Diary: April 19, 1786........................ 52 To Charles Adams, June 2, 1786 “A schollar is always made alone”................. 52 From the Diary: July I, 1786.......................... 53 To Richard Cranch, July 4, 1786 Nabby^s Marriage................................. 54- From the Diary: July 21, 1786......................... 55 To Rufus King, November 29, 1786 Tumult in Blew England............................ 5b To James Warren, January 9, 1787 ccPopularity was never my Mistress”............... 57 To Thomas Boylston Adams, January 15, 1787 aWe are not born for ourselves alone”........... 59 To Cotton Tufts, August 27, 1787 Buying Land in Braintree........................... bo CONTENTS Xlll To Thomas Jefferson, October 9, 1787 Keeping Resolutions.................................. 61 To Thomas Jefferson, December 6, 1787 The New Constitution................................. 63 from A Defence of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America, VoL 7, 1787......... 64. from A Defence of the Constitutions of Government of the United States of America, VoL III, 1788. no To John Quincy Adams, January 23, 1788 Oratory......................................... 161 To Cotton Tufts, January 23, 1788 “Trying the Experiment”......................... 162 To Cotton Tufts, February 12, 1788 Amending the Constitution....................... 163 To Thomas Brand Hollis, April 5, 1788 “A balance of three branches”.................... 164 To Thomas Brand Hollis, December 3, 1788 Balancing Vanity and Comfort..................... 166 VICE PRESIDENT, 1789-1797 To El bridge Gerry, March 20, 1789 The Presidential Election......................... 171 Inaugural Address as Vice President, April 21, 1789 .... 172 From the Diary of William Maclay: April 25-May 8, 1789............................. 174 To Benjamin Lincoln, May 8, 1789 Monarchy and Aristocracy......................... 188 From the Diary of William Maclay: May 9—14, 1789 . . . 190 To George Washington, May 17, 1789 Presidential Protocol............................ 201 To Nathaniel Peaslee Sargeant, May 22, 1789 “We are in great danger”......................... 203 To Abigail Adams, May 24, 1789 A House in New Tork...............................206 XIV CONTENTS From the Diary of William Maclay: May 26—28, 1789 . . 208 To William Tudor Sr., May 28, 1789 Official Titles............................... 215 To Jeremy Belknap, June 5, 1789 “Human passions are insatiable”................. 217 To Richard Peters, June 5, 1789 “The avarice of Liberty”........................ 217 To Benjamin Rush, June 9, 1789 “Fatal Divisions”............................... 219 To Benjamin Rush, June 19, 1789 Republican Governments.......................... 221 To William Tudor Sr., June 28, 1789 Hational and State Sovereignty.................. 222 To Benjamin Rush, July 5, 1789 “The Constitution of human nature”..............224- To Roger Sherman, July 17, 1789 Species of Governments.......................... 226 To Roger Sherman, July 18, 1789 “A monarchical Republic”........................ 228 To Roger Sherman, July 20, 1789 Appointments and the Senate..................... 231 To John Trumbull, January 13, 1790 “Tou read yourself to death”.................... 235 To John Trumbull, March 12, 1790 Ancestry and Principles......................... 236 To Benjamin Rush, April 4-, 1790 Franklin and Washington..........................242 To Thomas Brand Hollis^ June 11, 1790 The Few and the Many........................... 24.5 To George Washington, August 29, 1790 Preserving neutrality.......................... 24.7 To John Quincy Adams, October 4., 1790 “nil Admirari nil contemni”..................... 250 CONTENTS XV To Samuel Adams, October 18, 1790 Kepublics and Nobility.......................... 251 from Discourses on Davila, 1790-1791................ 258 To Charles Storer, March 16, 1791 The Boston Massacre................................290 To Thomas Jefferson, July 29, 1791 “A. direct and open personal attack”............ 291 To Abigail Adams, December 28, 1792 “Four years more”.................................294- To Abigail Adams, January 9, 1793 “This miserable Scramble”......................... 295 To Abigail Adams, February 3, 1793 The Trial of Louis XVI............................ 297 To Charles Adams, December 23, 1793 “Flowers of Jacobinical Khetorick”................ 