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To James Monroe Paris, June 17, 1785
DEAR SIR, -- I received three days ago your favor of Apr. 12.
You therein speak of a former letter to me, but it has not come to
hand, nor any other of later date than the 14th of December. My last
letter to you was of the 11th of May by Mr. Adams who went in the
packet of that month. These conveiances are now becoming deranged.
We have had expectations of their coming to Havre which would
infinitely facilitate the communication between Paris & Congress: but
their deliberations on the subject seem to be taking another turn.
They complain of the expence, and that their commerce with us is too
small to justify it. They therefore talk of sending a packet every
six weeks only. The present one therefore, which should have sailed
about this time, will not sail until the 1st of July. However the
whole matter is as yet undecided. I have hoped that when Mr. St.
John arrives from N. York he will get them replaced on their monthly
system. By the bye what is the meaning of a very angry resolution of
Congress on this subject? I have it not by me and therefore cannot
cite it by date, but you will remember it, and will oblige me by
explaining it's foundation. This will be handed you by Mr. Otto who
comes to America as Charge des Affaires in the room of Mr. Marbois
promoted to the Intendancy of Hispaniola, which office is next to
that of Governor. He becomes the head of the civil as the Governor
is of the military department. I am much pleased with Otto's
appointment. He is good humored, affectionate to America, will see
things in a friendly light when they admit of it, in a rational one
always, and will not pique himself on writing every trifling
circumstance of irritation to his court. I wish you to be acquainted
with him, as a friendly intercourse between individuals who do
business together produces a mutual spirit of accommodation useful to
both parties. It is very much our interest to keep up the affection
of this country for us, which is considerable. A court has no
affections, but those of the people whom they govern influence their
decisions even in the most arbitrary governments. -- The negociations
between the Emperor & Dutch are spun out to an amazing length. At
present there is no apprehension but that they will terminate in
peace. This court seems to press it with ardour and the Dutch are
averse considering the terms cruel & unjust as they evidently are.
The present delays therefore are imputed to their coldness & to their
forms. In the mean time the Turk is delaying the demarcation of
limits between him and the emperor, is making the most vigorous
preparations for war, and has composed his ministry of war-like
characters deemed personally hostile to the emperor. Thus time seems
to be spinning outboth by the Dutch & Turks, & time is wanting for
France. Every year's delay is a great thing to her. It is not
impossible therefore but that she may secretly encourage the delays
of the Dutch & hasten the preparations of the Porte while she is
recovering vigour herself and, in order to be able to present such a
combination to the emperor as may dictate to him to be quiet. But
the designs of these courts are inscrutable. It is our interest to
pray that this country may have no continental war till our peace
with England is perfectly settled. The merchants of this country
continue as loud & furious as ever against the Arret of August,
permitting our commerce with their islands to a certain degree. Many
of them have actually abandoned their trade. The Ministry are
disposed to be firm, but there is a point at which they will give
way, that is if the clamours should become such as to endanger their
places. It is evident that nothing can be done by us, at this time,
if we may hope it hereafter. I like your removal to N. York, and
hope Congress will continue there and never execute the idea of
building their federal town. Before it could be finished a change of
Members in Congress or the admission of new states would remove them
somewhere else. It is evident that when a sufficient number of the
Western states come in they will remove it to George town. In the
mean time it is our interest that it should remain where it is, and
give no new pretensions to any other place. I am also much pleased
with the proposition to the states to invest Congress with the
regulation of their trade, reserving it's revenue to the states. I
think it a happy idea, removing the only objection which could have
been justly made to the proposition. The time too is the present,
before the admission of the Western states. I am very differently
affected towards the new plan of opening our land office by dividing
the lands among the states and selling them at vendue. It separates
still more the interests of the states which ought to be made joint
in every possible instance in order to cultivate the idea of our
being one nation, and to multiply the instances in which the people
shall look up to Congress as their head. And when the states get
their portions they will either fool them away, or make a job of it
to serve individuals. Proofs of both these practices have been
furnished, and by either of them that invaluable fund is lost which
ought to pay our public debt. To sell them at vendue, is to give
them to the bidders of the day be they many or few. It is ripping up
the hen which lays golden eggs. If sold in lots at a fixed price as
first proposed, the best lots will be sold first. As these become
occupied it gives a value to the interjacent ones, and raises them,
tho' of inferior quality, to the price of the first. I send you by
Mr. Otto a copy of my book. Be so good as to apologize to Mr.
Thomson for my not sending him one by this conveiance. I could not
burthen Mr. Otto with more on so long a road as that from here to
l'Orient. I will send him one by a Mr. Williams who will go ere
long. I have taken measures to prevent it's publication. My reason
is that I fear the terms in which I speak of slavery and of our
constitution may produce an irritation which will revolt the minds of
our countrymen against reformation in these two articles, and thus do
more harm than good. I have asked of Mr. Madison to sound this
matter as far as he can, and if he thinks it will not produce that
effect, I have then copies enough printed to give one to each of the
young men at the college, and to my friends in the country.
I am sorry to see a possibility of A. L.'s being put into
the Treasury. He has no talents for the office, and what he
has will be employed in rummaging old accounts to involve you
in eternal war with R. M. and he will in a short time introduce
such dissensions into the Commission as to break it up. If he
goes on the other appointment to Kaskaskia he will produce a
revolt of that settlement from the U. S. I thank you for your
attention to my outfit. For the articles of household
furniture, clothes, and a carriage, I have already paid 28,000
livres and have still more to pay. For the greatest part of
this I have been obliged to anticipate my salary from which
however I shall never be able to repay it. I find that by a
rigid economy, bordering however on meanness I can save
perhaps $500 a month, at least in the summer. The residue
goes for expences so much of course & of necessity that I
cannot avoid them without abandoning all respect to my public
character. Yet I will pray you to touch this string, which I
know to be a tender one with Congress with the utmost delicacy.
I had rather be ruined in my fortune, than in their esteem. If
they allow me half a year's salary as an outfit I can get
through my debts in time. If they raise the salary to what it
was, or even pay our house rent & taxes, I can live with more
decency. I trust that Mr. A.'s house at the Hague & Dr. F.'s
at Passy the rent of which had been always allowed him will
give just expectations of the same allowance to me. Mr. Jay
however did not charge it. But he lived oeconomically and laid up
money. I will take the liberty of hazarding to you some thoughts on
the policy of entering into treaties with the European nations, and
the nature of them. I am not wedded to these ideas, and therefore
shall relinquish them chearfully when Congress shall adopt others,
and zealously endeavor to carry theirs into effect. First as to the
policy of making treaties. Congress, by the Confederation have no
original and inherent power over the commerce of the states. But by
the 9'th. article they are authorized to enter into treaties of
commerce. The moment these treaties are concluded the jurisdiction
of Congress over the commerce of the states springs into existence,
and that of the particular states is superseded so far as the
articles of the treaty may have taken up the subject. There are two
restrictions only on the exercise of the power of treaty by Congress.
1'st. that they shall not by such treaty restrain the legislatures of
the states from imposing such duties on foreigners as their own
people are subject to. 2'dly. nor from prohibiting the exportation or
importation of any particular species of goods. Leaving these two
points free, Congress may by treaty establish any system of commerce
they please. But, as I before observed, it is by treaty alone they
can do it. Though they may exercise their other powers by resolution
or ordinance, those over commerce can only be exercised by forming a
treaty, and this probably by an accidental wording of our
Confederation. If therefore it is better for the states that
Congress should regulate their commerce, it is proper that they
should form treaties with all nations with whom we may possibly
trade. You see that my primary object in the formation of treaties
is to take the commerce of the states out of the hands of the states,
and to place it under the superintendence of Congress, so far as the
imperfect provisions of our constitution will admit, and until the
states shall by new compact make them more perfect. I would say then
to every nation on earth, by treaty, your people shall trade freely
with us, & ours with you, paying no more than the most favoured
nation, in order to put an end to the right of individual states
acting by fits and starts to interrupt our commerce or to embroil us
with any nation. As to the terms of these treaties, the question
becomes more difficult. I will mention three different plans. 1.
that no duties shall be laid by either party on the productions of
the other. 2. that each may be permitted to equalize their duties to
those laid by the other. 3. that each shall pay in the ports of the
other such duties only as the most favoured nations pay. 1. Were the
nations of Europe as free and unembarrassed of established system as
we are, I do verily believe they would concur with us in the first
plan. But it is impossible. These establishments are fixed upon
them, they are interwoven with the body of their laws & the
organization of their government & they make a great part of their
revenue; they cannot then get rid of them. 2. The plan of equal
imposts presents difficulties insurmountable. For how are the equal
imposts to be effected? Is it by laying in the ports of A. an equal
percent on the goods of B. with that which B. has laid in his ports
on the goods of A.? But how are we to find what is that percent?
