[Life and Public Services of John Quincy Adams by William H. Seward]@TWC D-Link book
Life and Public Services of John Quincy Adams

CHAPTER II
11/27

* * * * He seemed very critical in his inquiries concerning the letters printed as mine in England.

I told him candidly that I did not write them, and as frankly, in confidence, who did.

He says they made a great impression upon the people of England; that he heard Mr.Windham and Mr.Fox speak of them as the best thing that had been written, and as one of the best pieces of reasoning and style they had ever read." The younger Adams, in surveying the condition of the country at this critical period, became convinced it would be a fatal step for the new government to take sides with either of the great parties in Europe, who were engaged in the settlement of their difficulties by the arbitrement of arms.

However strongly our sympathies were elicited in behalf of the French Republic--however we may have been bound in gratitude for the assistance rendered us during our Revolutionary struggle, to co-operate with France in her defence of popular institutions--still, self-preservation is the first law of nature.

Mr.Adams saw, that to throw ourselves into the melee of European conflicts, would prostrate the interests of the country, and peril the very existence of the government.
These views he embodied in a series of articles, which he published in the Boston Centinel, in 1793, under the signature of "Marcellus." He insisted it was alike the dictate of duty and policy, that the United States should remain strictly neutral between France and her enemies.
These papers attracted general attention throughout the Union, and made a marked impression on the public mind.


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