23 March 1835
adams-john10 Neal Millikan Health and Illness
522

23 VI:30. Monday.

Huntt Henry

Fanny continues ill, with severe returns of the fever; and I continue to write under much depression of Spirits— Called at the U.S. Branch Bank and then walked to the Capitol. The Library was not open; at the Office of the clerk of the House, I enquired for the file of papers upon the Resolutions for amending the Rules of the House, referred to a select Committee at the first Session of the last Congress, which Committee never made report— They looked some time for the papers but could not find them— It is a subject which I ought to revive for the consideration of the House at their next Session—a period to which I look forward with profound anxiety and deep concern— I wrote a short Letter to the Revd. B. Waterhouse junr. and examined Montesquieu and Burlamaqui for their definitions of the Executive power— Neither of them use the word at-all. Burlamaqui speaks of the pouvoir co-actif and Montesquieu of La Puissance executrice— Webster 523in his speech upon Calhoun’s patronage retrenchment bill, says that Montesquieu, Burlamaqui and De Lolme differ in their definitions of executive power, but Burlamaqui neither defines the word nor the thing— He speaks of the Legislative power, the coactive or coercive power and the sundry others among which are the taxing power and the power over religion—as well as the judiciary power,—but it is Montesquieu who lays down the principle of the separation of the Legislative and Executive powers as essential to Liberty— I find that Johnson’s Dictionary defines the word executive—active, not deliberative—not legislative—having the power to put in act the laws— He cites Addison and Swift for the use of the word—and Swift in the cited passage charges Hobbes with confounding the Legislative and Executive powers, though all the antient well regulated States kept them separate— I must pursue this enquiry further—mais pourquoi?

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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: