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To C.F. de C. Volney February 8, 1805
DEAR SIR, -- Your letter of November the 26th came to hand May
the 14th; the books some time after, which were all distributed
according to direction. The copy for the East Indies went
immediately by a safe conveyance. The letter of April the 28th, and
the copy of your work accompanying that, did not come to hand till
August. That copy was deposited in the Congressional library. It
was not till my return here from my autumnal visit to Monticello,
that I had an opportunity of reading your work. I have read it, and
with great satisfaction. Of the first part I am less a judge than
most people, having never travelled westward of Staunton, so as to
know any thing of the face of the country; nor much indulged myself
in geological inquiries, from a belief that the skin-deep scratches
which we can make or find on the surface of the earth, do not repay
our time with as certain and useful deductions, as our pursuits in
some other branches. The subject of our winds is more familiar to
me. On that, the views you have taken are always great, supported in
their outlines by your facts; and though more extensive observations,
and longer continued, may produce some anomalies, yet they will
probably take their place in this first great canvass which you have
sketched. In no case, perhaps, does habit attach our choice or
judgment more than in climate. The Canadian glows with delight in
his sleigh and snow, the very idea of which gives me the shivers.
The comparison of climate between Europe and North America, taking
together its corresponding parts, hangs chiefly on three great
points. 1. The changes between heat and cold in America, are greater
and more frequent, and the extremes comprehend a greater scale on the
thermometer in America than in Europe. Habit, however, prevents
these from affecting us more than the smaller changes of Europe
affect the European. But he is greatly affected by ours. 2. Our sky
is always clear; that of Europe always cloudy. Hence a greater
accumulation of heat here than there, in the same parallel. 3. The
changes between wet and dry are much more frequent and sudden in
Europe than in America. Though we have double the rain, it falls in
half the time. Taking all these together, I prefer much the climate
of the United States to that of Europe. I think it a more cheerful
one. It is our cloudless sky which has eradicated from our
constitutions all disposition to hang ourselves, which we might
otherwise have inherited from our English ancestors. During a
residence of between six and seven years in Paris, I never, but once,
saw the sun shine through a whole day, without being obscured by a
cloud in any part of it: and I never saw the moment, in which,
viewing the sky through its whole hemisphere, I could say there was
not the smallest speck of a cloud in it. I arrived at Monticello, on
my return from France, in January, and during only two months' stay
there, I observed to my daughters, who had been with me to France,
that twenty odd times within that term, there was not a speck of a
cloud in the whole hemisphere. Still I do not wonder that an
European should prefer his grey to our azure sky. Habit decides our
taste in this, as in most other cases.
The account you give of the yellow fever, is entirely agreeable
to what we then knew of it. Further experience has developed more
and more its peculiar character. Facts appear to have established
that it is originated here by a local atmosphere, which is never
generated but in the lower, closer, and dirtier parts of our large
cities, in the neighborhood of the water; and that, to catch the
disease, you must enter the local atmosphere. Persons having taken
the disease in the infected quarter, and going into the country, are
nursed and buried by their friends, without an example of
communicating it. A vessel going from the infected quarter, and
carrying its atmosphere in its hold into another State, has given the
disease to every person who there entered her. These have died in
the arms of their families without a single communication of the
disease. It is certainly, therefore, an epidemic, not a contagious
disease; and calls on the chemists for some mode of purifying the
vessel by a decomposition of its atmosphere, if ventilation be found
insufficient. In the long scale of bilious fevers, graduated by many
shades, this is probably the last and most mortal term. It seizes
the native of the place equally with strangers. It has not been long
known in any part of the United States. The shade next above it,
called the stranger's fever, has been coeval with the settlement of
the larger cities in the southern parts, to wit, Norfolk, Charleston,
New Orleans. Strangers going to these places in the months of July,
August or September, find this fever as mortal as the genuine yellow
fever. But it rarely attacks those who have resided in them some
time. Since we have known that kind of yellow fever which is no
respecter of persons, its name has been extended to the stranger's
fever, and every species of bilious fever which produces a black
vomit, that is to say, a discharge of very dark bile. Hence we hear
of yellow fever on the Alleganey mountains, in Kentucky, &c. This is
a matter of definition only: but it leads into error those who do not
know how loosely and how interestedly some physicians think and
speak. So far as we have yet seen, I think we are correct insaying,
that the yellow fever which seizes on all indiscriminately, is an
ultimate degree of bilious fever never known in the United States
till lately, nor farther south, as yet, than Alexandria, and that
what they have recently called the yellow fever in New Orleans,
Charleston and Norfolk, is what has always been known in those places
as confined chiefly to strangers, and nearly as mortal to them, as
the other is to all its subjects. But both grades are local: the
stranger's fever less so, as it sometimes extends a little into the
neighborhood; but the yellow fever rigorously so, confined within
narrow and well defined limits, and not communicable out of those
limits. Such a constitution of atmosphere being requisite to
originate this disease as is generated only in low, close, and
ill-cleansed parts of a town, I have supposed it practicable to
prevent its generation by building our cities on a more open plan.
Take, for instance, the chequer board for a plan. Let the black
squares only be building squares, and the white ones be left open, in
turf and trees. Every square of houses will be surrounded by four
open squares, and every house will front an open square. The
atmosphere of such a town would be like that of the country,
insusceptible of the miasmata which produce yellow fever. I have
accordingly proposed that the enlargements of the city of New
Orleans, which must immediately take place, shall be on this plan.
But it is only in case of enlargements to be made, or of cities to be
built, that this means of prevention can be employed.
The genus irritabile vatum could not let the author of the
Ruins publish a new work, without seeking in it the means of
discrediting that puzzling composition. Some one of those holy
calumniators has selected from your new work every scrap of a
sentence, which, detached from its context, could displease an
American reader. A cento has been made of these, which has run
through a particular description of newspapers, and excited a
disapprobation even in friendly minds, which nothing but the reading
of the book will cure. But time and truth will at length correct
error.
Our countrymen are so much occupied in the busy scenes of life,
that they have little time to write or invent. A good invention
here, therefore, is such a rarity as it is lawful to offer to the
acceptance of a friend. A Mr. Hawkins of Frankford, near
Philadelphia, has invented a machine which he calls a polygraph, and
which carries two, three, or four pens. That of two pens, with which
I am now writing, is best; and is so perfect that I have laid aside
the copying-press, for a twelve month past, and write always with the
polygraph. I have directed one to be made, of which I ask your
acceptance. By what conveyance I shall send it while Havre is
blockaded, I do not yet know. I think you will be pleased with it,
and will use it habitually as I do; because it requires only that
degree of mechanical attention which I know you to possess. I am
glad to hear that M. Cabanis is engaged in writing on the reformation
of medicine. It needs the hand of a reformer, and cannot be in
better hands than his. Will you permit my rekspects to him and the
Abbe de la Roche to find a place here.
A word now on our political state. The two parties which
prevailed with so much violence when you were here, are almost wholly
melted into one. At the late Presidential election I have received
one hundred and sixty-two votes against fourteen only. Connecticut
is still federal by a small majority; and Delaware on a poise, as she
has been since 1775, and will be till Anglomany with her yields to
Americanism. Connecticut will be with us in a short time. Though
the people in mass have joined us, their leaders had committed
themselves too far to retract. Pride keeps them hostile; they brood
over their angry passions, and give them vent in the newspapers which
they maintain. They still make as much noise as if they were the
whole nation. Unfortunately, these being the mercantile papers,
published chiefly in the sea ports, are the only ones which find
their way to Europe, and make very false impressions there. I am
happy to hear that the late derangement of your health is going
off,and that you are re-established.
I sincerely pray for the
continuance of that blessing, and with my affectionate salutations,
tender you assurances of great respect and attachment.
P. S. The sheets which you receive are those of the copying pen
of the polygraph, not of the one with which I have written.
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