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To Jean Nicolas Demeunier Monticello, Virginia, Apr. 29, 1795
DEAR SIR, -- Your favor of Mar. 30. from Philadelphia came to
my hands a few days ago. That which you mention to have written from
London has never been received; nor had I been able to discover what
has been your fortune during the troubles of France after the death
of the King. Being thoroughly persuaded that under all circumstances
your conduct had been entirely innocent & friendly to the freedom of
your country, I had hopes that you had not been obliged to quit your
own country. Being myself a warm zealot for the attainment &
enjoiment by all mankind of as much liberty, as each may exercise
without injury to the equal liberty of his fellow citizens, I have
lamented that in France the endeavours to obtain this should have
been attended with the effusion of so much blood. I was intimate
with the leading characters of the year 1789. So I was with those of
the Brissotine party who succeeded them: & have always been persuaded
that their views were upright. Those who have followed have been
less known to me: but I have been willing to hope that they also
meant the establishment of a free government in their country,
excepting perhaps the party which has lately been suppressed. The
government of those now at the head of affairs appears to hold out
many indications of good sense, moderation & virtue; & I cannot but
presume from their character as well as your own that you would find
a perfect safety in the bosom of your own country. I think it
fortunate for the United States to have become the asylum for so many
virtuous patriots of different denominations: but their
circumstances, with which you were so well acquainted before, enabled
them to be but a bare asylum, & to offer nothing for them but an
entire freedom to use their own means & faculties as they please.
There is no such thing in this country as what would be called wealth
in Europe. The richest are but a little at ease, & obliged to pay
the most rigorous attention to their affairs to keep them together.
I do not mean to speak here of the Beaujons of America. For we have
some of these tho' happily they are but ephemeral. Our public
oeconomy also is such as to offer drudgery and subsistence only to
those entrusted with its administration, a wise & necessary
precaution against the degeneracy of the public servants. In our
private pursuits it is a great advantage that every honest employment
is deemed honorable. I am myself a nail-maker. On returning home
after an absence of ten years, I found my farms so much deranged that
I saw evidently they would be a burden to me instead of a support
till I could regenerate them; & consequently that it was necessary
for me to find some other resource in the meantime. I thought for
awhile of taking up the manufacture of pot-ash, which requires but
small advances of money. I concluded at length however to begin a
manufacture of nails, which needs little or no capital, & I now
employ a dozen little boys from 10. to 16. years of age, overlooking
all the details of their business myself & drawing from it a profit
on which I can get along till I can put my farms into a course of
yielding profit. My new trade of nail-making is to me in this
country what an additional title of nobility or the ensigns of a new
order are in Europe. In the commercial line, the grocers business is
that which requires the least capital in this country. The grocer
generally obtains a credit of three months, & sells for ready money
so as to be able to make his paiments & obtain a new supply. But I
think I have observed that your countrymen who have been obliged to
work out their own fortunes here, have succeeded best with a small
farm. Labour indeed is dear here, but rents are low & on the whole a
reasonable profit & comfortable subsistence results. It is at the
same time the most tranquil, healthy, & independent. And since you
have been pleased to ask my opinion as to the best way of employing
yourself till you can draw funds from France or return there
yourself, I do presume that this is the business which would yield
the most happiness & contentment to one of your philosophic turn.
But at the distance I am from New York, where you seem disposed to
fix yourself, & little acquainted with the circumstances of that
place I am much less qualified than disposed to suggest to you
emploiments analogous to your turn of mind & at the same time to the
circumstances of your present situation. Be assured that it will
always give me lively pleasure to learn that your pursuits, whatever
they may be may lead you to contentment & success, being with very
sincere esteem & respect, dear sir,
your most obedient servant.
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