Difference between revisions of "Thomas Jefferson to Wythe, 26 May 1793"

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[[File:JeffersonToWytheMay261793p1.jpg|right|thumb|300px|<p>"Thomas Jefferson to Wythe, 26 May 1793, pg 1." Image from the [http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/mtj.mtjbib007464 Library of Congress,] ''The Thomas Jefferson Papers.''</p>]]
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==Letter text==
 
===Page 1===
 
===Page 1===
[[File:JeffersonToWytheMay261793p1.jpg|right|thumb|200px|<p>"Thomas Jefferson to Wythe, 26 May 1793, pg 1." Image from the [http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/mtj.mtjbib007464 Library of Congress,] ''The Thomas Jefferson Papers.''</p>]]
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<blockquote>
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[[Thomas Jefferson|Th: Jefferson]] to [[George Wythe|G. Wythe]]
  
Th: Jefferson to G. Wythe<br />
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I duly received, my Dear Sir, the note you inclosed for the 64. Dollars which was paid. – we have two blind stories here of which as yet we make nothing. the one is that DuMourier is gone over to the Austrians, the credit of this stands on an English paper only. it is opposed (not by the virtue of the man; he has none, but) by the great forfeit of reputation which he has acquired with the world & which there seems to have been no sufficient motion for him to throw away. the 2d. story is that he had cut off 10.000 Prussians & among them the K. of Prussia & D. of Brunswick. we know the latter to be out of command, & the former out of the way of Dumourier, & therefore supposed the story made to balance the former one. – but it now comes through another <u>captain of a ship</u>, & in better form, to wit that Custine has cut off 10.000 Prussians, without naming the K. of Prussia or D. of Brunswick. still it is little attended to. Adieu, my Dear Sir.  
&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;I duly received, my Dear Sir, the note you inclosed for the 64. Dollars which was paid. – we have two blind stories here of which as yet we make nothing. the one is that DuMourier is gone over to the Austrians, the credit of this stands on an English paper only. it is opposed (not by the virtue of the man; he has none, but) by the great forfeit of reputation which he has acquired with the world & which there seems to have been no sufficient motion for him to throw away. the 2d. story is that he had cut off 10.000 Prussians & among them the K. of Prussia & D. of Brunswick. we know the latter to be out of command, & the former out of the way of Dumourier, & therefore supposed the story made to balance the former one. – but it now comes through another <u>captain of a ship</u>, & in better form, to wit that Custine has cut off 10.000 Prussians, without naming the K. of Prussia or D. of Brunswick. still it is little attended to. Adieu, my Dear Sir. <br />
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</blockquote>
  
 
===Page 2===
 
===Page 2===
[[File:JeffersonToWytheMay261793p2.jpg|right|thumb|200px|<p>"Thomas Jefferson to Wythe, 26 May 1793, pg 2." Image from the [http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/mtj.mtjbib007464 Library of Congress,] ''The Thomas Jefferson Papers.''</p>]]
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[[File:JeffersonToWytheMay261793p2.jpg|right|thumb|250px|<p>"Thomas Jefferson to Wythe, 26 May 1793, pg 2." Image from the [http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.mss/mtj.mtjbib007464 Library of Congress,] ''The Thomas Jefferson Papers.''</p>]]
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<blockquote>
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[see page 1]
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</blockquote>
  
[see page 1] <br />
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==See also==
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*[[Thomas Jefferson to Wythe, 27 April 1793]]
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*[[Wythe to Thomas Jefferson & Edmund Randolph, 17 August, 1793]]
  
 
[[Category: Letters to Wythe]]
 
[[Category: Letters to Wythe]]
 
[[Category:PROOFED]]
 
[[Category:PROOFED]]

Revision as of 20:54, 4 July 2015

"Thomas Jefferson to Wythe, 26 May 1793, pg 1." Image from the Library of Congress, The Thomas Jefferson Papers.

Letter text

Page 1

Th: Jefferson to G. Wythe

I duly received, my Dear Sir, the note you inclosed for the 64. Dollars which was paid. – we have two blind stories here of which as yet we make nothing. the one is that DuMourier is gone over to the Austrians, the credit of this stands on an English paper only. it is opposed (not by the virtue of the man; he has none, but) by the great forfeit of reputation which he has acquired with the world & which there seems to have been no sufficient motion for him to throw away. the 2d. story is that he had cut off 10.000 Prussians & among them the K. of Prussia & D. of Brunswick. we know the latter to be out of command, & the former out of the way of Dumourier, & therefore supposed the story made to balance the former one. – but it now comes through another captain of a ship, & in better form, to wit that Custine has cut off 10.000 Prussians, without naming the K. of Prussia or D. of Brunswick. still it is little attended to. Adieu, my Dear Sir.

Page 2

"Thomas Jefferson to Wythe, 26 May 1793, pg 2." Image from the Library of Congress, The Thomas Jefferson Papers.

[see page 1]

See also