21 June 1830
adams-john10 Neal Millikan
482

21— IV.30. Monday.

I intended to have gone in to Boston with Charles this morning, and the Chaise was brought for us to the door, but there was a North east storm coming and it began just then to rain. We both concluded to stay and employed all the morning till dinner time in assorting the Books of the Library, and continuing the Catalogue— We had a fire in the dining room, and the Storm continued with heavy rain, and some thunder and lightening till approaching Sunset— I began yesterday to read Cicero’s Oration for his house, and continued this day. I brought up also the arrears of this Journal, and should henceforth be at liberty to pursue the occupation which I long since determined to undertake; upon which I did so little last Summer and have since entirely neglected— The very magnitude of the work deters me from the persevering application to it which it requires— There is a luxurious idleness in the possession of a considerable Library, and which I now find irresistible. While I take the Catalogue of my books; every volume that I take down to have its title recorded tempts me to look into it, and leads to a multitude of enquiries which waste time— I have a Letter from Dr Waterhouse, in which he mentions that he has sent to the Printer, his essay to prove that Lord Chatham was the author of Junius. A pertinacious attempt has lately been made to prove that Horne Tooke was the author of that literary prodigy— Nothing in literary or political History has ever more powerfully displayed the operation of Mystery upon the minds of men than the Letters of Junius. He declares himself that his secret is his own, and that it shall perish with him— This declaration has probably sharpened the curiosity of many readers, and has produced pamphlet after pamphlet, and volume after volume to fix the authorship, upon every possible person— Of the internal evidence of the Letters, there are two things which render it improbable that Chatham was the author— The panegyric upon himself—and the positive and explicit dissent from his avowed opinions upon no less a question than that between Great Britain and the American Colonies. The violence, the ingratitude, the duplicity, the malignity, the moral perversity, and the religious infidelity with which Junius abounds, were not in the known character of Lord Chatham, who if the fact should be proved upon him would lose reputation for virtue without gaining any thing upon the score of talent.

A A

Citation

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