Life and Public Services of John Quincy Adams eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 385 pages of information about Life and Public Services of John Quincy Adams.

Life and Public Services of John Quincy Adams eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 385 pages of information about Life and Public Services of John Quincy Adams.

“In that lapse of forty years, the generation of men with whom you co-operated in the conflict of arms, has nearly passed away.  Of the general officers of the American army in that war, you alone survive.  Of the sages who guided our councils; of the warriors who met the foe in the field, or upon the wave, with the exception of a few to whom unusual length of days has been allotted by Heaven, all now sleep with their fathers.  A succeeding, and even a third generation, have arisen to take their places; and their children’s children, while rising up to call them blessed, have been taught by them, as well as admonished by their own constant enjoyment of freedom, to include in every benison upon their fathers, the name of him, who came from afar, with them and in their cause to conquer or to fall.

“The universal prevalence of these sentiments was signally manifested by a resolution of Congress, representing the whole people, and all the States of this Union, requesting the President of the United States to communicate to you the assurances of the grateful and affectionate attachment of this government and people, and desiring that a national ship might be employed, at your convenience, for your passage to the borders of our country.

“The invitation was transmitted to you by my venerable predecessor, himself bound to you by the strongest ties of personal friendship; himself one of those whom the highest honors of his country had rewarded for blood early shed in her cause, and for a long life of devotion to her welfare.  By him the services of a national ship were placed at your disposal.  Your delicacy preferred a more private conveyance, and a full year has elapsed since you landed upon our shores.  It were scarcely an exaggeration to say that it has been to the people of the Union a year of uninterrupted festivity and enjoyment, inspired by your presence.  You have traversed the twenty-four States of this great confederacy—­you have been received with rapture by the survivors of your earliest companions in arms-you have been hailed, as a long-absent parent, by their children, the men and women of the present age; and a rising generation, the hope of future time, in numbers surpassing the whole population of that day when you fought at the head and by the side of their forefathers, have vied with the scanty remnants of that hour of trial, in acclamations of joy, at beholding the face of him whom they feel to be the common benefactor of all.  You have heard the mingled voices of the past, the present, and the future age, joining in one universal chorus of delight at your approach; and the shouts of unbidden thousands, which greeted your landing on the soil of freedom, have followed every step of your way, and still resound like the rushing of many waters, from every corner of our land.

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Life and Public Services of John Quincy Adams from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.