CFA
Sunday. 6th.

Fine day and warm. I passed the morning rather idly, assorting papers, but attended divine service and heard George Whitney preach 210from Job. 7. 16. “I would not live alway.” And from Mark 14. 8. “She did what she could.” The first discourse upon death, the second upon perfection of character. Of all the young men I know go into the pulpit, not one does so with such a quantity of pretension as this. He appears to have no doubt of his powers or of his eloquence and therefore inspires his hearers with something closely allied to disgust. I could not listen to his florid nonsense with any patience.

Afternoon, read a discourse of Dr. Barrow making the third of the course upon the subject of contentment from the same text, and directed to the consideration of the condition of the various people in this world as affected by circumstances to prevent contentment. Poverty, disgrace, loss of friends &ca. with the modes by which the mind should alleviate the pressure of these evils. Barrow is always sensible if he is not often great.

In the evening my father, my Wife and I went down to pay a visit to Col. and Mrs. J. Quincy. Mr. Price Greenleaf was also there. The night was very beautiful and we sat for some time in the Moonlight. Conversation principally upon Education of which Mrs. Quincy makes a hobby. She takes up warmly the spiritual culture of Mr. Alcott, one of the newfangled theories of the day to make spirits out of boys.1 Mrs. S. R. Miller and Miss Sophia Quincy were there. Home early.

1.

Mrs. Josiah Quincy IV, the former Mary Jane Miller, sent her son Josiah Phillips Quincy to Bronson Alcott’s school in Tremont Street, Boston. See the anecdote about young Quincy there in A Pride of Quincys, Mass. Hist. Soc., 1969, p. [9]; see also Adams Genealogy on the Quincys mentioned.