21 June 1839
adams-john10 Neal Millikan
119

21. IV. Friday

Butler Mills

Summer Solstice— Beclouded— Sultry morning Eastern chill afternoon— Misty fog evening. I made myself two hours of hard labour before breakfast by digging a trench across the border at the seminary gate to take out the stones under five seedling Apple trees of the second year, which were thriving, but the vegetation of which has stop’d— I wish to save the life at least of one of them— I took out about a bushel of stones; and filled the space they had occupied with mould from the brook over the hill, and from the garden—leaving the work unfinished for another day— Mrs John Adams and her two children with Miss Cutts and Charles, his wife and three elder children went to Boston to see the Giraffe, and Sully’s picture of Queen Victoria, which are exhibited now at Boston. They returned home to dine— Two young men, one named Butler now residing at Dorchester, and the other from New-Jersey named Mills, came on a visit of curiosity to see me and the house because we are both old— They enquired also, for the stone-quarries, to find which I gave them suitable directions.— Judge Davis left with me the other day a French Manuscript, being another explanation of the inscription upon the Dighton rock—or in the language of the original Explication de la Pierre de Taunston, par Moreau de Dammartin (Seine et Marne) Membre de l’Institut Historique— According to this learned Theban, the inscription is an Egyptian complete system of Astronomy—wrought at the winter solstice, and exhibiting all the great Northern Constellations.— There is no end to the absurdities of the human mind. The Phenicians, the Egyptians; the lost tribes of Israel, the Icelanders, the Welshmen with Prince Madoc; and the Basques have all been discoverers of America, to rob Christopher Columbus of his glory. Mankind will never be satisfied with History. They must have fables.— I spent the Evening at Charles’s house.

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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: