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To Madame de Tesse December 8, 1813
While at war, my dear Madam and friend, with the leviathan of
the ocean, there is little hope of a letter escaping his thousand
ships; yet I cannot permit myself longer to withhold the
acknowledgment of your letter of June 28 of the last year, with which
came the memoirs of the Margrave of Bareuth. I am much indebted to
you for this singular morsel of history which has given us a certain
view of kings, queens and princes, disrobed of their formalities. It
is a peep into the state of the Egyptian god Apis. It would not be
easy to find grosser manners, coarser vices, or more meanness in the
poorest huts of our peasantry. The princess shows herself the
legitimate sister of Frederic, cynical, selfish, and without a heart.
Notwithstanding your wars with England, I presume you get the
publications of that country. The memoirs of Mrs. Clarke and of her
_darling_ prince, and the book emphatically so called, because it is
the Biblia Sacra Deorum et Dearum sub-coelestium, the Prince Regent,
his Princess and the minor deities of his sphere, form a worthy
sequel to the memoirs of Bareuth; instead of the vulgarity and penury
of the court of Berlin, giving us the vulgarity and profusion of that
of London, and the gross stupidity and profligacy of the latter, in
lieu of the genius and misanthropism of the former. The whole might
be published as a supplement of M. de Buffon, under the title of the
"Natural History of Kings and Princes," or as a separate work and
called "Medicine for Monarchists." The "Intercepted Letters," a later
English publication of great wit and humor, has put them to their
proper use by holding them up as butts for the ridicule and contempt
of mankind. Yet by such worthless beings is a great nation to be
governed and even made to deify their old king because he is only a
fool and a maniac, and to forgive and forget his having lost to them
a great and flourishing empire, added nine hundred millions sterling
to their debt, for which the fee simple of the whole island would not
sell, if offered farm by farm at public auction, and increased their
annual taxes from eight to seventy millions sterling, more than the
whole rent-roll of the island. What must be the dreary prospect from
the son when such a father is deplored as a national loss. But let
us drop these odious beings and pass to those of an higher order, the
plants of the field. I am afraid I have given you a great deal more
trouble than I intended by my inquiries for the Maronnier or Castanea
Sativa, of which I wished to possess my own country, without knowing
how rare its culture was even in yours. The two plants which your
researches have placed in your own garden, it will be all but
impossible to remove hither. The war renders their safe passage
across the Atlantic extremely precarious, and, if landed anywhere but
in the Chesapeake, the risk of the additional voyage along the coast
to Virginia, is still greater. Under these circumstances it is
better they should retain their present station, and compensate to
you the trouble they have cost you.
I learn with great pleasure the success of your new gardens at
Auenay. No occupation can be more delightful or useful. They will
have the merit of inducing you to forget those of Chaville. With the
botanical riches which you mention to have been derived to England
from New Holland, we are as yet unacquainted. Lewis's journey across
our continent to the Pacific has added a number of new plants to our
former stock. Some of them are curious, some ornamental, some
useful, and some may by culture be made acceptable to our tables. I
have growing, which I destine for you, a very handsome little shrub
of the size of a currant bush. Its beauty consists in a great
produce of berries of the size of currants, and literally as white as
snow, which remain on the bush through the winter, after its leaves
have fallen, and make it an object as singular as it is beautiful.
We call it the snow-berry bush, no botanical name being yet given to
it, but I do not know why we might not call it Chionicoccos, or
Kallicoccos. All Lewis's plants are growing in the garden of Mr.
McMahon, a gardener of Philadelphia, to whom I consigned them, and
from whom I shall have great pleasure, when peace is restored, in
ordering for you any of these or of our other indigenous plants. The
port of Philadelphia has great intercourse with Bordeaux and Nantes,
and some little perhaps with Havre. I was mortified not long since
by receiving a letter from a merchant in Bordeaux, apologizing for
having suffered a box of plants addressed by me to you, to get
accidentally covered in his warehouse by other objects, and to remain
three years undiscovered, when every thing in it was found to be
rotten. I have learned occasionally that others rotted in the
warehouses of the English pirates. We are now settling that account
with them. We have taken their Upper Canada and shall add the Lower
to it when the season will admit; and hope to remove them fully and
finally from our continent. And what they will feel more, for they
value their colonies only for the bales of cloth they take from them,
we have established manufactures, not only sufficient to supersede
our demand from them, but to rivalize them in foreign markets. But
for the course of our war I will refer you to M. de La Fayette, to
whom I state it more particularly.
Our friend Mr. Short is well. He makes Philadelphia his winter
quarters, and New York or the country, those of the summer. In his
fortune he is perfectly independent and at ease, and does not trouble
himself with the party politics of our country.
Will you permit me
to place here for M. de Tesse the testimony of my high esteem and
respect, and accept for yourself an assurance of the warm
recollections I retain of your many civilities and courtesies to me,
and the homage of my constant and affectionate attachment and
respect.
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