298 To Charles Adams, January 9—10, 1794 “The modern Doctrine of Equality”............... 30 o To Charles Adams, February 24, 1794 CCA moral Equality only”.......................... 301 To Charles Adams, May 11, 1794 Chimerical Systems............................... 303 To Charles Adams, May 17, 1794 Uncontrolled Power and Passions................... 305 To Charles Adams, December 24, 1794 “The Follies of the Times”........................ 307 To Winthrop Sargent, January 24-, 1795 “The dirty Torrent of dissolving Europe”.......... 308 To John Trumbull, February 13, 1795 “One of my remarkable Cures”...................... 309 To Charles Adams, February 14, 1795 Popularity and Party Spirit....................... 310 To Jeremy Belknap, March 21, 1795 Slavery in Massachusetts.......................... 313 XVI CONTENTS To Jeremy Belknap, October 22, 1795 aJustice to the Negroes*....................... 314. To Abigail Adams, March II, 1796 aThe Ennui of Life *............................ 315 From the Diary: July 12—September 8, 1796.......... 316 To Abigail Adams, January 9, 1797 Hamilton’s Hypocrisy............................ 322 To Abigail Adams, February 4-, 1797 Financial Difficulties.......................... 323 Farewell Address to the Senate, February 15, 1797.. 324- PRESIDENT, 1797—1801 Inaugural Address, March 4-, 1797................... 329 To Abigail Adams, March 5, 1797 The Inaugural Ceremony.....,................... 335 To Henry Knox, March 30, 1797 aThe late Election*............................. 336 To Oliver Wolcott Jr., April 14-, 1797 Crisis with Erance.............................. 338 Address to Congress in Special Session, May 16, 1797.................................... 340 To Elbridge Gerry, May 30, 1797 “A Strong Antigallican Party*.................. 34.8 To the Citizens Committee of Boston and Vicinity, August 7, 1797 aCalumnies and Contempts*....................... 350 To William Walter, October 1797 Writing the aDefence*........................... 351 First Annual Message to Congress, November 23, 1797............................... 353 To Timothy Pickering, January 24., 1798 Contemplating War with France................... 359 Message to Congress on Relations with France, March 19, 1798.................................. 361 CONTENTS XVII Proclamation of a Fast Day, March 23, 1798........... 363 To the Mayor and Citizens of Philadelphia, April 23, 1798 ccThe prospect of Unanimity”...................... 365 To the Grand Jury for Plymouth County, Massachusetts, May 28, 1798 “Plundered, by professed Friends”............. . . . 366 To the Second Battalion of Militia of Prince George County, Virginia, June 6, 1798 French “Ambition and Avarice”..................... 367 To the Citizens of Richmond, Virginia, June 10, 179S Dangers of Foreign Influence...................... 368 To the Citizens of Concord, Massachusetts, June 25, 1798 Forgetting British Injuries........................ 369 To George Washington, July 7, 1798 “The urgent necessity”............................ 370 To the Citizens of Harrison County, Virginia, August 13, 1798 “A Union of sentiment”............................ 371 To the Greens Sc Whites Cavalry Troop of the Virginia Militia, August 15, 1798 “The Motives of such base Americans”............. 372 To Timothy Pickering, September 16, 1798 Passports for French Philosophers................. 372 To Oliver Wolcott Jr., September 24-, 1798 Military Appointments............................. 373 To Timothy Pickering, November 2, 1798 Logan’s Unauthorized Diplomacy.................... 377 To the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, December 21, 1798 “France ought to be ashamed”...................... 378 To the Maryland General Assembly, December 23, 1798 “The Basis of moral obligation”................... 379 Valuation of Real Estate, December 1798............... 381 XV111 CONTENTS To Charles Lee, March 29, 1799 “The real Spirit of the Parties”. . To Oliver Wolcott Jr., May 17, 1799 Fries Rebellion..................... To Timothy Pickering, June 7, 1799 To Oliver Wolcott Jr., June 21, 1799 Public Credit................................. To Timothy Pickering, August 1, 1799 Prosecuting the “Aurora”...................... To Abigail Adams, October 27, 1799 “The Essence of my Religion”.................. To William Tudor Sr., February 25, 1800 “A name for our Country”...................... To Benjamin Stoddert, Oliver Wolcott Jr., and Charles Lee, May 20, 1800 Pardoning the Fries Rebels.................... James McHenry to John Adams, May 31, 1800 Crisis in the Cabinet......................... Fourth Annual Message to Congress, November 22, 1800............................. . To Thomas Boylston Adams, January 24-, 1801 “All revolutions are alike”................... To George Churchman and Jacob Lindley, January 24, 1801 “Slavery is fast diminishing”................. To Samuel Smith, February 7, 1801 “Downright corruption has spread”............. retirement; 1801-1826 To Benjamin Stoddert, March 31, 1801 “We have no Americans in America” To Philip Peck, November 16, 1801 A Namesake Request.......... 384 384 385 386 386 387 388 389 391 400 404 406 407 411 412 CONTENTS XIX To Thomas Boylston Adams, March I, 1802 Appraising the “Defence”....................... 4.13 To William Cunningham Jr., March 15, 1804. “The awful spirit of Democracy”..................414 To Benjamin Rush, February 6, 1805 “Dangerous Questions”........................... 416 To Benjamin Waterhouse, February 19, 1805 Tobacco and Cider............................... 417 To John Trumbull, July 27, 1805 Hamilton and Washington......................... 419 To Benjamin Rush, August 23, 1805 Hamilton*s Talents............................ 427 To Benjamin Rush, September 30, 1805 Avoiding European Alliances......................430 To Benjamin Waterhouse, October 29, 1805 Laurence Sterne and Thomas Paine ............... 437 To John Trumbull, November 18, 1805 Hamilton and Madison............................ 438 To François Adriaan van der Kemp, January 8, 1806 Meteorites and Natural History...................442 To Benjamin Rush, January 25, 1806 General Miranda..................................445 To John Quincy Adams, February 5, 1806 Blockade and Impressment.........................449 To John Adams Smith, March 27, 1806 Advantages of a College Degree.................. 451 To François Adriaan van der Kemp, August 23, 1806 “The real Fathers of their Country”............. 453 To Benjamin Rush, December 22, 1806 “The Perfectibility of Man”..................... 455 To Benjamin Rush, February 2, 1807 The Burr Conspiracy............................. 459 Excerpt from a letter of Abigail Adams to Mercy Otis Warren, March 9, 1807............................462 XX CONTENTS To William Heath, May n, 1807 Military Discipline............................. 463 To Benjamin Rush, May 2,1, 1807 The Origin of Independence..................... 465 To Benjamin Rush, May 23, 1807 “Empire rises where the Sun descends”............468 To Benjamin Rush, June 23, 1807 “Calamities of my Enemies”.......................469 To Mercy Otis Warren, July 11, 1807 Responding to Warren’s “History”............... 475 To Benjamin Rush, September I, 1807 Prudence “a rascally Virtue”................... 481 To Benjamin Rush, November 11, 1807 Washington’s Talents.............................484 To William Heath, December 14, 1807 “The Art of War”................................489 To Benjamin Rush, January 18, 1808 Naivete........................................ 491 To John Quincy Adams, February 12, 1808 Judicial Removal............................... 495 To Benjamin Rush, July 25, 1808 The Embargo Act................................ 500 To Benjamin Rush, September 27, 1808 Preserving the Union............................ 503 To Josiah Quincy III, December 23, 1808 Removing the Embargo............................ 505 To Joseph B. Varnum, December 26, 1808 Relations with France and England.............. 508 To Daniel Wright and Erastus Lyman, March 13, 1809 “Strict historical Truth”...................... 512 To Joseph Ward, January 8, 1810 Jefferson and “Sally”........................... 514 CONTENTS XXI To François Adriaan van der Kemp, April 9, 1811 “Catises of the Revolutionary Spirit”.............. 518 To Benjamin Rush, June 21, 1811 Family Flews and the “stormy Science of Politicks”. . . 519 To Benjamin Rush, August 28, 1811 “My posthumous sermon”............................. 523 To Benjamin Rush, December 25, 1811 Differences with Jefferson........................ 528 To Thomas Jefferson, January 1, 1812 “Two Pieces of Homespun”........................... 531 To John Adams 2nd, February 2, 1812 “That Word cworthyy”.............................. 532 To Thomas Jefferson, February 3, 1812 Resuming a Correspondence......................... 533 To William Cranch, March 19, 1812 Strengthening the Navy............................ 537 To Thomas Jefferson, June 28, 1812 American Indians.................................. 538 To Benjamin Rush, December 29—30, 1812 “Had I been continued President”.................. 541 To Benjamin Rush, January 4, 1813 “A moral essay”..................................54-4- To Joseph B. Varnum, January 5, 1813 Naval Anecdotes.................................. 54-6 To Elbridge Gerry, April 2, 1813 Foreign Affairs in 1789.......................... 54-9 To Elbridge Gerry, April 9, 1813 Judicial Construction............................ 552 To Thomas Jefferson, June 28, 1813 Christianity and Liberty.......................... 553 To Thomas Jefferson, June 30, 18x3 Terrorism 556 XXXI CONTENTS To Thomas Jefferson, July 9, 1813 Advances in Government........................... 559 To Thomas Jefferson, July 15, 1813 “Where is the Amelioration of Society?*........... 562 To Richard Rush, July 15, 1813 The War of 1812.................................... 564 To Thomas Jefferson, September 14, 1813 God and the Universe............................... 566 To Thomas Jefferson, November 15, 1813 Natural Aristocracy................................ 569 To Richard Rush, November 20, 1813 CT never owned a slave*........................... 576 To John Taylor, April 15, 1814 Liberty and Morality............................... 577 To Thomas Jefferson, July 16, 1814 Plato.............................................. 580 To John Taylor, January 13, 1815 “Causes of Aristocracy*............................ 586 To James Lloyd, February 17, 1815 Burr and Hamilton.................................. 588 To Jedidiah Morse, March 4, 1815 “I have little Faith in History*................... 592 To John Taylor, March 5, 1815 Knowledge and Equality............................. 593 To James Lloyd, March 31, 1815 “I left my Country in Peace*....................... 596 To George Washington Adams and John Adams 2nd, May 3, 1815 Advice for Foreign Travel........................ 599 To Thomas Jefferson, August 24, 1815 “The Revolution was in the Minds of the People*. . . . 601 To Charles Francis Adams, October 23, 1815 “Greek and latin are indispensible*................ 603 CONTENTS XX111 To William Stephens Smith, October 23, 1815 Clergymen and Priests........................... 603 To Jedidiah Morse, November 2, 1815 Secrecy and the Continental Congress............604. To George Washington Adams, December 15, 1815 Urging a Grandson to Return Home................ 605 To Thomas Jefferson, May 3, 1816 Death and the Afterlife.......................... 607 To Thomas Jefferson, May 6, 1816 ccThe Uses of Grief ”............................ 610 To George Washington Adams, May 27, 1816 “A martial spirit”................................ 613 To John Quincy Adams, July 24., 1816 Newton and the Ether............................. 615 To John Quincy Adams, August 26, 1816 “The most conceited People”...................... 616 To François Adriaan van der Kemp, December 27, 1816 Christianity and Revelation...................... 618 To Henry Colman, January 13, 1817 “A Colony of free Blacks”.........................620 To John Quincy Adams, January 22, 1817 Metaphisicks”.................................... 621 To John Gorham, January 28, 1817 “The only perfect Chymist”....................... 623 To Benjamin Waterhouse, February 26, 1817 The Fine Arts.................................... 626 To James Madison, June 17, 1817 Universal Suffrage............................... 627 To Hezekiah Niles, February 13, 1818 “Thirteen Clocks were made to strike together”.. 629 To John T. Watson, July 23, 1818 “A dull, dreary unfruitful Waste”................ 636 XXIV CONTENTS To Mordecai M. Noah, July 31, 1818 Jewish Citizenship................................ 637 To William Tudor Sr., September 23, 1818 Indian Land Rights................................ 