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Founders (All) > 1810s > 1815 > November 1815 > November 1, 1815 > From John Adams to Stephen Peabody, 1 November 1815 [Early Access]
[Early Access]

From John Adams to Stephen Peabody

1 November 1815

Dear Sir Quincy November 1st. 1815

I have “given your Letter, to your Daughter” and my lovely Neice Miss Abigail A Shaw, and “your best respects to my good Lady” According to your request.

All this is very well: but I cannot reconcile myself to the word “dejected,” The Consolations of Religion and Philosophy, are all your own; and you ought to rejoice always in all things.

I hope you will not think it Arrogance, Vanity, Affectation of Hypocrisy or Presumption, yet I fear you will Suspect it to be a mixture of all five, if I Say that if I had not stedfastly believed in a Government of the Universe wise beyond my comprehension and benevolent beyond my conception, I should have been constantly not only in dejection, but in despair, for at least [   ] 55 years of my life, on account of my public and private affairs.

And never did I see a moment more ominous and portentous to the human race than the present. Never did I feel a stronger propensity to dejection than the present.

Despotism and Fanaticism returning upon Mankind like a flood, or a hurricane; The Pope & the Devil, regaining their Empire, & all Men disposed to Submit to it.

You and I might avail ourselves of the miserable, selfish comfort, that our age exempts us from the danger, the disgrace, misery & horror; but I presume we both reject such a resource with contempt.

Your alarmed Brother

John Adams

MHi: Adams Family Papers, Letterbooks.

This early access document derives from raw transcriptions, prior to editing and publication in Rotunda's American History Collection. If this document is cited in formal research, it should be noted that it is not a final version, and that the URL you used to access it is not permanent.
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