A
COLLECTION
OF
STATE-PAPERS.
[Price Two Shillings.]
A
COLLECTION
OF
STATE-PAPERS,
Relative to the First Acknowledgment of the
SOVEREIGNTY OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
And the Reception of their
Minister Plenipotentiary, by their High Mightinesses the
STATES GENERAL OF THE UNITED NETHERLANDS
To which is prefixed, the Political Character of
JOHN ADAMS,
Ambassador Plenipotentiary from the States of North America, to their High Mightinesses the States General of the United Provinces of the Netherlands.
BY AN AMERICAN.
LIKEWISE,
AN ESSAY ON CANON AND FEUDAL LAW,
BY JOHN ADAMS, ESQ;
LONDON:
Printed for JOHN FIELDING, No. 23, Pater-noster-row; JOHN DEBRETT, opposite Burlington-House, Piccadilly; and JOHN SEWELL, No. 32, Cornhill. 1782.
[Entered at Stationers-Hall.]
INTRODUCTION
As the States General of the United Provinces have acknowledged the independency of the United States of North America, and made a treaty of commerce with them, it may not be improper to prefix a short account of John Adams, Esq; who, pursuing the interests of his country, hath brought about these important events.
Mr. Adams is descended from one of the first families which founded the colony of the Massachusets Bay in 1630. He applied himself early to the study of the laws of his country; and no sooner entered upon the practice thereof, but he drew the attention, admiration, and esteem of his countrymen, on account of his eminent abilities and probity of character. Not satisfied with barely maintaining the rights of individuals, he soon signalized himself in the defence of his country, and mankind at large, by writing his admirable Dissertation on the Canon and Feudal Laws; a work so well worth the attention of every man who is an enemy to ecclesiastical and civil tyranny, that it is here subjoined. It showed the author at an early period capable of seconding efficaciously the formation of republics on the principles of justice and virtue. Such a man became most naturally an object of Governor Barnard's seduction. The perversion of his abilities might be of use in a bad cause; the corruption of his principles might tarnish the best. But the arts of the Governor, which had succeeded with so many, were ineffectual with Mr. Adams, who openly declared he would not accept a favour, however flatteringly offered, which might in any manner connect him with the enemy of the rights of his country, or tend to embarrass him, as it had happened with too many others, in the discharge of his duty to the public. Seduction thus failing of its ends, calumny, menaces, and the height of power were made use of against him. They lost the effect proposed, but had that, which the show of baseness and violence ever produce on a mind truly virtuous. They increased his honest firmness, because they manifested, that the times required more than ordinary exertions of manliness. In consequence of this conduct, Mr. Adams obtained the highest honours which a virtuous man can receive from the good and the bad. He was honoured with the disapprobation of the Governor, who refused his admission into the council of the province; and he met with the applause of his countrymen in general, who sent him to assist at the Congress in 1774, in which he was most active, being one of the principal promoters of the famous resolution of the 4th of July, when the colonies declared themselves FREE AND INDEPENDENT STATES.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Collection of State-Papers, Relative to the Firs
- 2: Than he was called upon by the State of Massachusets Bay
- 3: Qui a ete frappe dans le cause Americain
- 4: Quil ne consiste pas a corrompre
- 5: Their unanimity has surprised him
- 6: An alliance would be perfectly natural
- 7: Of merchandises from the Baltic
- 8: Be followed by all the maritime powers
- 9: In the assembly of the States of Guelderland
- 10: This measure from the Republic
- 11: And our commerce at present neglected
- 12: Demanding a categorical answer
- 13: Has fallen into such a state of languor
- 14: Beyond the power of the petitioners
- 15: Whilst the petitioners themselves
- 16: As far as the petitioners may judge
- 17: And fulfilling the desires of the petitioners
- 18: Will certainly furnish matter for claims and negociations
- 19: Negociations with the United States
- 20: The petitioners believe themselves
- 21: Whereupon the petitioners represent
- 22: At Dordrecht there has not been presented any petition
- 23: Although the petitioners have always relied
- 24: Several of our languishing manufactures
- 25: It is not only the manufactures
- 26: The petitioners address themselves to your High Mightinesses
- 27: After her accession to the armed neutrality
- 28: The petitioners ought to observe
- 29: AMSTERDAM ADDRESS of the Merchants
- 30: Makes the undersigned not only suppose
- 31: And noble and venerable Lordships
- 32: The petitioners attest by the present
- 33: Adams hath demanded a categorical answer
- 34: And of the Cities composing the States of Overyssel
- 35: The States of Groningen and Ommelanden
- 36: Adams hath demanded a categorical answer
- 37: At the ordinary Diet of the year 1782
- 38: Events which should be represented symbolically by a Frisian
- 39: Man has certainly an exalted soul
- 40: And that the spiritual grandees
- 41: They were very far from being enemies to monarchy
- 42: And servile dependencies of the feudal system
- 43: That they have left among their posterity
- 44: Rulers are no more than attornies
- 45: And diffident of declaring the result of their enquiries
- 46: Let me intreat you to consider
- 47: Let us recollect it was liberty
- 48: The encroachments upon liberty
- 49: Achievements spelled atchievements Left as is
