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To William Waller Hening Washington, January 14, 1807
SIR, -- Your letter of Dec. 26th, was received in due time.
The only object I had in making my collection of the laws of
Virginia, was to save all those for the Public which were not then
already lost, in the hope that at some future day they might be
republished. Whether this be by public or private enterprise, my end
will be equally answered. The work divides itself into two very
distinct parts; to wit, the printed and the unprinted laws. The
former begin in 1682, (Purvis' collection.) My collection of these is
in strong volumes, well bound, and therefore may safely be
transported anywhere. Any of these volumes which you do not possess,
are at your service for the purpose of republication, but the
unprinted laws are dispersed through many MS. volumes, several of
them so decayed that the leaf can never be opened but once without
falling into powder. These can never bear removal further than from
their shelf to a table. They are, as well as I recollect, from 1622
downwards. I formerly made such a digest of their order, and the
volumes where they are to be found, that, under my own
superintendence, they could be copied with once handling. More they
would not bear. Hence the impracticability of their being copied but
at Monticello. But independent of them, the printed laws, beginning
in 1682, with all our former printed collections, will be a most
valuable publication, & sufficiently distinct. I shall have no doubt
of the exactness of your part of the work, but I hope you will take
measures for having the typography & paper worthy of the work. I am
lead to this caution by the scandalous volume of our laws printed by
Pleasants in 1803, & those by Davis, in 1796 were little better; both
unworthy the history of Tom Thumb. You can have them better &
cheaper printed anywhere north of Richmond.
Accept my salutations &
assurances of respect.
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