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TRANSCRIPT GLC 2437.19.052
Thomas Jefferson. Letter fragment: Paris, to George Washington,
1786 November 14. 2 p. + doc.
[inserted: Cincinnati]
Ext. of Letter from Mr. Jefferson, dated Paris Novr. 14. 1786.
The author of the Political part of the Encyclopedie Methodique
desired me to examine his article “Etats unis.”
I did so. I found it a tissue of Errors; for in truth they
know nothing about us here; particularly however the article
“Cincinnati” was a mere Philippic against that
institution, in which it appeared that there was an utter
ignorance of facts & motives. I gave him notes on it.
He reformed it as he supposed & sent it again to me to
revise: in this reformed State Colo. Humphreys saw it. I found
it necessary to write that article for him; before I gave
it to him I showed it to the Marquis de la Fayette who made
a correction or two. I then sent it to the Author; he used
the materials mixing a great deal of his own with them. In
a work which is sure of going down to the latest posterity,
I thought it material to set facts to rights as much as possible.
The author was well disposed, but could not entirely get the
better of his original bias. I send you the article as ultimately
published. If you find any material errors in it & will
be so good as to inform me of them, I shall probably have
opportunities of setting the author to rights. What has heretofore
passed between us on this institution, makes it my duty to
mention to you that I have never heard a person in Europe,
learned, or unlearned, express his thoughts upon this institution,
who did not consider it as dishonourable & destructive
to our Governments, and that every [2]writing which has come
out since my arrival here, in which it is mentioned, considers
it, even as now reformed, as the germ whose development is
one day to destroy the fabric we have reared. I did not apprehend
this while I had American ideas only, but I confess what I
have seen in Europe has brought me over to that opinion; &
that tho’ the day may be at some distance, beyond the
reach of our lives perhaps, yet it will certainly come, when
a single fibre left of this institution, will produce an hereditary
aristocracy which will change the form of our Governments
from the best to the worst in the world. To know the mass
of evil which flows from this fatal source, a person must
be in France, he must see the finest soil, the finest climate,
the most compact state, the most benevolent character of people,
& every earthly advantage combined, insufficient to prevent
this scourge from rendering existence a curse to 24 out of
25 parts of the inhabitants of this Country. With us the branches
of this institution cover all the States: the Southern ones
at this time aristocratical in their disposition: and that
that disposition should grow & extend itself is [struck:
very] within the natural order of things. I do not flatter
myself with the immortality of our Governments: but I shall
think little also of their longevity unless this germ of destruction
be taken out. When the Society themselves shall weigh the
possibility of evil against the impossibility of any good
to proceed from this institution I cannot help hoping they
will eradicate it. I know they wish the permanence of our
Governments as much as any individuals composing them.
[docket]
an extract of a letter
from Mr. Jefferson
to Genl Washington relative
to the Cincinnati
Nov. 14. 1786
Notes: For full edited version, see Twohig, Dorothy et al.
The Papers of George Washington. Confederation Series, v.
4: 363-66.
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