24 August 1814
adams-john10 Neal Millikan Diplomacy Native Americans
139

24. IV:45. I wrote a Letter to the Secretary of State, and sent it by Post, under cover to Mr Hoogland at the Helder; to be sent by the John Adams, if it should reach there before she sails. We had a short meeting of the mission in the morning, to consider the new draught of the answer to the British Note— But Mr Bayard was not present, and Mr Russell wished to make a revision of the paper before it was finally discussed— The meeting was therefore adjourned until immediately after dinner, and we then sat until eleven at Night; sifting, erasing, patching, and amending, untill we were all wearied, though none of us was yet satiated with amendment— Of the part of my own draught which had been left for consideration, two thirds were now struck out. The remnant left of mine, certainly does not form a fifth part of the Paper as finally settled; and it is patched up, with scraps from Mr Gallatin, and scraps from Mr Bayard, and scraps from Mr Clay, all of whom are dissatisfied with the Paper, as finally constructed. Each of us takes a separate and distinct view of the subject matter, and each naturally thinks his own view of it the most important.— The peculiar difficulty with Mr Bayard is that his view is always exclusive— My draught contained a view of the Law of Nations, as applied to the relations between Settlements of European origin in America, and the Indians— I thought it important, because the Article proposed to us by the British Commissioners as a “sine qua non” would produce a total change of the Public Law, in that respect, and because Lord Castlereagh had pledged the faith of his Government, not to ask any thing contrary to the established maxims of Public Law— Almost the whole of what I had written on this subject has been struck out and when I stated that the right of civilized Nations to settle upon Lands where Indians had been was explicitly recognized by Vattel, Mr Bayard called upon me to produce the passage, and was perfectly unaware that I could produce it, much more strongly than I had stated it.

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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: