INDEX

Note: Page references in italics refer to illustrations. All locations are in Massachusetts unless otherwise indicated. JQ refers to Josiah Quincy Jr.

Abbey Church (Bath), 247

Adams, Abigail, x

Adams, Deacon (John), xi

Adams, Henry, ix

Adams, John, xi

as atypical, xix

and the Boston Massacre trials, 22–23n.21, 22–24, 27n.30

on classical principles underlying government, 84n.19

commonplace/pleading books of, xxiii

on historical explanation/documentation, 77–78

and Jefferson, 78

and JQ, xvii, 9, 18, 23n.22

legal commonplace book of, 79

legal training of, xxiii

library of, 79, 80n.9

maxims used by, xxii

on Parliament, 64

Richardson defended by, 24–25

on Warren, 9

Adams, John Quincy, xiv, xxxi, 46n.87

Adams, Mr. (John, M.P. for Carmathen, Wales), 262, 262n.106

Adams, Samuel, 20–21, 21n.17, 27–28, 34

Adams Papers project, xviii

Addison, Joseph

Cato, A Tragedy, 49, 49n.7, 53

Free-Holder, 82–84, 176, 201

The Administration of the American Colonies (Pownall), 82, 234n.40

Advancement of Learning (Bacon), 53, 99n.5, 100n.6

in the Political Commonplace Book, 88, 97, 99, 103–4, 104n.9, 148, 187–93, 202

“Aeneid” (Virgil), 252, 252n.94, 254n.98

Alleyne, John, 240, 240n.62, 241

amblyodia (lazy eye), xxxv

American Antiquarian Society, xx

The Americanization of Benjamin Franklin (Wood), xviii

American Revolution

British blunders as contributing to, xxvi, 90

as a civil war, xix, xxvi

documenting causes of, xx–xxi

French role in, 90

historical explanation/documentation of, 77–78

JQ on possibility of war, 42–43, 42n.75, 43n.77, 265–66

moderates vs. radicals on, xxiii

Political Commonplace Book on causes of, 91

predictions of, 242

and revolutionary subconscious vs. consciousness, 91–92

Spanish role in, 90

See also reconciliation efforts/prospects

Ancient History (Rollin), 159, 159n.22

Annals (Tacitus), 49–52, 71–72, 83n.16, 96

aphorisms. See maxims/aphorisms

Aquinas, Thomas, 77, 77n.1

Aristotle, 56, 77n.1, 148

army/armies, 122, 131–32, 147

See also standing armies

Ashby v. White, 139, 201–2

Auchmuty, Robert, 22

Bacon, Francis

on commonplace books, 47n.2, 99

Essays, 100, 104–5

influence on JQ, xxxv, 88, 88n.26

on maxims, xxii, xxxv, 95

See also Advancement of Learning

Baillie, Hugh, 84, 251, 261n.104

Bailyn, Bernard, 83, 83n.16, 85–86

Ballou, Frederick, xx

Bancroft, Edward, 230, 230n.30, 243

Barclay, David, 264, 264n.111

Barré, Isaac, 39, 247–48, 247–48nn.82–83

Barrington, Daines: Observations upon the Statutes, 55, 97, 99, 202

Barry, Spranger and Ann, 244, 244n.75

Bath (England), 37, 226, 245–49

battle of the books, 59n.34

Beaux Stratagem (Farquhar), 237, 237n.54

Beccaria, Marquis: An Essay on Crimes and Punishment, 122–23, 127, 202–3

Becker, Carl, 78–79, 84

Benjamin Franklin (Morgan), xviii

Benjamin Franklin: An American Life (Isaacson), xviii

Bernard, Francis, xx–xxi, 19–21, 40

Bernard Papers, xx

Bielfield, Baron Jacob Friedriech: The Elements of Universal Erudition, 57–58, 95, 100, 113–15, 203

Blackstone, Sir William: Commentaries on the Laws of England, 82, 259n.101

Blowers, Sampson Salter, 23

Board of Trade, xx

Bodmin (England), 226

Bolingbroke, Henry St. John, Viscount

on commonplace books, 47

on human nature, as always the same, 66

on the past, relevance of, 47–48, 48n.3

in the Political Commonplace Book, 48, 84–85, 85n, 149, 156–59, 203

Bollan, William, 239–40n.60

Boorstin, Daniel, 79

Boston Athenaeum, xx

Boston Evening-Post, 21–22, 21n.18

Boston Gazette, 11–12n.14

anonymous attacks on government in, 68

“Callisthenes,” writings in, 25

“Edward Sexby,” writings in, 21n.18, 68, 85

“Hyperion,” writings in, 19, 66–70

“An Independent,” writings in, 68

“Marchmont Nedham,” writings in, 21n.18, 68, 68n.48, 69–70, 85

“An Old Man,” writings in, 69

“Pro Aris et Focis,” writings in, 67, 67n.47

“A Bostonian,” (an anonymous respondent to JQ), 68

Boston Massacre trials

acquittals in, 22–23, 26–27n.29–30

John Adams’s role in, 22–23n.21, 22–24

Auchmuty’s role in, 22

Hutchinson on, 26n.29

JQ’s role in, xiii, 22–27

Law Reports on, xxv

Robert Treat Paine’s role in, 22

Samuel Quincy’s role in, 22–24

Boston Tea Party (1773), 32–33, 32n.44, 62, 73

Boston town meeting, 27–28

Boswell, James, 77

Botta, Carlo, 78

Bowdoin, James, 20, 240n.60

Boyd, Mr. (possibly John or Hugh), 238, 238n.59, 244

Braintree (later named Quincy), x–xi, 16

Brand Hollis, Thomas, 241, 241n.66, 251, 267

Bristol (England), 249–50

Britain. See Great Britain

Bromfield, Thomas, 228–29, 228n.25, 232, 243, 261, 263–65

Brutus, 75, 75n.69, 122

Bunker Hill, Battle of (Boston, 1775), 7

Bunker Hill Monument, 7–8

Burgh, James, 264, 264n.113

Burke, Edmund, 252, 261, 262n.105

Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents, 166, 203

Butterfield, L. H., xviii, 271

Caesar, Julius, 50n.10, 71–72

Gordon on, 49–50

Observations on, 50, 74

Plutarch on, 53, 74

Political Commonplace Book on, 50, 119–20, 122, 128, 132, 161

“Callisthenes” (pseud. used by JQ), 25

Camden, Charles Pratt, Earl of, 242, 242n.68, 257–59, 258n.99, 259n.101, 261

Campbell case, 227n.50, 237

Carew, Thomas, 143–45

Carlisle, Earl of, 252n.93

Carteret, Sophia, 249n.84

Cassius, 75, 75n.69, 122

Catley, Ann, 244, 244n.75

Cato, A Tragedy (Addison), 49, 49n.7, 53

Cato’s Letters (Gordon and Trenchard), 48–49, 82

Cavendish, John, Lord, 262, 262n.105

Cecil, Sir William, 106

“Centinel” essays (The Massachusetts Spy; attrib. to Franklin or JQ), 12n.14, 81n.12, 273

Champion, Alexander, 244, 244n.76

Chandler, Thomas Bradbury, 233n.38

Charles I, 177

Charles II, 55

Charleston (S.C.), 30

Charles V (Robertson), 105, 107–8

Charles VII, king of France, 108

Chatham, William Pitt, Earl of, 38–39

London Journal on, 252–53nn.94–95, 252–57, 261

on reconciliation, 252–53n.95, 252–57

Chesterfield, Philip Dormer Stanhope, Lord, 54n.21, 85n

Chinard, Gilbert, 80n.9

Cicero, xxii, 119–20, 138–39, 161

civic humanism, 87n.23

Clare, Robert Nugent, Viscount, 243, 261

classical traditions/analogies

vs. commonwealth, 82–85, 87n.23

vs. modern, 58–59, 59n.34

Clifton (England), 249–50, 249n.86

Clymer, George, 31

Coercive Acts (taxation of the colonies without consent), 33, 89

See also Port Bill; Tea Act

Coke, Sir Edward, 56

Institutes, 82

A Collection of Original Papers Relative to the History of Massachusets-Bay (Hutchinson), 173–74, 208

College of William and Mary (Williamsburg, Va.), 30

colonial rights, declaration of, 27–28, 28n.33

Colonial Society of Massachusetts, xx–xxi, xxi n.6

Comines, Phillipe de: Cronique et hystoire, 139n.13

Commentaries on the Laws of England (Blackstone), 82, 259n.101

commonplace books

of John Adams, xxiii, 79

Bacon on, 47n.2, 99

Bolingbroke on, 47

definition of, 93

of John Dickinson, 99n.4

of Jefferson, 79, 80n.9

Locke on, 95n.2

JQ’s Shakespearean, 88

See also Law Commonplace; Political Commonplace Book

“Common Sense” (an anonymous respondent to JQ), 68

Common Sense (T. Paine), 61

commonwealth vs. classical traditions, 82–85, 87n.23

Considerations (Wilson), 12

constitutional vs. charter rights, 64–65

Continental Congress, 77–79, 267

Cooper, Myles, 233n.38

Copley, John Singleton

Josiah Quincy “the Colonel,” xxx, xxxi, xxxiii n.5

Samuel Quincy, xxxii, xxxiii n.5

Coquillette, Dan, 5, 18n.8, 273

Cornwall, Vetters, 148

corruption, 101–2, 105, 109, 135–36, 143–47, 156, 161–62

Cox, James, 245–45n

Craftsman, 204

Criminal Law (Dagge), 171, 205

The Critical Review, 204

Cromwell, Oliver, 49–50, 58, 71–72, 74, 132

Cronique et hystoire (Comines), 139–39n

Cruger, Henry, 243, 243n.71, 250

Cushing, Thomas, 20

Dagge, Criminal Law, 171, 205

Dartmouth, Lord, xxiii n.11, 40, 235, 235n.41, 237n.52, 245

Davis, Dr., 233

Debates of the House of Commons (Grey), 207

Declaration of Independence, 61, 64, 78, 84n.19

Declaratory Act (1766), 73, 258, 258n.99

DeLanceys, 266, 266n.116

De Laudibus Legum Angliae (Fortescue), 127–28, 206, 259n.100

Dennie, William, 223n.11

dephlogisticated air (oxygen), 246n.78

DeQuincey family, x

See also Quincy family

de Quincy, Roger, earl of Winchester, 15

de Quincy, Saer, earl of Winchester, 15

de Quincy family, 15, 15n.2

despotism, 95, 120, 138, 158–59, 165, 168

See also tyranny

De Witt, Jan: Political Maxims of the State of Holland, 90, 109, 113, 205

Dickason, Thomas, 244, 244n.76

Dickinson, John (pseud. Pennsylvania Farmer)

commonplace book of, 99n.4

on declaring independence, 78

An Essay on the Constitutional Power of Great-Britain over the Colonies in America, 97, 99, 99n.4, 184–85, 205

and JQ, xvii, 25, 30–31, 34–35

London Journal on, 244, 250

on Parliament, 64

A Speech, Delivered in the House of Assembly of the Province of Pennsylvania, 174, 205–6

on Tacitus, 51

A Dictionary of the English Language (Johnson), 13, 93, 208

Diggins, John, 86–87

Dilly, Charles, 36, 228n.26, 233–35, 244–45

Dilly, Edward, 36, 228, 228n.26, 233–35, 244–45, 251, 263

Dionysius of Halicarnassus, 48n.3

Discourses on Government (Sidney), 55–56

divide and conquer (maxim), 117

divine right of kings, 55–56

Doddington, George, 140

Dorr, Harbottle, 21n.18

Dulany, Daniel, 30

Dunning, John, 262–63, 263n.110

Dupuis, Abraham, 265

Dworetz, Steven, 87n.23

Eden, William, 252, 252n.93

Edes, Benjamin, 68

See also Boston Gazette

Edgcumbe, George, Baron, 226, 226n.19

Edwards, Jonathan, 81

The Elements of Universal Erudition (Bielfield), 57–58, 95, 100, 113–15, 203

Eliot, Sir Gilbert, 262, 262n.106

England. See Great Britain

An Essay on Crimes and Punishment (Beccaria), 202–3

An Essay on the Constitutional Power of Great-Britain over the Colonies in America (Dickinson), 97, 99, 99n.4, 184–85, 205

Essays (Bacon), 100, 104–5

Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects (Hume), 56, 90, 95, 97, 101, 123–27, 207

Exeter (England), 35–36, 226–27

Exeter Cathedral (England), 226–27

Expository Works (Leighton), 117, 209

Falmouth (England), 223–24

Farquhar, George: Beaux Stratagem, 237, 237n.54

Fazakerley, Nicholas, 140

Ferdinand, duke of Brunswick, 266–67, 266n.115

Filmer, Robert: Patriarcha, 55–56

Fortescue, Sir John: De Laudibus Legum Angliae, 127–28, 206, 259n.100

Fothergill, John, 41–42, 262, 262nn.107–8, 263, 264n.111, 265

Fox, Charles James, 243, 243n.71, 261

Franklin, Benjamin

as atypical, xix

in England, xxii, xxii n.10, xxvii, 34

and Hartley, 238n.58

and Josiah Quincy Sr., x

and JQ, xiv, xvii, 36–37, 41

on avoiding war, 265–66, 267

on JQ’s epitaph, 45–46

London Journal on, 228, 230, 235–38, 240–45, 251–52, 261–62, 265–67

London residence on Craven Street, 228n.28

pamphlets by, 36n.58, 236

politics of, xix

Poor Richard’s Almanack, 53

reconciliation efforts of, 264n.111

and Vaughan, 235n.44

and Wright, 236n.47

freedom

and civil wars, 158

definition of, 150

and despotism, 158

and laws, 139

love of, 109–10

of speech/writing, 110

See also liberty

Free-Holder (Addison), 82–84, 176, 201

free press/debate, 67–68

Freiberg, Malcolm, xviii

Frothingham, Richard, 32n.44

Fuller, Rose, 243, 243n.72, 244

Furneaux, Philip: An Interesting Appendix to Sir William Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England, 172, 206

Galba, 122

Galloway, John Stewart, Earl of, 240, 240n.62

Galway, William Monckton, Viscount, 240n.62

Garrick, David, 37, 237, 237n.54, 241

Gaspee affair, 231–32

George I statue (Plymouth, England), 226

George III, 38, 73, 237

Gerry brothers, 224n.16

Gibbon, Edward, 77

Gilbert Stuart (Park), xxxv

Gill, John, 68

See also Boston Gazette

Goebel, Julius, Jr., xix n.3

Goldney, Thomas, 249, 249n.86

Gordon, Thomas

on Caesar, 49–50

Cato’s Letters, 48–49, 82

on human nature, as always the same, 66

Independent Whig, 82

on the past, relevance of, 56

Political Commonplace Book on, 48

on the rule of law, 50

Sallust’s Works edited/translated by, 49, 51–52, 61, 96, 206

Tacitus’s Annals edited/translated by, 49–52, 71–72, 83n, 96, 206–7

Gorges, Sir Ferdinando, 72–73

Gorham, David, 250, 250n.87

government

abuse of, 137, 148

bonds of, 122

civil, 163

classical principles underlying, 84n.19

by consent, 56, 175

and despotism, 66

dignity of, 133

by foreign laws, 128

foundation of, 112, 139–40, 175

free, 139–41

good, 104

governance, art of, 117

modes of, 171

oppressive, 171–72

origin of, 126, 163

rebellion against, 136–37

republican vs. monarchical, 138

security of, 128

subjection to, 126

time’s effects on, 103

See also despotism; ministers

Gower, Lord, 260

Grand Alliance, xxiii

Granville, John Carteret, Earl of, 249n.84

Great Britain

administration of, 169

authority over American colonies, 231, 234, 254

the Cabinet vs. the colonies, 169

and colonies, ties to, xxvii

constitutional crisis of, 61–65, 124–25, 157, 169

government, and the crown’s prerogatives/influence/powers, 154–55

imperial abuses against the people, 68–70

land forces of, 140

motives of, 62–64

vs. Rome, 66–67, 84

See also House of Commons; House of Lords; London Journal; Parliament

Greeks as sources, 56, 59

Grenville, George, 39

Grey, Anchitell: Debates of the House of Commons, 178, 179–80, 207

Gridley, Jeremiah, 79

Gridley, Jeremy, xxii

Hamilton, Alexander: Hamilton Papers, xix n.3

Hancock, John, 20–21

Hancock Cemetery (Quincy), 222

Haraszti, Zoltán, 80n.9

Harrington, James: Oceana, 88–89

Harris, William

An Historical and Critical Account of the Life of Charles the Second, 177, 207

An Historical and Critical Account of the Life of Oliver Cromwell, 176–77, 207

Hartley, David, 37, 230n.34

London Journal on, 238, 238n.58, 243, 243n.71, 244

Hartley, Elizabeth, 244, 244n.75

Harvard Law School, xxiii

Hastings, Selina, 237, 237n.52

Hayes, Mr., 250

Henry III, king of England, 15

Henry V (Shakespeare), 76n.69

Hewson, Mary, 262, 262n.109

Hillsborough, Earl of, 66

An Historical and Critical Account of the Life of Charles the Second (Harris), 177, 207

An Historical and Critical Account of the Life of Oliver Cromwell (Harris), 176–77, 207

historical explanation/documentation, 77–78

An Historical Treatise on the Feudal Law (Sullivan), 149, 213

The History of England (Hume), 57–58, 101, 139–40, 165, 207–8

The History of England From the Accession of James I to the Elevation of the House of Hanover (Macaulay), 58–60, 96, 102, 109–12, 209–10, 228n.26

The History of Scotland (Robertson), 57, 96, 105–7, 211–12

History of the Exchequer (Maddox), 167, 167n.23

Hodgson, John, 22–23n.21

Hollis, Thomas, 241n.66

Holt, Sir John, 80–81, 139, 202

House of Commons, 243, 261–62

impeachment of Parliament members by, 65–66, 179

Political Commonplace Book on, 85–85n, 96, 124–25, 142–43, 152

on tyranny, 96

House of Lords

debates in, 252–61, 267, 267n.118

on tyranny, 62, 62n.39, 209

JQ visits, 237–38, 252–61

Howard, Sir Robert, 237, 237n.53

Howe, Fanny. See Quincy, Fanny

Howe, Helen, 15n.2, 220, 220n.7

Howe, Mark Anthony DeWolfe, xviii, 95n.1, 219–21, 219n.2, 220n.8, 273

human nature, as always the same, 54, 54n.21, 56, 66

Hume, David, 56–57

Essays and Treatises on Several Subjects, 56, 90, 95, 97, 101, 123–27, 207

The History of England, 57–58, 101, 139–40, 165, 207–8

Huntingdon, Theophilus Hastings, Earl of, 237n.52

Hutchinson, Thomas, xx–xxi

on the Boston Massacre trials, 26n.29

A Collection of Original Papers Relative to the History of Massachusets-Bay, 173–74, 208

History of the Colony of Massachusets–Bay, 165, 208

on Cox’s museum, 245n

in England, 34, 40–41, 41n.69

house burned by Stamp Act mob, xxv, xxvii, 19, 25

on human nature, as always the same, 54n.21

and JQ, 18, 20–21, 40

JQ’s attacks on, 27, 50, 66, 70–71, 71n.56, 84

London Journal on, 229–30, 235, 235n.41, 236, 239, 241, 245, 247

on Norton, 238n.56

on the opposition press, 68, 70

Political Commonplace Book on, 50, 60–61, 66

politics of, 40

and the Tea Act, 31–32

and Whately, 71

“Hyperion” (pseud. used by JQ), 19, 66–70

ideas, as explanatory (causes) vs. expressive, 86–87, 86–87nn.22–23

“An Independent” (pseud. used by JQ), 68

Independent Whig (Gordon and Trenchard), 82

Inghirami, Tommaso, xxxv

Institutes (Coke), 82

An Interesting Appendix to Sir William Blackstone’s Commentaries on the Laws of England (Furneaux), 172–73, 206

Iraq war (2003–), xxvii

Ireland, 185–86

Isaacson, Walter: Benjamin Franklin: An American Life, xviii

Islington (England), 263

Jackson, Edward (JQ’s uncle), ix–x

“Jane Shore” (Rowe), 244, 244n.75

Jefferson, Thomas

and John Adams, 78

on Bacon, 88n.26

on classical sources for the Declaration of Independence’s authority, 84n.19

commonplace books of, 79, 80n.9

Declaration of Independence drafted by, 78

on historical explanation/documentation, 77–78

library of, 79–80

on Locke, 88n.26

on Newton, 88n.26

Plutarch’s Lives owned by, 52

political philosophy of, 82, 82n.15

on Shakespeare, 81

Summary View, 12, 64

on Tacitus, 52

Jeffreys, Sir George, 19, 19n.11, 179–80

Jekyll, Sir Joseph, 212

John Adams (McCullough), xviii

Johnson, Samuel, 77, 261n

A Dictionary of the English Language, 13, 93, 208

Johnstone, George, 243n.71, 261, 262n.105

Jones, Roger: Mene Tekel, 175, 208

Josiah Quincy, “the President” (Stuart), xxix, xxxi n, xxxiv

Josiah Quincy Junior, “the Patriot” (Stuart), iv, xxii, xxix, xxxi, xxxiii, xxxiii n.5, xxxiii n.7, xxxv–xxxvi, 88, 271–72

Josiah Quincy “the Colonel” (Copley), xxx, xxxi, xxxiii n.5

justice, 164, 177, 181

Justinian, xxii

Keene, Whitshed, 237, 237n.51

“King Lear” (Shakespeare), 81

kings, 111–12, 133–34, 178, 184

See also monarchy; rulers

Labaree, Leonard W.: Papers of Benjamin Franklin, xviii

Lafayette, Marquis de, 7

Langhorne, John and William, 50n.10, 52, 60, 228n.26

See also Plutarch, Lives

Laurie, Walter Sloan, 21, 21n.17

Lavoisier, Antoine, 246n.78

Law Commonplace (JQ)

Bacon’s influence on, xxxv

duration of writing of, 17–18

organization of, xxiv

and the Political Commonplace, xxiii–xxiv

sources for, 18

transcriptions of, 18n.8

Lawes and Libertyes, xxv

The Law of Nations (Vattel), 172, 172n.24

Law Reports (JQ)

on Adams, xxv

on Auchmuty, xxv

on bawdy houses, xxv–xxvi

biographies of judges in, xxvi

on the Boston Massacre trials, xxv

Catalogue of Books Belonging to the Estate of Josiah Quincy, xxvi

on commercial law, xxv–xxvi

on consumer protection, xxv–xxvi

counsel’s arguments as focus of, xxv

duration of writing of, 17–18

as earliest American law reports, xxv

editing/publication of, xxv, xxvi

on Gridley, xxv

importance of, xxvi

on Otis, xxv

on Paine, xxv

as precedent, xxvi

publication of, 18n.8

on public officials’ conduct, xxv–xxvi

on the Stamp Act Memorial, xxv

on the Superior Court of Judicature’s composition, xxvi

on Thacher, xxv

updating of, xxvi

on women’s rights, xxv–xxvi

law reports, in England vs. America, xxv

laws

consent to, 127–28, 139, 174–75

and education, 103, 171

ignorance vs. knowledge of, 102

as instruments of blessings, 104

and nations, 164–65

natural vs. municipal, 183

and rich vs. poor, 164

rule of law, xxvii, 50, 53

vs. sovereignty, 133

See also precedents

Laws and Orders (General Court), xxv

law schools, xxiii

Lee, Arthur, 37, 238, 241, 243, 245, 265, 266n.115

Lee, Charles, 233, 233n.38

Lee, Jeremiah, 251

Lee, John, 262–63, 263n.110

Lee, William, 233, 233n.39, 234, 238, 251, 264–66

legal education, xxiii–xxiv

Legal Papers of John Adams (Wroth and Zobel, eds.), xxxv–xxxvi

legal system, adversarial, 25

“Legis Miscellenea” (JQ), 17–18, 18n.8, 88

Leighton, Robert: Expository Works, 117, 209

“Lelius” (an anonymous respondent to JQ), 68

Letters from Italy (Orrery), 176, 211

Letters on the French Nation (Talbot), 109, 138, 213–14

Levellers, 86, 111

liberty

alienation of, 164

and bondage, 164

and its blessings, 160

and licentiousness, 162, 172

as necessary, 165–66

public, 131, 156–57, 165

and royalty, 133–34

and slavery, 149–50

See also freedom; rights/liberties

Liberty party. See Sons of Liberty

Lincoln, Abraham, xxiii

Lindsey, Theophilus, 267, 267n.117

Lives (Plutarch), 52–53, 60, 96, 100nn.6–7, 101, 116–22, 209, 228n.26

Livy, 56

Locke, John, 88n.26

and Hume, 57

influence on JQ, xxxv

on maxims, 95

“A New Method of a Common-Place-Book,” 95n.2

Lockridge, Kenneth, 80n.9

London, 36

See also London Journal

London Coffee House, 235, 244, 252

London Journal (JQ), 223–69

at Abbey Church, 247

on John Adams, M.P., 262, 262n.106

on Alleyne, 240, 240n.62, 241

on American autonomy/avoiding war, xxvi

on American political jealousies/cautions, 224n.18

on Baillie, 251, 261–61n.104

on Bancroft, 230, 230n.30, 243

on Barclay, 264, 264n.111

on Barré, 247–48, 247–48nn.82–83

on the Barrys, 244, 244n.75

in Bath, 226, 245–49

in Bodmyn, 226

on Bollan, 239–49n.60

on Boyd, 238, 238n.59, 244

on Brand Hollis, 241, 241n.66, 251, 267

in Bristol, 249–50

on Britain’s authority over American colonies, 231, 234

on Bromfield, 228–29, 228n.25, 232, 243, 261, 263–65

on Burgh, 264, 264n.113

on Burke, 252, 261, 262n.105

on Camden, 242, 242n.68, 257–59, 258n.99, 259n.101, 261

on the Campbell case, 227n.50, 237

on capital punishment, 244

on Catley, 244, 244n.75

on Cavendish, 262, 262n.105

on Champion, 244, 244n.76

on Chatham, 252–53nn.94–95, 252–57, 261

on Clare, 243, 261

in Clifton, 249–50, 249n.86

on the Continental Congress, 267

on Cox, 245–45n

criticism of Britain, 225

on Cruger, 243, 243n.71, 250

on Dartmouth, 235, 235n.41, 245

on Davis, 233

on death (JQ’s own), 268–69

on the DeLanceys, 266, 266n.116

departure to London, 223, 223n.12

on Dickason, 244, 244n.76

on Dickinson, 244, 250

on Dilly, Edward and Charles, 228, 228n.26, 233–35, 244–45, 251, 263

on Dunning, 262–63, 263n.110

on Dupuis, 265

on Eden, 252, 252n.93

on Edgcumbe, 226, 226n.19

editorial treatment of, 221

on Eliot, 262, 262n.106

in Exeter, 226–27

on Exeter Cathedral, 226–27

expenses in preparation for the journey, 223

in Falmouth, 223–24

on Farquhar’s Beaux Stratagem, 237, 237n.54

fellow passengers, 223n.13

on Ferdinand, duke of Brunswick, 266–67, 266n.115

on Fothergill, 262, 262nn.107–8, 263, 265

on Fox, 243n, 243n.71, 261

on Franklin, 228, 228n.28, 230, 235–38, 240–45, 251–52, 261–62, 265–67

on Fuller, 243, 243n.72, 244

on Galloway, 240

on Garrick, 237, 237n.54, 241

on the Gaspee affair, 231–32

on Goldney, 249, 249n.86

on Gorham, 250, 250n.87

on Gower, 260

on gun ships, 226

on hardship in Britain, 225

on David Hartley, 238, 238n.58, 243, 243n.71, 244

on Elizabeth Hartley, 244, 244n.75

on Hastings, 237, 237n.52

on Hayes, 250

on Hewson, 262, 262n.109

at the House of Commons, 243, 261–62

on the House of Lords debates, 252–61, 267, 267n.118

at the House of Peers, 237–38

on Howard, 237, 237n.53

on Hutchinson, 229–30, 235, 235n.41, 236, 239, 241, 245, 247

on illness (JQ’s own), 239, 262–63, 265

in Islington, 263

on Johnstone, 243n.71, 261, 262n.105

on Keene, 237, 237n.51

on the king, 237

on land cultivation, 224–25

on Arthur Lee, 238, 241, 243, 245, 265, 266n.115

on Charles Lee, 233, 233n.38

on Jeremiah Lee, 251

on John Lee, 262–63, 263n.110

on William Lee, 233, 233n.39, 234, 238, 251, 264–66

letters to Abigail, 223, 223n.14, 228n.28, 229, 236–37, 236n.48, 239, 241, 243–44, 250–51

letters to Josiah Sr., 227n.49, 236–37

letters to William Phillips, 223, 223n.14, 245, 261

on Lindsey, 267, 267n.117

London arrival, 228

at the London Coffee House, 235, 244, 252

on London sights, 228

on Luttrell, 262, 262n.105

on Macaulay, 246, 246n.79, 247

on Mason, 264

on McCartney, 262, 262n.106

on McDougall, 243–44, 243n.73

on merchants/tradesmen, 225

on Meredith, 261, 262n.106

on Milton, 237, 237n.53

moderate views in, xxiii

on Molleson, 264, 264n.111

on Morris, 229, 229n.29, 232, 234, 239

on Morton, 265, 265n.114

newspaper coverage of London arrival, 233, 233n.37

on newspapers of London, 242, 242n.69

on Brownlow North, 238, 238n.57

on Lord North, 234, 243, 243n.71, 245, 252, 261, 262nn.105–6

on Norton, 237–38, 238n.55, 264

on Oliver, 235, 235n.43, 243, 243n.72

at the opera, 230, 230n.32, 261

on Paine, 245

on Pearson, 238

on the peasantry, 225

on Pembroke, 227, 227n.21

on Pendennis Castle, 224, 224n.17

in Plymouth, 226

at Plymouth Docks, 226

on the Port Bill, 231

on Portsmouth, 227

on the power/riches of Britain, 226

on Pownall, 234–36, 245, 247, 250–51

on Price, 235, 235n.42, 251–52, 262–63, 265–66

on Priestley, 246, 246n.78, 251–52, 265

on Radcliff Church, 250

on reconciliation efforts/prospects, 232, 232n.36, 235, 239, 241, 250, 252–62, 253n.96, 265–68

on Reed, 243, 243n.74, 245

on religious services/trappings, 227, 233

return voyage, 267–68

on the Revolution, predictions of, 242

on Richmond, 260–61, 260n.103

on Rigby, 243, 243n.71

on rings made in Britain, 263, 268–69n.120

on Rockingham, 260, 260n.102

on Rogers, 236, 236n.48, 238, 265–66

on Rowe’s “Jane Shore,” 244, 244n.75

on the Royal George, 226

at the Royal Society, 235

on Salisbury Cathedral, 227

on Savile, 230–32, 230n.34, 238, 242–43

on Sawbridge, 262, 262n.105, 263

on Sayre, 242, 242n.67

on Scotland, English hatred of, 236

on Shelburne, 240–41, 246, 248–49, 259–63

on Shuter, 230, 230n.31

size/format of, 221

on social policy of “the greatest happiness to the greatest number,” 225

at St. James, 251

at St. Paul’s Cathedral, 236

on Stanley, 262, 262n.106

on Stevens, 249, 249n.85

on Stevenson, 251, 251n.90

at Stonehenge, 227

on Tankerville, 262–63, 263n.110

on taxation of Americans by Parliament, 226, 231

on Temple, 246, 246n.80, 247, 249

on Thornton, 240, 240n.61, 245

on Towgood, 243, 243n.70, 265

on Townshend, 262, 262n.105

on Benjamin Vaughan, 235, 235n.44

on Samuel Vaughan, 238, 245–46

on Waldo, 249–50

on the Watts, 266

at the Wednesday Club of friends to Liberty and science, 244

on Welsh, 232–33

on Wentworth, 236, 236n.46

at Westminster Abbey, 233

at Westminster Hall, 233–34, 237

on Jonathan Williams, 228, 228n.27, 229–31, 234–35, 239, 245, 261, 263

on Wingfield, 265

on the women of Britain, 227

on Wooldridge, 264, 264n.111

on Wright, 236, 236n.47

writing of, xxii

Louis XI, king of France, 108–9

Lovell, James, 9, 42

Lowell, James Russell, 44n.83

Luttrell, John, 262, 262n.105

luxury, 101–2, 155–56, 159

Lycurgus, 53

Macaulay, Catharine, 37, 71

The History of England From the Accession of James I to the Elevation of the House of Hanover, 58–60, 96, 102, 109–12, 209–10, 228n.26

London Journal on, 246, 246n.79, 247

Observations on a Pamphlet Entitled, Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents, 171, 210, 228n.26

“Macbeth” (Shakespeare), 81

Maddox: History of the Exchequer, 167–71

Magna Carta, 15

Maier, Pauline, 87n.23

Mansfield, Lord Chief Justice, 41

Marcellus (Roman general), 252, 252n.94

Marcellus, Marcus Claudius (Roman senator), 252n.94

Marsh, Joseph, 17

Marshall, John, xxiii

Marvell, Andrew: The Rehearsal Transpros’d, 69, 103, 210

Maryland, 30

Mason, George, xxix, xxxi

Mason, Jonathan, 264

Massachusetts, 64

Massachusetts Historical Society, xx, 272

The Massachusetts Spy, 12n.14, 49, 49n.7, 68

maxims/aphorisms

definition of “maxim,” 13

divide and conquer, 117

instruction by, xxii, 53

the king can do no wrong, 180–81

legal, 134–35

political, 115–17, 123, 125

in the Political Commonplace Book, generally, xxii

as self-evident truths, 95

of tyrants, 102

Mayhew, Jonathan, 81

McCartney, Sir George, 262, 262n.106

McCullough, David: John Adams, xviii

McDougall, Alexander, 243–44, 243n.73

Memoir of the Life of Josiah Quincy, Jr. (Josiah Quincy III and Eliza Susan Quincy)

authorship/editing of, xxxi n, xxxiii n.5, 8n.3, 9n.9, 17n.5, 271

on England, 16

frontispiece for, 42–43n.76

genealogy of, 15, 15n.2

on health of JQ, 16

organization of, 15

publication of, 10–11

Webster on, 8–9

Mene Tekel (Jones), 175, 208

“Mentor” (pseud. used by JQ), 21–22, 21n.18

“The Merchant of Venice” (Shakespeare), 81

Meredith, Sir William, 261, 262n.106

militia system, 74

Milton, John, 38

London Journal on, 237, 237n.53

Prose Works, 177, 210

ministers

and the community, 177

corrupt, 143

excesses, 122

and the House of Commons, 142–43

and Parliament, 147–48

prosecution of, 179

public, 182

as servants of the crown, 141

and their administration, 155

mob action/excesses, 19, 25–26, 62

See also Boston Tea Party

Molleson, William and Robert, 264, 264n.111

monarchy, 163

advocates for, 113

influence/power of the crown, 141–42, 154–55, 157, 167, 182

princes, public affection for/hatred of, 130

princes, resistance to, 107

princes’ claims, 182

princes’ duty/power, 106, 109

and tyranny, 61, 66, 162

Monckton, Robert, 240n.62

Montagu, Edward Wortley: Reflections on the Rise and Fall of the Antient Republicks, 54–55, 96, 101–2, 210

Montesquieu, Baron de, 56

The Monthly Review, 211

Monticello, 80

Morgan, Edmund: Benjamin Franklin, xviii

Morris, Corbyn, 229–29n, 232, 234, 239

Morton, Charles, 265, 265n.114

motivation, 87, 87n.23, 91

Mount, Charles Merrill, xxxi n.5

Murray, William, 140

Nash, George, 34, 92

Native Americans, scholarship on, xxi n.6

Nedham, Marchmont, 85–86, 86n.21, 178, 211

“Nedham, Marchmont” (pseud. used by JQ), 21n.18, 68, 68n.48, 69–70, 85

“A New Method of a Common-Place-Book” (Locke), 95n.2

Newton, Isaac, 88n.26

Nicholson, Colin, xx

North, Brownlow, 238, 238n.57

North, Lord, xxii, 40–41, 238n.55

London Journal on, 234, 243, 243n.71, 245, 252, 261, 262nn.105–6

North Briton (Wilkes), 82

North Carolina, 30

Norton, Sir Fletcher, 237–38, 238n.55, 264

Observations (JQ), 273

on the Boston Tea Party, 73

on Brutus, 75

on Caesar, 50, 74

on Cassius, 75

on Cromwell, 74

on the Declaratory Act, 73

on George III, 73

on Gorges, 72–73

on the House of Lords on tyranny, 62n.39

JQ’s loyalties in, 75

on a militia system, 74

Patriot politics of, 45

Political Commonplace Book as source material for, 12, 72

on the Port Bill, 11–12, 33, 72

on Randolph, 72–73

reception of, 73n.60

on standing armies, 11–12, 71–74

on Tacitus, 74

on the Tea Act, 73

Observations (W. Temple), 57, 214

Observations on a Pamphlet Entitled, Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents (Macaulay), 171, 210, 228n.26

Observations upon the Statutes (Barrington), 55, 97, 99, 202

Oceana (Harrington), 88–89

“An Old Man” (pseud. used by JQ), 69

Oliver, Andrew, 19

Oliver, Richard, 235, 235n.43, 243, 243n.72

opposition, 106–7, 149, 173

opposition press, 67–68

See also specific newspapers

oppression, 104, 128, 136–37, 172

Orrery, John Boyle, Earl of: Letters from Italy, 176, 211

Otis, James, xvii, xxii–xxiii, 24, 27–28

oxygen (dephlogisticated air), 246n.78

Paine, Dr., 245

Paine, Robert Treat, xxiii, 22

Paine, Thomas: Common Sense, 61

Pangle, Thomas, 87n.23

Papers of Benjamin Franklin (Labaree), xviii

Park, Lawrence, xxxiii n.7

Gilbert Stuart, xxxv

Parliament

corruption in, 144–45

duties of, 140

impeachments in, 65–66, 179

and ministers, 147–48

Parliamentary sentence, 181

the people’s representation in, 152–54

role of, 64

parliaments, 110, 143–44

passive obedience, 75

past

classical, and present, 83–85, 84n.19

historical, 77–79, 86–87nn.22–23

relevance of, 47–48, 48n.3, 56, 59

unknowability of, 91, 91n.31

Patriarcha (Filmer), 55–56

Pearson, Mr., 238

Pembroke, Henry Herbert, Earl of, 227, 227n.21

Pendennis Castle (Falmouth, England), 224, 224n.17

Pennsylvania, 30–31

Pennsylvania Farmer. See Dickinson, John

the people

as deceived, 129–30

feelings/judgment of, 103

and nobility/gentry, 104

sensibility of their own value, 168

Pericles, 116

Perkins, Thomas, xxxv

Petersham, 28, 28n.33

Philip of Macedon, 84

Phillips, Abigail. See Quincy, Abigail

Phillips, Sir John, 144–47

Phillips, William (JQ’s father-in-law), 26n.28, 35

Phillips family, xiii

Pickering, Timothy, 17

Plato, 56, 100, 116, 121

Plutarch, 50n.10

on Caesar, 53, 74

influence of, 52–53, 56

Lives, 52–53, 60, 96, 100nn.6–7, 101, 116–22, 228n.26

on the rule of law, 53

Plymouth (England), 226

policy, 111, 113, 168

Political Commonplace Book (JQ), 95–199, 98, 161

on active life, faculty of, 103

on Addison’s Free-Holder, 176, 201

on ambition/wickedness, 128

on America’s subordination to Britain, 186

on anarchy, 120

Antitheta Rerum, 187–93

on arms, 117–20, 169

on the army/armies, 122, 131–32, 147

(see also standing armies)

on the arts, westward progress of, 176

on Bacon, 95

on Bacon’s Advancement of Learning, 88, 97, 99, 103–4, 104n.9, 148, 187–93, 202

on Bacon’s Essays, 100, 104–5

on bad/good men, 169

on Barrington’s Observations, 97, 99, 202

on belief/doubt, 114

on benevolence, 126

on Bielfield’s Elements of Universal Erudition, 57–58, 95, 100, 113–15, 203

on Bolingbroke, 48, 84–85, 85n, 149, 156–59

on bondage, 159–60, 164

on bribery, 116

on Britain’s motives, 62–64

on the British administration, 169

on the British Cabinet vs. the colonies, 169

on the British constitutional crisis, 61–65, 124–25, 157, 169

on British government, and the crown’s rerogatives/influence/ powers, 154–55

on British land forces, 140

on Brutus, 75n.69, 122

on Caesar, 50, 119–20, 122, 128, 132, 161

on Cassius, 75n.69, 122

on causes of the Revolution, 91

on character, 119

citation style in, 97

on citizenship, 169

on civil calamities, 176

on civil discord, 107, 118–19

on civil wars, 158

on the colonies, British governance of, 186

on commerce’s effects, 107–8

on the Commons, rights of, 179

on communities and individuals, 165

on contract, original, 126

on contrariety to the spirit of the people, 175

on corruption, 101–2, 105, 109, 135–36, 143–47, 156, 161–62

on counsel before events, 175

on courage, 116

on Cromwell, 132

on the crown’s influence/power, 141–42, 154–55, 157, 167, 182

on delegates, 63–64

on Demetrius and the Old Woman, 121

on dependence, 157

on despotism, 95, 120, 138, 158–59, 165, 168

on De Witt’s Political Maxims, 90, 109, 113, 205

on Dickinson’s Essay, 97, 99, 99n.4, 205

on Dickinson’s Speech, 174, 205–6

on disaffection, 102, 140

on discontent, 140

on disgrace, 116–17

on dominion, 105, 112, 127

editorial treatment of, 96–97, 99

on education, 103, 171

on electors, British, 152–53

on empire and money, 117

on emulation, 115

on executive vs. legislative powers, 150

on fame, love of, 121

on favorites, 159

on folly, 175

on Fortescue’s De Laudibus, 127–28, 206

on fraud vs. force, 148

on freedom, and civil wars, 158

on freedom, and despotism, 158

on freedom, definition of, 150

on freedom, love of, 109–10

on freedom and laws, 139

on freedom of speech/writing, 110

on glory, 122

on good/bad men, 169

on Gordon, 48

on governance, art of, 117

on government, abuse of, 137, 148

on government, bonds of, 122

on government, by consent, 175

on government, by foreign laws, 128

on government, civil, 163

on government, dignity of, 133

on government, foundation of, 112, 139–40, 175

on government, free, 139–41

on government, good, 104

on government, modes of, 171

on government, oppressive, 171–72

on government, origin of, 126, 163

on government, rebellion against, 136–37

on government, republican vs. monarchical, 138

on government, security of, 128

on government, subjection to, 126

on governments, time’s effects on, 103

on governors of distant provinces, 102

on the guilty, 134–35

on historians’ contempt for humanity, 183–84

on history, 113–14, 149

on the House of Commons, 85–85n, 96, 124–25, 142–43, 152

on the House of Lords on tyranny, 62

on Hume’s Essays, 56, 90, 95, 97, 101, 123–27, 207

on Hume’s History, 101, 139–40, 165

Hutchinson criticized in, 50, 66

on Hutchinson’s Collection, 173–74

on Hutchinson’s loss, 60–61

on ignorance, 159–60, 167–68

on illegal exactions, 182

index, 99, 195–99

on indifference about public affairs, 160

on individual vs. public judgment, 110

on influence, 167–68

on instruction, 159–60

on Ireland, 185–86

on Jeffreys, 19, 19n.11, 179–80

on judges, 175, 179, 181

on justice, and the civil body, 181

on justice, universal, 164

on justice against a tyrant, precedent of, 177

on kings, 184

on kings, and subjects, 133–34

on kings, idolization of, 178

on kings, tenure of, 111–12

on kings’ power vs. laws, 133

on kings’ prerogatives, 133–34

and the Law Commonplace, xxiii–xxiv

on laws, and education, 103, 171

on laws, and nations, 164–65

on laws, and rich vs. poor, 164

on laws, as instruments of blessings, 104

on laws, consent to, 127–28, 139, 174–75

on laws, ignorance vs. knowledge of, 102

on laws, natural vs. municipal, 183

on laws vs. sovereignty, 133

on legislative power, 150, 172–74

on Leighton’s Expository Works, 117

on Levellers, 111

on liberty, alienation of, 164

on liberty, and bondage, 164

on liberty, and its blessings, 160

on liberty, and licentiousness, 162, 172

on liberty, and royalty, 133–34

on liberty, and slavery, 149–50

on liberty, as necessary, 165–66

on liberty, public, 131, 156–57, 165

on licentiousness and popular government, 162

on literature/reading, 100–101

on Louis XI, 108–9

on loyalty, 137

on luxury, 101–2, 155–56, 159

on Macaulay’s The History, 96, 102, 109–12, 209–10

on Macaulay’s Observations, 171, 210

on madmen vs. knaves, 183

on the man/multitude, 118

on Marvell’s Rehearsal Transpros’d, 103, 210

on the maxim of tyrants, 102

on maxims, legal, 134–35

on maxims, political, 115–17, 123, 125

maxims in, generally, xxii

on the maxim that the king can do no wrong, 180–81

on the militia, 125–26, 147, 166

on ministers, and Parliament, 147–48

on ministers, and the community, 177

on ministers, and the House of Commons, 142–43

on ministers, and their administration, 155

on ministers, as servants of the crown, 141

on ministers, corruption of, 143

on ministers, prosecution of, 179

on ministers, public, 182

on ministers’ excesses, 122

on moderation/prudence, 177–78

on monarchy, 163

on monarchy, advocates for, 113

on monarchy/tyranny, 61, 66, 162

on Montagu’s Antient Republicks, 101–2

on motivation, 91

motivations for writing, 59–60

on the navy, 138

“NB” in, 95–96

on necessity/self-preservation, 176–77

on the nobility/gentry, 104

note taking in, 95–96

on obedience, 159–60

“Obsta principiis” in, 95–96, 96n.3

on offices, multiplication of, 130

on oppression, 104, 128, 136–37, 172

organization of, xxi, 59, 95–96, 95n.2

on Parliament, and ministers, 147–48

on Parliament, corruption in, 144–45

on Parliament, the people’s representation in, 152–54

on Parliamentary impeachments, 179

on a Parliamentary sentence, 181

on parliaments, annual, 143–44

on parliaments, dependent, 110

on parliaments, septennial, 144

on Parliament’s duties, 140

on Parliament’s role, 64

on the passions, 127

on patriotic combination/union, timely, 171

on patriots and tyrants, 150–51

on the people, and nobility/gentry, 104

on the people, sensibility of their own value, 168

on the people as deceived, 129–30

on the people’s feelings/judgment, 103

on personal distinction, 111

on philosophical debate, 101

on piety, professions of, 112

on Plato, 121

on plunder of liberties, 151

on plunder of public money, 141

on Plutarch’s Lives, 52–53, 60, 96, 100nn.6–7, 101, 116–22

on policy, art of, 111

on policy, in general, 113

on policy, true, 168

on political activity, early, 171

on political astuteness, 168

on political complaisance, 117–19, 121

on political connections, 170

on political sagacity, 166, 174

on political virtue, 113, 116

on politicians/men, 170, 176

Pope quoted in, 84–85, 85n.20

on popular complaints, duty of, 166

on posterity, 134–35

on power, abuses of, 137

on power, and despotism, 165

on power, and tyranny/oppression, 162, 172

on power, and wantonness/distrust/cruelty, 129

on power, as corrupting, 121, 136

on power, civil, 169

on power, exercise of, 164

on power, insinuating progress of, 107

on power, legislative, 150, 172–74

on power, sovereign, 127

on power, the ocean as similar to, 174

on power, usurped, 105, 125

on power vs. authority, 125

on precedents, 184–85

on prejudice, 115

on prerogative, 140, 151, 154, 167–68

on princes, claims of, 182

on princes, duty/power of, 106, 109

on princes, public affection for/hatred of, 130

on princes, resistance to, 107

on privileges, hereditary, 111

on professions, 101

on provinces/colonies, 123, 125

on public affairs, 160, 174

on public credit, 157

on public enemies, 137

on public life, 170

on the public purse, 138

on public servants, duties of, 170

on public spirit, 126

on public virtue, 120

on punishments, 131, 166, 181–82

on reason, power of, 109

on reason/moderation, 100

on rebellion, 136–37, 160

on religion, 171–72

on religious zeal, 107

on resistance/opposition, 106–7, 149, 173

on rights/liberties, 149, 151, 172

on riot acts, 147

on Robertson’s Charles V, 105, 107–8, 212

on Robertson’s History of Scotland, 57, 96, 105–7, 211–12

on Robinson-Morris, 89–90

on Roman provinces/governors, 162

on Royalists and governors, 138

on rulers, nature/powers of, 171

on rulers, obedience to/rebellion against, 130–31, 138, 160

on rulers/subjects, 148, 159

on Sallust, 96, 159–65, 206

on Satan’s maxims, 117

on the sciences, westward progress of, 176

on scientific progress, 105

on seamen, impressing of, 125

on security, political, 137

on security of the people, 110, 127–28

and self-fashioning in, 60, 60n.36

on self-interest, 123–24, 127

on serving one’s country, 142

on servitude, 138, 173

size/format of, 95

on slavery, and its curses, 160

on slavery vs. liberty, 149–50

on slaves, 132–33, 164

on social happiness, 109

on society, inequality/suffering in, 122–23

on society’s right of self-defense, 106

on soldiers, 120–21, 132

on sorcery, 115

as source material for Observations, 12, 72

sources for, 5, 12, 52–53, 56–57, 59n.34, 62–63n.69, 69, 69n.49, 89, 96, 201–15

on sovereign power, 127

on the Stamp Act, 60–61

on standing armies, 71–72, 96, 102, 108, 125–26, 132, 138, 146–47, 171, 182–83

on states, claims of, 182

on states’ laws, 103

on statesmen, great, 110

on statesmen, rule for, 118

on subjection to a sovereign, 111–12

on Swift’s Works, 84–85, 85n, 139, 150, 213

on Tacitus, 96, 104, 128–33, 135–37, 206–7

on taxes, 109, 125, 173

on treason, 110, 137

on troops, native, 132

on troops, regular, 105

on trusts of states, 168

on Turkish viziers, 115–16, 153

on tyranny, prevention of, 116

on tyranny and monarchy, 162

on tyrants, duties to, 106

on tyrants, hatred of, 129

on tyrants, the oppressed feared by, 128

on tyrants and patriots, 150–51

on tyrants’ disregard for subjects’ prayers, 121

on understanding and errors, 148

on union/division, 163

on venality, 155–57

on Wales, 185

on warlike people’s duty to tyrants, 106

on wisdom, 169, 175

on Young’s Political Essays, 89, 125, 149–55

Political Essays (A. Young), 89–90, 96, 125, 149–55, 215

Political Maxims of the State of Holland (De Witt), 90, 109, 113, 205

political virtue, 87, 113

Polybius, 48, 56

Poor Richard’s Almanack (Franklin), 53

Pope, Alexander, 84–85, 85n.20

popular sovereignty, 64

populism, 68–70

Port Bill, xiii, 11–12, 33, 72, 231, 255

Portsmouth, Earl of, 227

power

abuses of, 137

vs. authority, 125

civil, 169

as corrupting, 121, 136

and despotism, 165

exercise of, 164

insinuating progress of, 107

legislative, 150, 172–74

the ocean as similar to, 174

sovereign, 127

and tyranny/oppression, 162, 172

usurped, 105, 125

and wantonness/distrust/cruelty, 129

Pownall, Thomas, 40, 42

The Administration of the American Colonies, 82, 234n.40

London Journal on, 234–36, 245, 247, 250–51

precedents, xxvi, 177, 184–85

prerogative, 140, 151, 154, 167–68

Preston, Thomas, xiii, 22–23, 26

See also Boston Massacre

Price, Richard, 37, 81, 235, 235n.42, 251–52, 262–63, 265–66, 267n.117

Priestley, Joseph, 246, 246n.78, 251–52, 265, 267n.117

“Pro Aris et Focis” (pseud. used by JQ), 67, 67n.47

Prose Works (Milton), 177, 210

Public Advertiser, 242n.69

punishments, 131, 166, 181–82

The Pupil of Nature (Voltaire), 101, 214

Pym, John, 181–82

Quincy (formerly Braintree), x–xi, 16

Quincy, Abigail (JQ’s daughter), 35, 35n.51

Quincy, Abigail (née Phillips; JQ’s wife), xiii, xxix, xxxi, 35, 43–44n.80, 44–45, 222, 269

Quincy, Ann (JQ’s half-sister), 16

Quincy, Ann (JQ’s stepmother), 16

Quincy, Edmund (JQ’s grandson), 10

Quincy, Edmund (“Ned”; JQ’s brother), 18, 28

Quincy, Edmund I (JQ’s great-great-grandfather). Emigrates to America, x, x n.3, 16

Quincy, Edmund, II (JQ’s great-grandfather), xi

Quincy, Edmund, III (JQ’s grandfather), xi

Quincy, Edmund IV (JQ’s uncle)

land holdings of, x

mercantile business of, ix–x, xiv–xv

in St. Andrew’s Masonic Lodge, x

Quincy, Elizabeth (JQ’s stepmother), 16

Quincy, Eliza Susan (JQ’s granddaughter)

death of, 219n.2

as guardian of the family name, 10

Quincy mansion painting by, 194

and Stuart’s portrait of JQ, xxix, xxxi, xxxiii

See also Memoir of the Life of Josiah Quincy, Jr.

Quincy, Eliza Susan Morton (JQ’s daughter-in-law), xxix

Quincy, Fanny Huntington (JQ’s great-great-granddaughter), 95n.1, 219, 273

Quincy, Frances (JQ’s half-sister), 16

Quincy, Hannah (JQ’s mother), 16

Quincy, John, xi, xiii

Quincy, Josiah, III (JQ’s son, “The Mayor” or “The President”)

biographies of, 10, 272

birth of, 35

books willed to, 88

as Congressman, 8

death of, 10

father’s influence on, 44

on his father’s death, 8

Lowell on, 44n.83

mansion inherited by, 16, 194

as mayor of Boston, xvii, 8

as president of Harvard, xvii, 8

as state senator, 8

See also Memoir of the Life of Josiah Quincy, Jr.

Quincy, Josiah, Jr.

Abigail buried with, 44–45, 222

and John Adams, xvii, 18

John Adams on, 9

ambition/energy/eloquence of, 18

on American independence, xiv–xv

ancestors’ influence on, ix

anti-theatrical bias of, 230, 230n.33

as atypical, xix

biographical works on, 271 (see also Memoir of the Life of Josiah Quincy, Jr.)

book buying by, 17, 80–83

books willed to his son, 88

as the “Boston Cicero,” 32

on the Boston massacre observance, 21–22

in the Boston Massacre trials, xiii, 22–27

burial place of, 44–45, 222

at Cambridge, 17, 17n.4

in Charleston, 30

childhood/upbringing of, ix

children of, xiii, 35, 35n.51

on the Committee of Correspondence, xxiv

death of, xiv, xxii, 8–9, 43, 43n.80, 45, 268–69

and Dickinson, xvii, 25, 30–31, 34–35

in England, as emissary, xiii–xiv, xix, xxvii, 34–35, 39–42, 41n.69 (see also London Journal)

epitaphs of, xiv, 45–46, 46n.87

fame of, 11

finances of, 17

and Franklin, xiv, xvii, 36–37, 41

on a free press/debate, 67–68

at Harvard, xiii, xiii n, 16

and Hutchinson, 18, 20–21, 40

illness/frailty of, ix, xiv–xv, xviii, 16, 28–29, 32, 41, 43, 92, 239, 262–63, 265

on impeachment, 65–66

on imperial abuses against the people, 68–70

impetuosity of, 23n.22, 92

influence of, xvii

intellect of, ix

as a lawyer, xiii, 17–18, 25 (see also Boston Massacre trials; Law Reports)

library of, xv, xxxv, 17, 17n.7, 79–82, 89

in London, 36–38

London residence on Arundel Street, 228n.28

Lovell on, 9

marriage to Abigail, xiii, 35

melancholy of, 28–29

on mob action/excesses, 19, 25–26, 62

nationalistic awakening of, 31

and Otis, xvii

on passive obedience, 75

patriotism of, 15

patriotism oration by, 17, 17n.4

in Pennsylvania, 30–31

politics of, xiii–xiv, xix, 19–21, 27, 92

(see also Political Commonplace Book; specific writings)

portrait of (see Josiah Quincy Junior, “the Patriot”)

and John Quincy, xi

and Samuel Quincy, 45, 45n.86

religious tracts owned by, 81–82

reputation of, xvii, 7–10

on resistance/economic warfare, 68–70, 74–75

return trip from England, 42–43

as a Revolutionary, 61–62, 91–92

Richardson defended by, 24–25

satirical criticism of, 21, 21n.17

in the Sons of Liberty, 19, 25

Southern travels of, 28–31, 29n.34 (see also Southern Journal)

on Stamp Act violence, 19

strabismus of, xxxv, 21

on the Tea Act, 31–33

on the Tea Party, 32n.44, 62

and Thacher, 17

as “the Patriot,” xiii, xiii n

on war, possibility of, 42–43, 42n.75, 43n.77

and Warren, 26n.28, 34, 42

Webster on, 7–9

and Wilkes, 21

will of, xxxv, 48

Quincy, Josiah, Jr., writings of

and Samuel Adams’s backing/editorializing, 20

for the Boston town meeting, 27–28

as “Callisthenes,” in the Boston Gazette, 25

on colonial rights, 27–28, 28n.33

commonplace books, xvii (see also Law Commonplace; Political Commonplace Book)

as “Edward Sexby,” in the Boston Gazette, 21n.18, 68, 85

as “Henry Ireton,” 37

against Hutchinson, 27, 70–71, 71n.56, 84

as “Hyperion,” in the Boston Gazette, 19, 66–70

as “An Independent,” in the Boston Gazette, 68

journals, xviii, xix (see also London Journal; Southern Journal)

law reports, xvii (see also Law Reports)

“Legis Miscellenea,” 17–18, 18n.8, 88

as “Marchmont Nedham,” in the Boston Gazette, 21n.18, 68, 68n.48, 69–70, 85

as “Mentor,” in the Boston Evening–Post, 21–22, 21n.18

newspaper essays, 11–12n.14, 19–20, 68, 273 (see also specific newspapers and essays)

as “An Old Man,” in the Boston Gazette, 69

papers, archives of, 272–73

as polemical vs. reasoned, 65

as “Pro Aris et Focis,” in the Boston Gazette, 67, 67n.47

pseudonyms used by, xxii–xxiii, xxiii n.11, 19–20, 21n.18 (see also specific pseudonyms above)

Shakespearean commonplace book, 88

Shakespearean epigraphs/allusions in, 17, 81

transcription of, xviii

See also Observations

Quincy, Josiah, Sr. (JQ’s father)

on the Boston Massacre trials, JQ’s role in, 24

burial place of, 222

children of, 16 (see also individual children)

epitaph of JQ written by, 45–46

and Franklin, x

land holdings of, xi

marriage to Ann, 16

marriage to Elizabeth, 16

marriage to Hannah, 16

“Maxims of Wisdom,” 44

mercantile business of, ix–x, xiv–xv, 16

military career of, x

politics of, x

portrait of, xxx, xxxi

in the Sons of Liberty, x

in St. Andrew’s Masonic Lodge, x

Quincy, Josiah III (“the President” or “the Mayor”; JQ’s son), xxix, xxxi n, xxxiv

Quincy, Nancy (JQ’s half-sister), 16

Quincy, Samuel (JQ’s brother), xiv

in the Boston Massacre trials, 22–24

death of, 45

and JQ, 45, 45n.86

law career of, 18

politics of, xix, xxvi, 18, 45

portrait of, xxxii

Quincy, Samuel M. (JQ’s great-grandson), xvii, xviii, xxv, xxvi, 18n.8

Quincy, Wilkes. See Quincy, Josiah, Jr.

