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To James Madison Paris, Feb. 8, 1786
DEAR SIR, -- My last letters have been of the 1st & 20th of
Sep. and the 28th of Oct. Yours unacknowledged are of Aug. 20, Oct.
3, & Nov. 15. I take this the first safe opportunity of enclosing to
you the bills of lading for your books, & two others for your
namesake of Williamsburgh & for the attorney which I will pray you to
forward. I thank you for the communication of the remonstrance
against the assessment. Mazzei who is now in Holland promised me to
have it published in the Leyden gazette. It will do us great honour.
I wish it may be as much approved by our assembly as by the wisest
part of Europe. I have heard with great pleasure that our assembly
have come to the resolution of giving the regulation of their
commerce to the federal head. I will venture to assert that there is
not one of it's opposers who, placed on this ground, would not see
the wisdom of this measure. The politics of Europe render it
indispensably necessary that with respect to everything external we
be one nation only, firmly hooped together. Interior government is
what each state should keep to itself. If it could be seen in Europe
that all our states could be brought to concur in what the Virginia
assembly has done, it would produce a total revolution in their
opinion of us, and respect for us. And it should ever be held in
mind that insult & war are the consequences of a want of
respectability in the national character. As long as the states
exercise separately those acts of power which respect foreign
nations, so long will there continue to be irregularities committing
by some one or other of them which will constantly keep us on an ill
footing with foreign nations.
I thank you for your information as to my Notes. The copies I
have remaining shall be sent over to be given to some of my friends
and to select subjects in the college. I have been unfortunate here
with this trifle. I gave out a few copies only, & to confidential
persons, writing in every copy a restraint against it's publication.
Among others I gave a copy to a Mr. Williamos. He died. I
immediately took every precaution I could to recover this copy. But
by some means or other a bookseller had got hold of it. He employed
a hireling translator and was about publishing it in the most
injurious form possible. An Abbe Morellet, a man of letters here to
whom I had given a copy, got notice of this. He had translated some
passages for a particular purpose: and he compounded with the
bookseller to translate & give him the whole, on his declining the
first publication. I found it necessary to confirm this, and it will
be published in French, still mutilated however in it's freest parts.
I am now at a loss what to do as to England. Everything, good or
bad, is thought worth publishing there; and I apprehend a translation
back from the French, and a publication there. I rather believe it
will be most eligible to let the original come out in that country;
but am not yet decided.
I have purchased little for you in the book way, since I sent
the catalogue of my former purchases. I wish first to have your
answer to that, and your information what parts of those purchases
went out of your plan. You can easily say buy more of this kind,
less of that &c. My wish is to conform myself to yours. I can get
for you the original Paris edition in folio of the Encyclopedie for
620 livres, 35. vols.; a good edn in 39 vols, 4to, for 380#; and a
good one in 39 vols 8vo, for 280#. The new one will be superior in
far the greater number of articles: but not in all. And the
possession of the ancient one has moreover the advantage of supplying
present use. I have bought one for myself, but wait your orders as
to you. I remember your purchase of a watch in Philadelphia. If it
should not have proved good, you can probably sell her. In that case
I can get for you here, one made as perfect as human art can make it
for about 24 louis. I have had such a one made by the best & most
faithful hand in Paris. It has a second hand, but no repeating, no
day of the month, nor other useless thing to impede and injure the
movements which are necessary. For 12 louis more you can have in the
same cover, but on the back side & absolutely unconnected with the
movements of the watch, a pedometer which shall render you an exact
account of the distances you walk. Your pleasure hereon shall be
awaited.
Houdon is returned. He called on me the other day to
remonstrate against the inscription proposed for Genl W.'s statue.
He says it is too long to be put on the pedestal. I told him I was
not at liberty to permit any alteration, but I would represent his
objection to a friend who could judge of it's validity, and whether a
change could be authorized. This has been the subject of
conversations here, and various devices & inscriptions have been
suggested. The one which has appeared best to me may be translated
as follows: "Behold, Reader, the form of George Washington. For his
worth, ask History: that will tell it, when this stone shall have
yielded to the decays of time. His country erects this monument:
Houdon makes it." This for one side. On the 2d represent the
evacuation of Boston with the motto "Hostibus primum fugatis." On the
3d the capture of the Hessians with "Hostibus iterum devictis." On
the 4th the surrender of York, with "Hostibus ultimum debellatis."
This is seizing the three most brilliant actions of his military
life. By giving out here a wish of receiving mottos for this statue,
we might have thousands offered, of which still better might be
chosen. The artist made the same objection of length to the
inscription for the bust of the M. de la Fayette. An alteration of
that might come in time still, if an alteration was wished. However
I am not certain that it is desirable in either case. The state of
Georgia has given 20.000 acres of land to the Count d' Estaing. This
gift is considered here as very honourable to him, and it has
gratified him much. I am persuaded that a gift of lands by the state
of Virginia to the Marquis de la Fayette would give a good opinion
here of our character, and would reflect honour on the Marquis. Nor
am I sure that the day will not come when it might be an useful
asylum to him. The time of life at which he visited America was too
well adapted to receive good & lasting impressions to permit him ever
to accommodate himself to the principles of monarchical government;
and it will need all his own prudence & that of his friends to make
this country a safe residence for him. How glorious, how comfortable
in reflection will it be to have prepared a refuge for him in case of
a reverse. In the meantime he could settle it with tenants from the
freest part of this country, Bretagny. I have never suggested the
smallest idea of this kind to him: because the execution of it should
convey the first notice. If the state has not a right to give him
lands with their own officers, they could buy up at cheap prices the
shares of others. I am not certain however whether in the public or
private opinion, a similar gift to Count Rochambeau could be
dispensed with. If the state could give to both, it would be better:
but in any event, I think they should to the Marquis. C. Rochambeau
too has really deserved more attention than he has received. Why not
set up his bust, that of Gates, Greene, Franklin in your new capitol?
A propos of the Capitol. Do my dear friend exert yourself to get the
plan begun on set aside, & that adopted which was drawn here. It was
taken from a model which has been the admiration of 16. centuries,
which has been the object of as many pilgrimages as the tomb of
Mahomet: which will give unrivalled honour to our state, and furnish
a model whereon to form the taste of our young men. It will cost
much less too than the one begun, because it does not cover one half
the Area. Ask, if you please, a sight of my letter of Jan. 26 to
Messrs. Buchanan & Hay, which will spare me the repeating its
substance here.
Everything is quiet in Europe. I recollect but one new
invention in the arts which is worth mentioning. It is a mixture of
the arts of engraving & printing, rendering both cheaper. Write or
draw anything on a plate of brass with the ink of the inventor, and
in half an hour he gives you engraved copies of it so perfectly like
the original that they could not be suspected to be copies. His
types for printing a whole page are all in one solid piece. An
author therefore only prints a few copies of his work from time to
time as they are called for. This saves the loss of printing more
copies than may possibly be sold, and prevents an edition from being
ever exhausted.
I am with a lively esteem Dear Sir, your sincere friend &
servant.
P. S. Could you procure & send me an hundred or two nuts of the
peccan? they would enable me to oblige some characters here whom I
should be much gratified to oblige. They should come packed in sand.
The seeds of the sugar maple too would be a great present.
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