638 To Thomas Jefferson, October 20, 1818 Abigail’s Final Illness........................... 641 To Thomas Jefferson, December 8, 1818 “My great Affliction 39............................642 To William Tudor Sr., February 9, 1819 Samuel Adams..................................... 64.3 To William Willis, February 21, 1819 Temperance.........................................644 To Mordecai M. Noah, March 15, 1819 A Jewish Nation in Judea.......................... 645 To Isaac Hall Tiffany, March 31, 1819 Dejining “Liberty” and aRepublic”................. 645 To Robert J. Evans, June 8, 1819 The Infamy of the Slave Trade..................... 647 To Vine Utley, September 10, 1819 “My Physical habits................................648 To François Adriaan van der Kemp, September 25, 1819 “This weight of woe”...............................649 To Emma Willard, December 8, 1819 Women’s Education................................. 650 To Thomas Jefferson, December 21, 1819 Virtue in Nations................................. 651 To Louisa Catherine Adams, December 23, 1819 “The Missouri Question”........................... 652 To Louisa Catherine Adams, January 13, 1820 “The gangrene” of Slavery......................... 654 To Jesse Torrey, February 7, 1820 Public Libraries.................................. 655 To Thomas Jefferson, May 12, 1820 “Pillows of Ignorance”............................ 656 CONTENTS XXV To Samuel Miller, July 7, 1820 Calvinism....................................... 658 To Charles Holt, September 4, 1820 “Stubborn facts”.................................. 660 To Benjamin Waterhouse, May 8, 1821 Duty to Posterity................................ . 661 To Benjamin Waterhouse, May 21, 1821 Natural Genius and Education...................... 662 To David Sewall, May 22, 1821 icExhilirating prospects”..........................664 To William Smith Shaw, June 20, 1821 Indian and African Keligions...................... 665 To Louisa Catherine Adams, November 15, 1821 Religious Questions................................666 To George Washington Adams, December 27, 1821 Montesquieu....................................... 667 To John Van Ness Yates, January 1, 1823 Assisting Greece...................................669 To Alexander Bryan Johnson, March 1, 1823 Missionaries.......................................670 To Edmund Rogers, April 5, 1824 Coffee............................................ 671 To Thomas Jefferson, January 23, 1825 Blasphemy Laws.................................... 672 To John Quincy Adams, February 18, 1825 John Quincy Is Elected President.................. 673 To John Adams 2nd, February 19, 1825 “Not an event to excite vanity”................... 673 To John Whitney, June 7, 1826 Anniversary of Independence....................... 674 Chronology............................................. 679 Note on the Texts...................................... 706 Notes.................................................. 720 Index.................................................. 879
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physical xxv, 905 Seiten 21 cm
publishDate 2016
publishDateSearch 2016
publishDateSort 2016
publisher Library of America
record_format marc
series The library of America
series2 The library of America
spellingShingle Adams, John 1735-1826
Writings from the new nation, 1784-1826
The library of America
Adams, John 1610-1671 (DE-588)1037525000 gnd
subject_GND (DE-588)1037525000
title Writings from the new nation, 1784-1826
title_auth Writings from the new nation, 1784-1826
title_exact_search Writings from the new nation, 1784-1826
title_full Writings from the new nation, 1784-1826 John Adams ; Gordon S. Wood, editor
title_fullStr Writings from the new nation, 1784-1826 John Adams ; Gordon S. Wood, editor
title_full_unstemmed Writings from the new nation, 1784-1826 John Adams ; Gordon S. Wood, editor
title_short Writings from the new nation, 1784-1826
title_sort writings from the new nation 1784 1826
topic Adams, John 1610-1671 (DE-588)1037525000 gnd
topic_facet Adams, John 1610-1671
url http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=028871179&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA
volume_link (DE-604)BV000009606
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