Quincy family, ix–xii, x n.2, 16

Quincy mansion, 16, 194, 269n.120

Quincy Papers, xx, xxi–xxvi

Quincy’s Reports (JQ), xxvii

Radcliff Church (Bristol, England), 250

Randolph, Edward, 72–73

Raphael, xxxv

reason/moderation, 100

rebellion, 136–37, 160

reconciliation efforts/prospects, 232, 232n.36, 235, 239, 241, 250, 252–62, 253n.96, 264nn.111–12, 265–68

Reed, Joseph, 31, 42, 243, 243n.74, 245

Reflections on the Rise and Fall of the Antient Republicks (Montagu), 54–55, 96, 101–2, 210

The Rehearsal Transpros’d (Marvell), 69, 103, 210

Reid, John Phillip, 86

resistance

and economic warfare, 68–70, 74–75

and opposition, 106–7, 149, 173

Richardson, Ebenezer, 24–25

Richmond, Charles Lennox, Duke of, 260–61, 260n.103

Rigby, Richard, 243, 243n.71

rights/liberties, 149, 151, 172

See also freedom

Rights of the Kingdom (Sadler), 180–81, 212–13

Robbins, Caroline, 82

Robertson, William

Charles V, 105, 107–8, 212

The History of Scotland, 57, 96, 105–7, 211–12

Robinarchs, 85

Robinson-Morris, Matthew, 89–90, 183, 212

Rockingham, Charles Watson-Went-worth, Marquess of, 260, 260n.102

Rogers, Thomas, 236, 236n.48, 238, 265–66

Rollin, Charles: Ancient History, 159–59n

Romans as sources, 49–54, 56, 59

Rome

vs. Great Britain, 66–67, 84

Hume on, 56

JQ on, 66–67, 74–75

provinces/governors, 162

standing army in, 74

Rousseau, Jean Jacques, 56

Social Compact, 164–65, 212

Rowe, Nicholas: “Jane Shore,” 244, 244n.75

Royal George (ship), 226

Royal Society, 235

rule of law, xxvii, 50, 53

rulers

nature/powers of, 171

obedience to/rebellion against, 130–31, 138, 160

and subjects, 148, 159

See also kings; monarchy

Rutledge, Edward, 30

Sachervell, Henry: Tryall of Dr. Henry Sachervell, 174–75, 212

Sadler, John: Rights of the Kingdom, 180–81, 212–13

Salisbury (England), 227n.21

Salisbury Cathedral (England), 35, 227

Sallust, 56

The Works of Sallust, 49, 51–52, 61, 96, 206

Samuel Quincy (Copley), xxxii, xxxiii n.5

Savile, Sir George, 230–32, 230n.34, 238, 242–43

Sawbridge, John, 262, 262n.105, 263

Sayre, Stephen, 233n.39, 242, 242n.67

sciences, 105, 176

Scotland, English hatred of, 236

Secretaries of War, xx

Selden, Sir John, 259, 259n.100

self-fashioning, 60, 60n.36

Sexby, Edward, 85–86

“Sexby, Edward” (pseud. used by JQ), 21n.18, 68, 85

Shakespeare, William

Henry V, 76n.69

influence of, 17, 81

“King Lear,” 81

“Macbeth,” 81

“The Merchant of Venice,” 81

parodies of, 81n.12

“The Tempest,” 81

Shakespearean commonplace book (JQ), 88

Shaw, Peter, 92

Shebbeare, John, 261n.104

Shelburne, Earl of, 37, 39, 42

Shelburne, William Fitzmaurice Petty, Earl of

London Journal on, 240–41, 246, 248–49, 259–63

Sheldon, Garrett Ward, 82n.15

Shuter, Edward, 230, 230n.31

Sidney, Algernon, xxxv, 19, 28n.33, 59, 88

Discourses on Government, 55–56

Simple Cobbler of Aggawam (Ward), 133–35, 214

slaves/slavery, 132–33, 149–50, 160, 164

social policy of “the greatest happiness to the greatest number,” 225

solitude, 100, 116

Solon, 53

Sons of Liberty (Whig opposition), x, xiii, 19, 25

Southern Journal (JQ)

on American autonomy/avoiding war, xxvi

on the Catholic parish, xxiv–xxv

on legal education, xxiv

on the legal profession in the colonies, xxiv

on the Mennonites, xxiv–xxv

on the Quakers, xxiv–xxv

route taken on the voyage, xxiv

scope of, xxiv–xxv

sections cut from, xix

on slavery, xxiv

Southwell, Edward, 141–43

A Speech, Delivered in the House of Assembly of the Province of Pennsylvania (Dickinson), 174, 205–6

St. Andrew’s Masonic Lodge, x

St. James (London), 251

St. James Chronicle, 242n.69

St. Paul’s Cathedral (London), 236

Stamp Act, xxii, xxv, xxvii, 17, 19, 39, 60–61

standing armies, 21–22, 71–72

Observations on, 11–12, 71–74

Political Commonplace Book on, 71–72, 96, 102, 108, 125–26, 132, 138, 146–47, 171, 182–83

in Rome, 74

Stanhope, Lord, 253, 253n.96

Stanley, Edward, 262, 262n.106

Stevens, George Alexander, 249, 249n.85

Stevenson, Margaret, 251, 251n.90

Stonehenge, 35, 227

Storer, Ebenezer (JQ’s brother-in-law), xxxi

Storer, Hannah Quincy (JQ’s sister), xxxi, xxxiii, 45

Story, Joseph, xxiii

strabismus, xxxv

Stuart, Gilbert

and John Quincy Adams, xxxi

death of, xxix

finances of, xxxi n

historical-figure painting by, xxxiii n.5

illness/death of, xxxiii, xxxv

Josiah Quincy, “the President,” xxix, xxxi n, xxxiv

Josiah Quincy Junior, “the Patriot,” iv, xxii, xxix, xxxi, xxxi n, xxxiii, xxxiii n.5, xxxiii n.7, xxxv–xxxvi, 88, 271–72

Stuarts, 58

Suffolk, Earl of, 252n.93

Sullivan, Francis Stoughton: An Historical Treatise on the Feudal Law, 149, 213

Summary View (Jefferson), 12, 64

Swift, Jonathan: Works, 84–85, 85n, 139, 150, 213

Syrett, Harold C., xix n.3

Tacitus

Annals, 49–52, 71–72, 83n.16, 96

influence of, 56

Observations on, 74

The Works of Tacitus, 96, 104, 128–33, 135–37, 206–7

Talbot, Robert: Letters on the French Nation, 109, 138, 213–14

Tankerville, Charles Bennet, Earl of, 262–63, 263n

taxation of the colonists, 39, 109, 125, 173, 226, 231, 257–59

See also Coercive Acts; Declaratory Act; Port Bill; Stamp Act; Tea Act

Tea Act (1773), 31–33, 73

“The Tempest” (Shakespeare), 81

Temple, John, 246, 246n.80, 247, 249

Temple, Sir William: Observations, 57, 175–76, 214

terrorism, xxvii

Thacher, Oxenbridge, 17

theater, bias against, 230, 230n.33

Thomas, Isaiah, 49

Thornton, Henry, 240n.61

Thornton, John, 240, 240n.61, 245

Thoughts on the Cause of the Present Discontents (Burke), 166, 203

Thucydides, 48n.3

Towgood, Michaijah, 243, 243n.70, 265

Townshend, Thomas, 262, 262n.105

Trenchard, John

Cato’s Letters, 48–49, 82

Independent Whig, 82

“A true Patriot” (an anonymous respondent to JQ), 68

tuberculosis, symptoms of, 16

Turenne, Marshall, 255–56

Tyler, John W., xx–xxi, 5, 33n.45

tyranny

duties to tyrants, 106

and fear of the oppressed, 128

hatred of tyrants, 129

prevention of, 116

subjects’ prayers disregarded under, 121

tyrants and patriots, 150–51

See also despotism

Unitarianism, 267n.117

Vattel, Emmerich de: The Law of Nations, 172–72n

Vaughan, Benjamin, 235, 235n.44

Vaughan, Samuel, 235n.44, 238, 245–46

Vernon, John, 91n.31

Virgil: “Aeneid,” 252, 252n.94, 254n.98

Voltaire, François Marie Arouet: The Pupil of Nature, 101, 214

Vyner, Robert, 141

Waldo, Joseph, 249–50

Wales, 185

Walpole, Robert, 84–85

Ward, Nathaniel: Simple Cobbler of Aggawam, 133–35, 214

Warren, Joseph, xv, xxiv

John Adams on, 9

and JQ, 26n.28, 34, 42

politics of, 19

on war, possibility of, 42, 42n.75

Webster on, 7

Washington, George, 49, 76n.69

Watts, 266

Webster, Daniel, xxxiii, 7–9

Welsh, Mr., 232–33

Wentworth, Paul, 236, 236n.46

Westminster Abbey, 233

Westminster Hall, 233–34, 237

Whately, Thomas, 71

Whigs, xxvii, 256

Wilkes, John, 21, 233n.39

North Briton, 82

Williams, John, 228n.27

Williams, Jonathan, 37, 228, 228n.27, 229–31, 234–35, 239, 245, 261, 263

Williams, Lydia Pickering, xxxiii n.5

Williamsburg (Va.), 30

William the Conquerer, 15

Wilson, Douglas L., 80n.9

Wilson, James: Considerations, 12

Window Tax Act, 185

Wingfield, Thomas, 265

Wood, Gordon: The Americanization of Benjamin Franklin, xviii

Wooldridge, Thomas, 264, 264n.111

Works (Swift), 84–85, 85n.20, 139, 150, 213

The Works of Sallust (Sallust), 49, 51–52, 61, 96, 159–64, 206

Wright, Patience, 236, 236n.47

Wroth, L. Kinvin, xviii

Legal Papers of John Adams, xxxv–xxxvi

Wycombe, Baron, 240n.63

Young, Arthur

on Bath, 246–47n.81

on Pembroke’s house/art collection, 227n.21

Political Essays, 89–90, 96, 125, 149–55, 215

Young, Thomas, 21n.17

Zobel, Hiller B., xviii

Legal Papers of John Adams, xxxv–xxxvi