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| To Abigail Adams
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Paris, Feb. 22, 1787
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DEAR MADAM -- I am to acknolege the honor of your letter of
Jan. 29. and of the papers you were so
good as to send me. They were
the latest I had seen or have yet seen. They left off too in a
critical
moment; just at the point where the Malcontents make their
submission on condition of pardon, and before
the answer of
government was known. I hope they pardoned them. The spirit of
resistance to
government is so valuable on certain occasions, that I
wish it to be always kept alive. It will often
be exercised when
wrong, but better so than not to be exercised at all. I like a
little rebellion now
and then. It is like a storm in the Atmosphere.
It is wonderful that no letter or paper tells us who is
president of
Congress, tho' there are letters in Paris to the beginning of
January. I suppose I shall
hear when I come back from my journey,
which will be eight months after he will have been chosen.
And yet
they complain of us for not giving them intelligence. Our Notables
assembled to-day, and I
hope before the departure of Mr. Cairnes I
shall have heard something of their proceedings worth
communicating
to Mr. Adams. The most remarkeable effect of this convention as yet
is the number
of puns and bon mots it has generated. I think were
they all collected it would make a more voluminous
work than the
Encyclopedie. This occasion, more than any thing I have seen,
convinces me that this
nation is incapable of any serious effort but
under the word of command. The people at large view
every object
only as it may furnish puns and bon mots; and I pronounce that a good
punster would
disarm the whole nation were they ever so seriously
disposed to revolt. Indeed, Madam, they are gone.
When a measure so
capable of doing good as the calling the Notables is treated with so
much ridicule,
we may conclude the nation desperate, and in charity
pray that heaven may send them good kings.
-- The bridge at the
place Louis XV. is begun. The hotel dieu is to be abandoned and new
ones to
be built. The old houses on the old bridges are in a course
of demolition. This is all I know of Paris.
We are about to lose
the Count d'Aranda, who has desired and obtained his recall. Fernand
Nunnez,
before destined for London is to come here. The Abbes Arnoux
and Chalut are well. The Dutchess
Danville somewhat recovered from
the loss of her daughter. Mrs. Barrett very homesick, and
fancying
herself otherwise sick. They will probably remove to Honfleur. This
is all our news.
I have only to add then that Mr. Cairnes has taken
charge of 15. aunes of black lace for you at
9 livres the aune,
purchased by Petit and therefore I hope better purchased than some
things have
been for you; and that I am with sincere esteem Dear
Madam your affectionate humble servt.,
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