8 August 1807
adams-john10 Neal Millikan
301

8. The rain, with my occupations confined me this whole day to the house— I employed part of it in writing, and part in packing and unpacking books. To a person whose life is so much that of a wanderer, as mine has been, there is nothing so troublesome as a large Library— During the period of my life when I possess’d the means of collecting Books I used them to such an extent that since my return to this Country, I have never had, and can scarcely flatter myself with the hope of ever having a place for receiving them with such an arrangement as may give me the free use of them— I have them now in extreme confusion, and know not when I shall get them into better order— Young Mr: Sanger called this afternoon, and I return’d him his Oration for the Exhibition, revised. Mrs: Adams was unwell— In the Evening I read part of the first Book of Phillips’s Poem on Cider— In which the most remarkable passages are the destruction of Ariconium, and the walking Mountain.

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