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To Richard Price Paris, January 8, 1789
DEAR SIR, -- I have duly received your favor of the 5'th. inst.
With respect to the busts & pictures I will put off till my return
from America all of them except Bacon, Locke and Newton, whose
pictures I will trouble you to have copied for me: and as I consider
them as the three greatest men that have ever lived, without any
exception, and as having laid the foundation of those superstructures
which have been raised in the Physical & Moral sciences, I would wish
to form them into a knot on the same canvas, that they may not be
confounded at all with the herd of other great men. To do this I
suppose we need only desire the copyist to draw the three busts in
three ovals all contained in a larger oval in some such form as this
each bust to be the size of life.
xxx. The large oval would I suppose be about between four &
five feet. Perhaps you can suggest a better way of accomplishing my
idea. In your hands be it, as well as the subaltern expences you
mention. I trouble you with a letter to Mrs. Church. We have no
important news here but of the revolution of Geneva which is not yet
sufficiently explained. But they have certainly reformed their
government. I am with great respect D'r. Sir Your affectionate friend & humble serv't.
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