Madam.
Philadelphia February 14th
1791—
By the last post I received your letter of January 17th, and was as much surprised at the information that my last
letter to you arrived unsealed, as you could be at the receipt of it.1 It was most certainly no intention of mine that
it should have gone unsealed; nor can I account for the fact.2 My conjecture is that the person, one of my sons
who copied into my letterbook, either inadvertently sent it, or suffered a servant to
take it off the table to the post office without putting a wafer into it according to
his usual practice. Neither “The ebullitions of party, nor political malice” have made
any impressions on me. The expressions you allude to, were the result of very sober
reflection upon facts proved to me, by the testimony of many witnesses of unquestionable
veracity among whom were not a few of the best friends General Warren ever had in his
life.—
A civil war Madam, is in my opinion a very serious thing. This
Country has once at least been within a hairs breadth of a very bloody one: nor is it
likely to be soon so secure against the probability of another, as I wish it. There is
more than one among those persons whom twenty years ago, I counted among my friends who
are not so explicit and decided as I presume to think they ought to be, in favor of
those principles and measures, which appear to me 475 indispensable to
preserve the liberty, peace and safety of this people. As long as this indecission
remains, it is impossible there should be the same confidence between them and me, which
there was once.—The affection for them which I once had will never be forgotten, nor can
it ever be destroyed, but confidence can never be the same, without the same foundation
for it
With3 much esteem I
am Madam / your most obedient servant
John Adams.4
LbC in CA’s hand (Adams Papers); internal address: “Mrs Warren.”; notation by CA: “Not sent.”; APM Reel 115. Dft (Adams Papers).
1.
In the Dft, CA also wrote, “in that
unguarded condition.”
2.
In the Dft, CA also wrote: “The only
conjectures that I can form are that the person who copied it into my letter book
either inadvertently sent it or suffered a servant to take it off the table to the
post office, without putting a wafer into it, according to his usual practise. The
other copies of the poems, which I mentioned, appear to have been sent by a
bookseller, who has since sent in his account as for the copies we subscribed for. A
poem under the title of the ‘Virtues of nature’ attributed to Mrs Morton is now circulating here and meets with much applause. The fine arts
appear to be growing in this Country at least as fast as science, agriculture,
commerce and manufactures— Yet I think there are scarcely so many readers as before
the Revolution—”
3.
In the Dft, CA wrote, “With usual
regards to Genl Warren.”
4.
JA and Warren did not exchange letters again until
Aug. 1803 (
Warren-Adams Letters
, 2:344–345).