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To Archibald Stuart Paris, Jan. 25, 1786
DEAR SIR, -- I have received your favor of the 17th of October,
which though you mention as the third you have written me, is the
first which has come to hand. I sincerely thank you for the
communications it contains. Nothing is so grateful to me at this
distance as details both great & small of what is passing in my own
country. Of the latter we receive little here, because they either
escape my correspondents or are thought unworthy notice. This
however is a very mistaken opinion, as every one may observe by
recollecting that when he has been long absent from his neighborhood
the small news of that is the most pleasing and occupies his first
attention either when he meets with a person from thence, or returns
thither himself. I shall hope therefore that the letter in which you
have been so good as to give me the minute occurrences in the
neighborhood of Monticello may yet come to hand. And I venture to
rely on the many proofs of friendship I have received from you, for a
continuance of your favors. This will be the most meritorious as I
have nothing to give you in exchange. The quiet of Europe at this
moment furnishes little which can attract your notice. Nor will that
quiet be soon disturbed, at least for the current year. Perhaps it
hangs on the life of the K. of Prussia, and that hangs by a very
slender thread. American reputation in Europe is not such as to be
flattering to its citizens. Two circumstances are particularly
objected to us, the nonpaiment of our debts, and the want of energy
in our government. These discourage a connection with us. I own it
to be my opinion that good will arise from the destruction of our
credit. I see nothing else which can restrain our disposition to
luxury, and the loss of those manners which alone can preserve
republican government. As it is impossible to prevent credit, the
best way would be to cure it's ill effects by giving an instantaneous
recovery to the creditor; this would be reducing purchases on credit
to purchases for ready money. A man would then see a poison painted
on everything he wished but had not ready money to pay for. I fear
from an expression in your letter that the people of Kentucke think
of separating not only from Virginia (in which they are right) but
also from the confederacy. I own I should think this a most
calametous event, and such an one as every good citizen on both sides
should set himself against. Our present federal limits are not too
large for good government, nor will the increase of votes in Congress
produce any ill effect. On the contrary it will drown the little
divisions at present existing there. Our confederacy must be viewed
as the nest from which all America, North & South is to be peopled.
We should take care too, not to think it for the interest of that
great continent to press too soon on the Spaniards. Those countries
cannot be in better hands. My fear is that they are too feeble to
hold them till our population can be sufficiently advanced to gain it
from them piece by piece. The navigation of the Mississippi we must
have. This is all we are as yet ready to receive. I have made
acquaintance with a very sensible candid gentleman here who was in
South America during the revolt which took place there while our
revolution was working. He says that those disturbances (of which we
scarcely heard anything) cost on both sides an hundred thousand
lives. -- I have made a particular acquaintance here with Monsieur
de Buffon, and have a great desire to give him the best idea I can of
our elk. Perhaps your situation may enable you to aid me in this.
Were it possible, you could not oblige me more than by sending me the
horns, skeleton, & skin of an elk. The most desireable form of
receiving them would be to have the skin slit from the under paw
along the belly to the tail, & down the thighs to the knee, to take
the animal out, leaving the legs and hoofs, the bones of the head, &
the horns attached to the skin by sewing up the belly & shipping the
skin it would present the form of the animal. However as an
opportunity of doing this is scarcely expected I shall be glad to
receive them detached, packed in a box, & sent to Richmond to the
care of Doctor Currie. Every thing of this kind is precious here,
and to prevent my adding to your trouble I must close my letter with
assurances of the esteem & attachment with which I am Dr Sir Your friend & servt.
P. S. I must add a prayer for some Peccan nuts, 100, if
possible, to be packed in a box of sand and sent me. They might come
either directly or via N. York.
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