Page:The Presidents of the United States, 1789-1914, v. I.djvu/275

 JOHN QUINCY ADAMS 225 upon the &quot;Chesapeake,&quot; killed and wounded several of her crew, and violently carried away four of them. For this outrage the commander of the &quot;Leopard&quot; was promoted in the British service. In spite of all these things, the hatred of the federalists for France was so great that they were ready to put up with insult added to injury rather than attack the power that was warring against Napoleon. So far did these feelings carry them that Mr. John Lowell, a prominent federalist of Boston, was actually heard to defend the action of the &quot;Leopard.&quot; Such pusillanimity incensed Mr. Adams. &quot;This was the cause,&quot; he afterward said, &quot;which alienated me from that day and forever from the councils of the federal party.&quot; He tried to persuade the federalists of Boston to hold a meeting and pledge their support to the govern ment in any measures, however serious, that it might see fit to adopt in order to curb the insolence of Great Britain. But these gentlemen were too far blinded by party feeling to respond to the call ; whereupon Mr. Adams attended a republican meet ing, at w r hich he was put upon a committee to draft and report such resolutions. Presently the fed eralists bowed to the storm of popular feeling and held their meeting, at which Mr. Adams was also present and drafted resolutions. For his share in the proceedings of the republicans it was threatened that he should &quot;have his head taken off for apos-