24JOHN
ADAMS.
games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires, and
illuminations this from one end of the continent to
the other, from this time forward forever. You will
think me transported with enthusiasm, but I am not. I
am well aware of the toil, and blood and treasure,
that it will cost to maintain this declaration and
support and defend these States; yet, through all the
gloom, I can see the rays of light and glory. I can
see that the end is worth more than all the means; and
that posterity ,will triumph, although you and I may
rue, which I hope we shall not."
In November, 1777, Mr. Adams was
appointed a delegate to France, and to co-operate with
Bemjamin (sic) Franklin and Arthur Lee, who were then
in Paris, in the endeavor to obtain assistance in arms
and money from the French Government. This was a
severe trial to his patriotism, as it separated him
from his home, compelled him to cross the ocean in
winter, and exposed him to great peril of capture by
the British cruisers, who were seeking him. He left
France June 17, 1779. In September of the same year he
was again chosen to go to Paris, and there hold
himself in readiness to negotiate a treaty of peace
and of commerce with Great Britian (sic), as soon as
the British Cabinet might be found willing to listen
to such proposels (sic). He sailed for France in
November, from there he went to Holland, where be
negotiated important loans and formed important
commercial treaties.
Finally a treaty of peace with
England was signed Jan. 21, 1783. The re-action from
the excitement, toil and anxiety through which Mr.
Adams had passed threw him into a fever. After
suffering from a continued fever and becoming feeble
and emaciated he was advised to go to England to drink
the waters of Bath. While in England, still drooping
and desponding, he received dispatches from his own
government urging the necessity of his going to
Amsterdam to negotiate another loan. It was winter,
his health was delicate, yet he immediately set out,
and through storm, on sea, on horseback and foot he
made the trip.
February 24, 1785, Congress
appointed Mr. Adams envoy to the Court of St. James.
Here he met face to face the King of England, who had
so long regarded him as a traitor. As England did not
condescend to appoint a minister to the United States,
and as Mr. Adams felt that he was accomplishing but
little, he sought permission to return to his own
country, where be arrived in June, 1788.
When Washington was first chosen
President, John Adams, rendered illustrious (sic) by
his signal services at home and abroad, was chosen
Vice President. Again at the second election of
Washington as President, Adams was chosen Vice
President. In 1796, Washington retired from public
life, and Mr. Adams was elected President, though not
without much opposition. Serving in this office four
years, he was succeeded by Mr. Jefferson, his opponent
in politics.
While Mr. Adams was Vice President
the great French Revolution shook the continent of
Europe, and it was upon this point which he was at
issue with the majority of his countrymen led by Mr.
Jefferson. Mr. Adams felt no sympathy with the French
people in their struggle, for he had no confidence in
their power of self-government, and he utterly abhored
the class of atheist philosophers who he claimed
caused it. On the other hand Jefferson's sympathies
were strongly enlisted in behalf of the French people.
Hence originated the alienation between these
distinguished men, and two powerful parties were thus
soon organized, Adams at the head of the one whose
sympathies were with England and Jefferson led the
other in sympathy with France.
The world has seldom seen a
spectacle of more moral beauty and grandeur, than was
presented by the old age of Mr. Adams. The violence of
party feeling had died away, and he had begun to
receive that just appreciation which, to most men, is
not accorded till after death. No one could look upon
his venerable form, and think of what he had done and
suffered, and how he had given up all the prime and
strength of his life to the public good, without the
deepest emotion of gratitude and respect. It was his
peculiar good fortune to witness the complete success
of the institution which he had been so active in
creating and supporting. In 1824, his cup of happiness
was filled to the brim, by seeing his son elevated to
the highest station in the gift of the people.
The fourth of July, 1826, which
completed the half century since the signing of the
Declaration of Independence, arrived, and there were
but three of the signers of that immortal instrument
left upon the earth to hail its morning light. And, as
it is well known, on that day two of these finished
their earthly pilgrimage, a coincidence so remarkable
as to seem miraculous. For a few days before Mr. Adams
had been rapidly failing, and on the morning of the
fourth he found himself too weak to rise from his bed.
On being requested to name a toast for the customary
celebration of the day, he exclaimed "INDEPENDENCE
FOREVER." When the day was ushered in, by the ringing
of bells and the firing of cannons, he was asked by
one of his attendants if he knew what day it was? He
replied, "0 yes; it is the glorious fourth of
July--God bless it--God bless you all." In the course
of the day he said, "It is a great and glorious day."
The last words he uttered were, "Jefferson survives."
But he had, at one o'clock, resigned his spirit into
the hands of his God.
The personal appearance and manners
of Mr. Adams were not particularly prepossessing. His
face, as his portrait manifests, was intellectual and
expressive, but his figure was low and ungraceful, and
his manners were frequently abrupt and uncourteous. He
had neither the lofty dignity of Washington, nor the
engaging elegance and gracefulness which marked the
manners and address of Jefferson.
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