HELP PLZ THIS IS A EMERGANCY
 the following letter, Abigail Adams (1744–1818) writes to her son John Quincy Adams, who is traveling abroad with his father, John Adams, a United States diplomat and later the country’s second president. Read the letter carefully. Then, in a well-developed essay, analyze the rhetorical strategies Adams uses to advise her son. Support your analysis with specific references to the text. need to have 3 paragraphs
 12 January, 1780.
 MY DEAR SON,
 I hope you have had no occasion, either from
 enemies or the dangers of the sea, to repent your
 second voyage to France. If I had thought your
 reluctance arose from proper deliberation, or that you
 5 were capable of judging what was most for your own
 Line
 benefit, I should not have urged you to accompany
 your father and brother when you appeared so averse
 to the voyage.
 You, however, readily submitted to my advice,
 10 and, I hope, will never have occasion yourself, nor
 give me reason, to lament it. Your knowledge of the
 language must give you greater advantages now than
 you could possibly have reaped whilst ignorant of it;
 and as you increase in years, you will find your
 15 understanding opening and daily improving.
 Some author, that I have met with, compares a
 judicious traveller to a river, that increases its stream
 the further it flows from its source; or to certain
 springs, which, running through rich veins of
 20 minerals, improve their qualities as they pass along.
 It will be expected of you, my son, that, as you are
 favored with superior advantages under the instructive
 eye of a tender parent, your improvement should bear
 some proportion to your advantages. Nothing is
 25 wanting with you but attention, diligence, and steady
 application. Nature has not been deficient.
 These are times in which a genius would wish to
 live. It is not in the still calm of life, or the repose
 of a pacific station, that great characters are formed.
 30 Would Cicero have shone so distinguished an orator if
 he had not been roused, kindled, and inflamed by the
 tyranny of Catiline, Verres, and Mark Anthony? The
 habits of a vigorous mind are formed in contending
 with difficulties. All history will convince you of this,
 35 and that wisdom and penetration are the fruit of
 experience, not the lessons of retirement and leisure.
 Great necessities call out great virtues. When a mind
 is raised and animated by scenes that engage the
 heart, then those qualities, which would otherwise lie
 40 dormant, wake into life and form the character of the
 hero and the statesman. War, tyranny, and desolation
 are the scourges of the Almighty, and ought no doubt
 to be deprecated. Yet it is your lot, my son, to be an
 eyewitness of these calamities in your own native
 45 land, and, at the same time, to owe your existence
 among a people who have made a glorious defence of
 their invaded liberties, and who, aided by a generous
 and powerful ally, with the blessing of Heaven, will
 transmit this inheritance to ages yet unborn.
 50 Nor ought it to be one of the least of your
 incitements towards exerting every power and faculty
 of your mind, that you have a parent who has taken so
 large and active a share in this contest, and discharged
 the trust reposed in him with so much satisfaction as
 55 to be honored with the important embassy which at
 present calls him abroad.
 The strict and inviolable regard you have ever paid
 to truth, gives me pleasing hopes that you will not
 swerve from her dictates, but add justice, fortitude,
 60 and every manly virtue which can adorn a good
 citizen, do honor to your country, and render your
 parents supremely happy, particularly your ever
 affectionate mother