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To John Page Paris, May 4, 1786
DEAR SIR, -- Your two favours of Mar 15 and Aug 23, 1785, by
Monsieur de la Croix came to hand on the 15th of November. His
return gives me an opportunity of sending you a copy of the nautical
almanacs for 1786, 7, 8, 9. There is no late and interesting
publication here, or I would send it by the same conveiance. With
these almanacs I pack a copy of some Notes I wrote for Monsr de
Marbois in the year 1781, of which I had a few printed here. They
were written in haste & for his private inspection. A few friends
having asked copies I found it cheaper to print than to write them.
One of these got into the hands of a bookseller who getting a bad
translation of them made, obliged me to consent that they should
appear on condition of their being translated by a better hand. I
apprehend therefore they will get further than I intended: tho' as
yet they are in few hands. They will offer nothing new to you, not
even as an oblation of my friendship for you which is as old almost
as we are ourselves. Mazzei brought me your favor of Apr 28. I
thank you much for your communications. Nothing can be more grateful
at such a distance. It is unfortunate that most people think the
occurrences passing daily under their eyes, are either known to all
the world, or not worth being known. They therefore do not give them
place in their letters. I hope you will be so good as to continue
your friendly information. The proceedings of our public bodies, the
progress of the public mind on interesting questions, the casualties
which happen among our private friends, and whatever is interesting
to yourself and family will always be anxiously received by me.
There is one circumstance in the work you were concerned in which has
not yet come to my knowledge, to wit how far Westward from Fort Pitt
does the Western boundary of Pennsylvania pass, and where does it
strike the Ohio? The proposition you mention from Mr. Anderson on
the purchase of tobacco, I would have made use of, but that I have
engaged the abuses of the tobacco trade on a more general scale. I
confess their redress does not appear with any certainty: but till I
see all hope of removing the evil by the roots, I cannot propose to
prune it's branches.
I returned but three or four days ago from a two months trip to
England. I traversed that country much, and own both town & country
fell short of my expectations. Comparing it with this, I found a
much greater proportion of barrens, a soil in other parts not
naturally so good as this, not better cultivated, but better manured,
& therefore more productive. This proceeds from the practice of long
leases there, and short ones here. The labouring people here are
poorer than in England. They pay about one half their produce in
rent, the English in general about a third. The gardening in that
country is the article in which it surpasses all the earth. I mean
their pleasure gardening. This indeed went far beyond my ideas. The
city of London, tho' handsomer than Paris, is not so handsome as
Philadelphia. Their architecture is in the most wretched stile I
ever saw, not meaning to except America where it is bad, nor even
Virginia where it is worse than in any other part of America, which I
have seen. The mechanical arts in London are carried to a wonderful
perfection. But of these I need not speak, because of them my
countrymen have unfortunately too many samples before their eyes. I
consider the extravagance which has seized them as a more baneful
evil than toryism was during the war. It is the more so as the
example is set by the best and most amiable characters among us.
Would that a missionary appear who would make frugality the basis of
his religious system, and go thro the land preaching it up as the
only road to salvation, I would join his school tho' not generally
disposed to seek my religion out of the dictates of my own reason &
feelings of my own heart. These things have been more deeply
impressed on my mind by what I have heard & seen in England. That
nation hates us, their ministers hate us, and their King more than
all other men. They have the impudence to avow this, tho' they
acknolege our trade important to them. But they say we cannot
prevent our countrymen from bringing that into their laps. A
conviction of this determines them to make no terms of commerce with
us. They say they will pocket our carrying trade as well as their
own. Our overtures of commercial arrangement have been treated with
a derision which shows their firm persuasion that we shall never
unite to suppress their commerce or even to impede it. I think their
hostility towards us is much more deeply rooted at present than
during the war. In the arts the most striking thing I saw there,
new, was the application of the principle of the steam-engine to
grist mills. I saw 8 pr. of stones which are worked by steam, and
they are to set up 30 pair in the same house. A hundred bushels of
coal a day are consumed at present. I do not know in what proportion
the consumption will be increased by the additional geer.
Be so good as to present my respects to Mrs. Page & your
family, to W. Lewis, F. Willis & their families and to accept
yourself assurances of the sincere regard with which I am Dr Sir your
affectionate friend & servt.
P. S. Mazzei is still here and will publish soon a book on the
subject of America.
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