Mrs. Abigail Adams incorporates pathos, logos and allusion in advising her son about his trip to France. While the revolutionary war is coming to a close in 1780, young John Adams accompanies his father and brother in his “second voyage to France.” John Quincy Adams, future president of the United States, doesn’t realize the importance of this voyage and observing his father being a diplomat in France. This is why Mrs. Adams finds the importance of writing a letter to give counsel to her son and his future. Emotion, the center point that drives Mrs. Adams’ focus in this letter. Her true parental love for her son radiated in her writing. At the beginning of the letter, she almost regrets sending her beloved son on this hazardous trip across …show more content…
Adams’ historic example was implied to teach her son not to be satisfied with the anarchy or “tyranny” of King George III. Brave men were fighting in the Revolutionary War to gain freedom, but not to gain a new King to the throne. She urges her son to be passionate and build character that will benefit the new country and encourage liberty for all the colonists. As a mother, Mrs. Adams wanted to see her child grow and be courageous in his ideals. This mother sees her son as intelligent and on the level of “genius.” But she also understands that just because he is brilliant, he still has young and immature qualities. Just like mothers today, Mrs. Adams guided her son to become the best he could be. She didn’t know what the results of the war would be, just like nobody knows the future, but she was the type of parent didn’t leave his side no matter what happens. Her motherly love was evident even though she sent him on a dangerous trip. John Quincey Adams’ expedition to France with his father and brother was so important because she desired her son to learn and gain the experience of how diplomacy and politics worked. But since he was still a young boy that needed an “instructive eye of a tender parent,” this affectionate mother, found it greatly necessary to write this short letter of counsel, to advise her son on how to be “a good citizen” and “do honor to [his]
On January 12, 1780, Abigail Adams writes a letter to her youngest son John Quincy Adams. Adams writes the letter for the soul purpose of informing her son on how important it is for him to travel to France. In her letter, Abigail Adams encourages her son to continue his journey of triumph. In Adams letter, she uses allusion, ethos, and pathos, to express her ideas of advise to John. Adams continuously appeals to her son’s emotions by emphasizing that she wants him to be successful in life and aiding him in realizing that she cares enough to push him to be the best that he can be.
The book, John Adams, by David McCullough, is a powerfully written biography of one of our nation’s greatest heroes. This biography explores Adams’ life in great depth, unveiling a side to his life unbeknownst to those who have never studied his life in great detail. Through diary entries, letters, and various other documents, the reader grasps a sense of what Adams’ day to day life was like, and is also able to grasp the enormity of his lifetime accomplishments.
Abigail Adams was and still is a hero and idle for many women in the United States. As the wife of John Adams, Abigail used her position to bring forth her own strong federalist and strong feminist views. Mrs. Adams was one of the earliest feminists and will always influence today's women.
Abigail Adams was a woman of high character and a loving soul. She was selfless in her thinking and remarkable in the way she handled people. Her management skills were above average for the normal female in the 1700s. She held many worldly interests that tied her to the political fashion of society. She was well cultured and was able to apply this to her role of a politician’s wife with great attributes towards society. She became the “buffer” with regard to her husband's temper and lack of diplomacy. She participated in many political activities. Her independent thinking, character, faithfulness, and hard work gave her the ability to succeed in society in the 17th century. Even though Abigail Adams was not formerly
Adams establishes her credibility by not only being John Quincy Adams mother, but by also being the wife of the soon-to-be President of the United States. Her ethos helps reassure John that he is following the right path because he is following his mother’s advice. With her ethos, she clearly expresses how important his travels are, but she won’t have to worry about him not listening or not following her advice. She is able to put in the allusion to the past without it sounding like a lecture. She uses her pathos to encourage her son, knowing that the respect at the end of his travels would be worth the
In Abigail Adams letter to her son: letter to John Quincy Adams, she uses many rhetorical devices to convey her feeling towards him as he leaves with his dad. She uses pathos as a way to project her feelings as a concerning strict mother toward Quincy telling him to use caution during the trip, hoping great things for him. She uses logos to explain to him that he must be grateful and use this advantage that has been given from his father that others don't get, to learn and grow from. Her tone in this letter to her son is advising and loving mother hoping he'll learn from this great experience and doesn't miss out on this opportunity.
Throughout Adams’ letter, she persuades her son by appealing to pathos in order to demonstrate how highly she thinks of her son. Clarifying, “Nothing is wanting with you but attention, diligence, and steady application,” Adams reassures that she is not trying to change her son, or turn him into a hero, but for him to gain experience and become a well-rounded person. Adams also acknowledges her sons disinterest in the voyage, “If I had thought your reluctance arose from proper deliberation or that you were
Abigail Adams writes a letter to her son while he is exploring with his father, a U.S president John Adams. Adams meticulously constructs a piece of writing that emphasizes the importance of their journey and summarizes her high expectations for him.
Abigail Adams married a man destined to be a major leader of the American Revolution and the second President of the United States. Although she married and raised men that become such significant figures during their time, her herself was played an important role in the American society. The events that happened in her life, starting from childhood and ending in her adult years, led her to be a Revolutionary woman. Three main reasons behind her becoming such a strong, independent woman was the fact that she married a man who had an important role in politics, growing up with no education, and raising a family basically by herself.
The letter written by Abigail Adams towards her son, John Quincy Adams, hints to the readers that his mother starts off showing little mercy toward her son and eventually throughout the letter you being to see the soft side of her, in other words the mother side. This giving the letter a sense of warmth seeing how dearly she cares for her son as she advises him for the preparations of his journey.
During the winter months of 1780, Abigail Adams, mother of John Quincy Adams, wrote to her son about his travels overseas with his father, John Adams. Aware of his hatred of traveling, Abigail writes to her son to persuade him to enjoy the characteristics of a journey. Throughout the letter, Abigail Adams promotes her own credibility by being kind hearted, she promotes the logical side of traveling and she uses flattery to further convince John Quincy Adams. Abigail Adam’s argumentative skills capitalize on the idea that John Quincy Adams is her son and not a regular audience member that she is trying to persuade to believe a certain point of view.
As the wife of John Adams, Abigail Adams became politically involved in the government part of the American Revolution. However, only her husband hears her concerns as he begins to establish the roots of the new nation. Three months prior to the official approval of the Declaration of Independence, Abigail Adams expresses the need of inclusion of women’s rights in the new laws in a series of letters to her husband. These letters during the American Revolution show the beliefs of white male supremacy and the prejudices even among loved ones.
Withey’s book also includes much information about the politics and government of the time, while also painting a portrait of Abigail Adams as an intelligent, resourceful, and outspoken woman, as well as involving details of her domestic life, with excerpts from multiple letters that she and John wrote to each other. The reader is able to read these passages and understand the public and reserved sides of Abigail Adams, who was both a believer in the emancipation of slavery and an early feminist, and had advised her husband of keeping women in mind while he
“If particular care and attention is not paid to the ladies, we are determined to foment a rebellion, and will not hold ourselves bound by any laws in which we have no voice, or representation.”-Abigail Adams
Abigail Adams faced many hardships throughout her life. She was the daughter of a minister and had two sisters and a brother. In the 1700’s, children did not have a high survival rate due to the amount of diseases and nothing to treat them with. Abigail Adams said in her old age that she “was always sick” (Akers 5). This reminds people how tough life was in the 1700’s and how easy it was to pass away from a mere cold. Abigail also did not have any education growing up. Women, in the colonial era, were not supposed to have an education and were supposed to watch the kids, cook, and clean. Readers of this book learn that many women back then were illiterate and were self-taught, if they had any education. Abigail did find a love for literature due to her sister’s spouse, Richard Cranch. He influenced her love for literature at a young age and she started to become more literate. Along with the disease and educational deficiency, women were considered as property. A young woman could either give up