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To G. K. van Hogendorp Paris, Oct. 13, 1785
DEAR SIR, -- Having been much engaged lately, I have been
unable sooner to acknolege the receipt of your favor of Sep. 8. What
you are pleased to say on the subject of my Notes is more than they
deserve. The condition in which you first saw them would prove to
you how hastily they had been originally written; as you may remember
the numerous insertions I had made in them from time to time, when I
could find a moment for turning to them from other occupations. I
have never yet seen Monsr. de Buffon. He has been in the country all
the summer. I sent him a copy of the book, & have only heard his
sentiments on one particular of it, that of the identity of the
Mammoth & Elephant. As to this he retains his opinion that they are
the same. If you had formed any considerable expectations from our
Revised code of laws you will be much disappointed. It contains not
more than three or four laws which could strike the attention of the
foreigner. Had it been a digest of all our laws, it would not have
been comprehensible or instructive but to a native. But it is still
less so, as it digests only the British statutes & our own acts of
assembly, which are but a supplementary part of our law. The great
basis of it is anterior to the date of the Magna charta, which is the
oldest statute extant. The only merit of this work is that it may
remove from our book shelves about twenty folio volumes of our
statutes, retaining all the parts of them which either their own
merit or the established system of laws required.
You ask me what are those operations of the British nation
which are likely to befriend us, and how they will produce this
effect? The British government as you may naturally suppose have it
much at heart to reconcile their nation to the loss of America. This
is essential to the repose, perhaps even to the safety of the King &
his ministers. The most effectual engines for this purpose are the
public papers. You know well that that government always kept a kind
of standing army of news writers who without any regard to truth, or
to what should be like truth, invented & put into the papers whatever
might serve the minister. This suffices with the mass of the people
who have no means of distinguishing the false from the true
paragraphs of a newspaper. When forced to acknolege our independance
they were forced to redouble their efforts to keep the nation quiet.
Instead of a few of the papers formerly engaged, they now engaged
every one. No paper therefore comes out without a dose of paragraphs
against America. These are calculated for a secondary purpose also,
that of preventing the emigrations of their people to America. They
dwell very much on American bankruptcies. To explain these would
require a long detail, but would shew you that nine tenths of these
bankruptcies are truly English bankruptcies in no wise chargeable on
America. However they have produced effects the most desirable of
all others for us. They have destroyed our credit & thus checked our
disposition to luxury; & forcing our merchants to buy no more than
they have ready money to pay for, they force them to go to those
markets where that ready money will buy most. Thus you see they
check our luxury, they force us to connect ourselves with all the
world, & they prevent foreign emigrations to our country all of which
I consider as advantageous to us. They are doing us another good
turn. They attempt without disguise to possess themselves of the
carriage of our produce, & to prohibit our own vessels from
participating of it. This has raised a general indignation in
America. The states see however that their constitutions have
provided no means of counteracting it. They are therefore beginning
to invest Congress with the absolute power of regulating their
commerce, only reserving all revenue arising from it to the state in
which it is levied. This will consolidate our federal building very
much, and for this we shall be indebted to the British.
You ask what I think on the expediency of encouraging our
states to be commercial? Were I to indulge my own theory, I should
wish them to practise neither commerce nor navigation, but to stand
with respect to Europe precisely on the footing of China. We should
thus avoid wars, and all our citizens would be husbandmen. Whenever
indeed our numbers should so increase as that our produce would
overstock the markets of those nations who should come to seek it,
the farmers must either employ the surplus of their time in
manufactures, or the surplus of our hands must be employed in
manufactures, or in navigation. But that day would, I think be
distant, and we should long keep our workmen in Europe, while Europe
should be drawing rough materials & even subsistence from America.
But this is theory only, & a theory which the servants of America are
not at liberty to follow. Our people have a decided taste for
navigation & commerce. They take this from their mother country: &
their servants are in duty bound to calculate all their measures on
this datum: we wish to do it by throwing open all the doors of
commerce & knocking off its shackles. But as this cannot be done for
others, unless they will do it for us, & there is no great
probability that Europe will do this, I suppose we shall be obliged
to adopt a system which may shackle them in our ports as they do us
in theirs.
With respect to the sale of our lands, that cannot begin till a
considerable portion shall have been surveyed. They cannot begin to
survey till the fall of the leaf of this year, nor to sell probably
till the ensuing spring. So that it will be yet a twelve-month
before we shall be able to judge of the efficacy of our land office
to sink our national debt. It is made a fundamental that the
proceeds shall be solely & sacredly applied as a sinking fund to
discharge the capital only of the debt. It is true that the tobaccos
of Virginia go almost entirely to England. The reason is that they
owe a great debt there which they are paying as fast as they can. --
I think I have now answered your several queries, & shall be happy to
receive your reflections on the same subjects, & at all times to hear
of your welfare & to give you assurances of the esteem with which I
have the honor to be Dear Sir your most obedient & most humble servant.
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