For this is not the usual form of imposts. They generally pay by the
ton, by the measure, by the weight, & not by the value. Besides if
A. sends a million's worth of goods to B. & takes back but the half
of that, and each pays the same percent, it is evident that A. pays
the double of what he recovers in the same way with B. This would be
our case with Spain. Shall we endeavour to effect equality then by
saying A. may levy so much on the sum of B.'s importations into his
ports, as B. does on the sum of A's importations into the ports of
B.? But how find out that sum? Will either party lay open their
custom house books candidly to evince this sum? Does either keep
their books so exactly as to be able to do it? This proposition was
started in Congress when our institutions were formed, as you may
remember, and the impossibility of executing it occasioned it to be
disapproved. Besides who should have a right of deciding when the
imposts were equal. A. would say to B. my imposts do not raise so
much as yours; I raise them therefore. B. would then say you have
made them greater than mine, I will raise mine, and thus a kind of
auction would be carried on between them, and a mutual imitation,
which would end in anything sooner than equality, and right. 3. I
confess then to you that I see no alternative left but that which
Congress adopted, of each party placing the other on the footing of
the most favoured nation. If the nations of Europe from their actual
establishments are not at liberty to say to America that she shall
trade in their ports duty free they may say she may trade there
paying no higher duties than the most favoured nation. And this is
valuable in many of these countries where a very great difference is
made between different nations. There is no difficulty in the
execution of this contract, because there is not a merchant who does
not know, or may not know, the duty paid by every nation on every
article. This stipulation leaves each party at liberty to regulate
their own commerce by general rules; while it secures the other from
partial and oppressive discriminations. The difficulty which arises
in our case is, with the nations having American territory. Access
to the West Indies is indispensably necessary to us. Yet how to gain
it, when it is the established system of these nations to exclude all
foreigners from their colonies. The only chance seems to be this,
our commerce to the mother countries is valuable to them. We must
endeavor then to make this the price of an admission into their West
Indies, and to those who refuse the admission we must refuse our
commerce or load theirs by odious discriminations in our ports. We
have this circumstance in our favour too, that what one grants us in
their islands, the others will not find it worth their while to
refuse. The misfortune is that with this country we gave this price
for their aid in the war, and we have now nothing more to offer. She
being withdrawn from the competition leaves Gr. Britain much more at
liberty to hold out against us. This is the difficult part of the
business of treaty, and I own it does not hold out the most
flattering prospect. -- I wish you would consider this subject and
write me your thoughts on it. Mr. Gherry wrote me on the same
subject. Will you give me leave to impose on you the trouble of
communicating this to him? It is long, and will save me much labour
in copying. I hope he will be so indulgent as to consider it as an
answer to that part of his letter, and will give me his further
thoughts on it.
Shall I send you so much of the Encyclopedia as is already
published or reserve it here till you come? It is about 40 vols.
which probably is about half the work. Give yourself no uneasiness
about the money. Perhaps I may find it convenient to ask you to pay
trifles occasionally for me in America. I sincerely wish you may
find it convenient to come here. The pleasure of the trip will be
less than you expect but the utility greater. It will make you adore
your own country, it's soil, it's climate, it's equality, liberty,
laws, people & manners. My God! how little do my country men know
what precious blessings they are in possession of, and which no other
people on earth enjoy. I confess I had no idea of it myself. While
we shall see multiplied instances of Europeans going to live in
America, I will venture to say no man now living will ever see an
instance of an American removing to settle in Europe & continuing
there. Come then & see the proofs of this, and on your return add
your testimony to that of every thinking American, in order to
satisfy our countrymen how much it is their interest to preserve
uninfected by contagion those peculiarities in their government &
manners to which they are indebted for these blessings. Adieu, my
dear friend. Present me affectionately to your collegues. If any of
them think me worth writing to, they may be assured that in the
epistolary account I will keep the debit side against them. Once
more adieu.
June 19. Since writing the above we receive the following
account. Mons. Pilatre de Rosiere, who has been waiting some months
at Boulogne for a fair wind to cross the channel, at length took his
ascent with a companion. The wind changed after a while and brought
him back on the French coast. Being at a height of about 6000 f.
some accident happened to his baloon of inflammable air. It burst,
they fell from that height & were crushed to atoms. There was a
Montgolfier combined with the baloon of inflammable air. It is
suspected the heat of the Montgolfier rarified too much the
inflammable air of the other & occasioned it to burst. The
Montgolfier came down in good order.
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