17 January 1836
adams-john10 Neal Millikan Religion Anti-Masonic Party Elections, Presidential 1836 Press Smithsonian Institution
165

17. VI. Sunday.

A fall of Snow in the night and this morning sufficient to cover the ground. I attended the morning service at the Presbyterian Church, and heard Mr Bishop from Isaiah 9.6. part of the verse “And his name shall be called, Wonderful” This sublime prophesy, one of the most remarkable, in the volume of the Old Testament, has been presented in modern times and languages under various aspects, and with very different versions. It is now much questioned among biblical commentators and critics whether it has any reference whatever to Jesus Christ— Mr Bishop however had no doubt of this, and his discourse consisted of an enumeration of the several properties in the birth, condition, history, and religion of Jesus, which inspired the prophet to say that his name should be called Wonderful— There were scarcely fifty persons in the Church, and it was a Sermon which might have delighted thousands, and tens of thousands, if to such a multitude, a human voice can be heard— Mr Bishop gave notice that if the weather in the Evening should be stormy, there would be no service— There was none in the afternoon, at St. John’s Church— I was writing an answer to a Letter from Thaddeus Stevens, a member of the Pennsylvania Legislature, in which he asked my opinion of General William H. Harrison’s Anti-masonry— Stevens is the great Antimasonic leader in Pennsylvania at this time— He is also a partizan of Mr Webster for the succession to the Presidency— He had a correspondence with Harrison, upon Masonry, and was not satisfied with his answers.— He was a member of a late Antimasonic State Convention, where he wished to have Webster nominated, but where Harrison was nominated by a vote of more than three to one. 166Stevens, with Harmar Denny and seven others seceded from the Convention, and published an angry declaration denouncing them;—and now he writes to me enclosing a newspaper containing his correspondence with Harrison, and enquiring my opinion of Harrison’s AntiMasonry— I have declined giving it, because it was asked merely to operate against the nomination of Harrison, and I wish to avoid all interference with the election— I saw in a newspaper an advertisement of a new Edition of Halleck’s Alnwick Castle and other poems, and it occurred to me that a notice of Alnwick Castle would be a good addition to the Report on the Smithson bequest I accordingly slipped it in, between Chevy Chace, Addison and Shakespear— In this I have the intention to attract the notice of the public to Halleck’s merit as a lyric Poet—to accredit our national literature, by placing the first of our lyric Poets thus in line with Addison and Shakespear—and to add another twig to the laurel of the Percys. The additional member of the Sentence harmonizes well with the whole tenour of the period, though it has the inconvenience of lengthening the paragraph, already perhaps too long. My Journal lingers in arrear— I read part of Mr Upham’s Discourse upon the prophetical argument.

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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: