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To Alexander von Humboldt December 6, 1813
MY DEAR FRIEND AND BARON,-- I have to acknowledge your two
letters of December 20 and 26, 1811, by Mr. Correa, and am first to
thank you for making me acquainted with that most excellent
character. He was so kind as to visit me at Monticello, and I found
him one of the most learned and amiable of men. It was a subject of
deep regret to separate from so much worth in the moment of its
becoming known to us.
The livraison of your astronomical observations, and the 6th
and 7th on the subject of New Spain, with the corresponding atlasses,
are duly received, as had been the preceding cahiers. For these
treasures of a learning so interesting to us, accept my sincere
thanks. I think it most fortunate that your travels in those
countries were so timed as to make them known to the world in the
moment they were about to become actors on its stage. That they will
throw off their European dependence I have no doubt; but in what kind
of government their revolution will end I am not so certain.
History, I believe, furnishes no example of a priest-ridden people
maintaining a free civil government. This marks the lowest grade of
ignorance, of which their civil as well as religious leaders will
always avail themselves for their own purposes. The vicinity of New
Spain to the United States, and their consequent intercourse, may
furnish schools for the higher, and example for the lower classes of
their citizens. And Mexico, where we learn from you that men of
science are not wanting, may revolutionize itself under better
auspices than the Southern provinces. These last, I fear, must end
in military despotisms. The different casts of their inhabitants,
their mutual hatreds and jealousies, their profound ignorance and
bigotry, will be played off by cunning leaders, and each be made the
instrument of enslaving others. But of all this you can best judge,
for in truth we have little knowledge of them to be depended on, but
through you. But in whatever governments they end they will be
American governments, no longer to be involved in the never-ceasing
broils of Europe. The European nations constitute a separate
division of the globe; their localities make them part of a distinct
system; they have a set of interests of their own in which it is our
business never to engage ourselves. America has a hemisphere to
itself. It must have its separate system of interests, which must
not be subordinated to those of Europe. The insulated state in which
nature has placed the American continent, should so far avail it that
no spark of war kindled in the other quarters of the globe should be
wafted across the wide oceans which separate us from them. And it
will be so. In fifty years more the United States alone will contain
fifty millions of inhabitants, and fifty years are soon gone over.
The peace of 1763 is within that period. I was then twenty years
old, and of course remember well all the transactions of the war
preceding it. And you will live to see the epoch now equally ahead
of us; and the numbers which will then be spread over the other parts
of the American hemisphere, catching long before that the principles
of our portion of it, and concurring with us in the maintenance of
the same system. You see how readily we run into ages beyond the
grave; and even those of us to whom that grave is already opening its
quiet bosom. I am anticipating events of which you will be the
bearer to me in the Elsyian fields fifty years hence.
You know, my friend, the benevolent plan we were pursuing here
for the happiness of the aboriginal inhabitants in our vicinities.
We spared nothing to keep them at peace with one another. To teach
them agriculture and the rudiments of the most necessary arts, and to
encourage industry by establishing among them separate property. In
this way they would have been enabled to subsist and multiply on a
moderate scale of landed possession. They would have mixed their
blood with ours, and been amalgamated and identified with us within
no distant period of time. On the commencement of our present war,
we pressed on them the observance of peace and neutrality, but the
interested and unprincipled policy of England has defeated all our
labors for the salvation of these unfortunate people. They have
seduced the greater part of the tribes within our neighborhood, to
take up the hatchet against us, and the cruel massacres they have
committed on the women and children of our frontiers taken by
surprise, will oblige us now to pursue them to extermination, or
drive them to new seats beyond our reach. Already we have driven
their patrons and seducers into Montreal, and the opening season will
force them to their last refuge, the walls of Quebec. We have cut
off all possibility of intercourse and of mutual aid, and may pursue
at our leisure whatever plan we find necessary to secure ourselves
against the future effects of their savage and ruthless warfare. The
confirmed brutalization, if not the extermination of this race in our
America, is therefore to form an additional chapter in the English
history of the same colored man in Asia, and of the brethren of their
own color in Ireland, and wherever else Anglo-mercantile cupidity can
find a two-penny interest in deluging the earth with human blood.
But let us turn from the loathsome contemplation of the degrading
effects of commercial avarice.
That their Arrowsmith should have stolen your Map of Mexico,
was in the piratical spirit of his country. But I should be
sincerely sorry if our Pike has made an ungenerous use of your candid
communications here; and the more so as he died in the arms of
victory gained over the enemies of his country. Whatever he did was
on a principle of enlarging knowledge, and not for filthy shillings
and pence of which he made none from that work. If what he has
borrowed has any effect it will be to excite an appeal in his readers
from his defective information to the copious volumes of it with
which you have enriched the world. I am sorry he omitted even to
acknowledge the source of his information. It has been an oversight,
and not at all in the spirit of his generous nature. Let me solicit
your forgiveness then of a deceased hero, of an honest and zealous
patriot, who lived and died for his country.
You will find it inconceivable that Lewis's journey to the
Pacific should not yet have appeared; nor is it in my power to tell
you the reason. The measures taken by his surviving companion,
Clarke, for the publication, have not answered our wishes in point of
despatch. I think, however, from what I have heard, that the mere
journal will be out within a few weeks in two volumes 8vo. These I
will take care to send you with the tobacco seed you desired, if it
be possible for them to escape the thousand ships of our enemies
spread over the ocean. The botanical and zoological discoveries of
Lewis will probably experience greater delay, and become known to the
world through other channels before that volume will be ready. The
Atlas, I believe, waits on the leisure of the engraver.
Although I do not know whether you are now at Paris or ranging
the regions of Asia to acquire more knowledge for the use of men, I
cannot deny myself the gratification of an endeavor to recall myself
to your recollection, and of assuring you of my constant attachment,
and of renewing to you the just tribute of my affectionate esteem and
high respect and consideration.
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