10 July 1808
adams-john10 Neal Millikan Health and Illness
362

10. Dr: Waterhouse called here this morning just as we were going to breakfast.— He told me some of the persecutions which he is enduring at the College— He was going to Charlestown— As he went away my eldest boy, George, who had followed me attending him to the door, leaned against the Venetian-blind door, which opening by his weight, he pitched forward, rolled down the steps untill he came to the lowest which is of stone; and struck the back of his head against it, so as to raise a large contusion in the space of five minutes— This symptom was soon after followed by Sickness at his Stomach—faintness—and sleepiness— We were excessively alarmed, and sent immediately to Dr: Welsh— However the Child after laying half an hour on the bed, with immediate and continual application of vinegar to the bruise, recovered, and appears to have received no material injury. The Dr: when he came did not think it necessary to bleed him— In the afternoon we all went to Meeting, & heard Mr: Ware, whose Sermon was occasional on the Death of Mr: Ames.— It rained at intervals the whole of this day— And as we were coming home, we were obliged to stop a short time at Mr: J. Foster’s in School-Street— Susan Adams went to Mr: W. Smith’s, with his daughter Hannah.— Mr: Shaw pass’d an hour with us this Evening— I read and wrote as much this day as I was able— But the accident of my child had almost unhinged me for any thing— I am ashamed of my own weakness on this and the like occasions; and I pray for fortitude from above.

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Citation

John Quincy Adams, , , The John Quincy Adams Digital Diary, published in the Primary Source Cooperative at the Massachusetts Historical Society: