Thomas Jefferson Papers
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https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-45-02-0029

From Thomas Jefferson to James Lyle, 16 November 1804

To James Lyle

Washington Nov. 16. 04.

Dear Sir

Your favor of the 5th. has been duly recieved, and I sincerely wish it were in my power, as it would be my duty, to comply immediately with it’s request—but it is not immediately practicable. I have ordered my crop of tobo. to be in Richmond by the last of December, and as soon as it can be sold you shall recieve from it a strong paiment, which I am enabled to make the more considerable, as I have now compleated the discharge of my part of mr Wayles’s debt to Farrell & Jones, which has hung so heavily on me. in the constant hope of making a considerable paiment from other resources, I have put off calculating the present state of the debt, but I trust that the paiment which I shall make in the winter will leave such a balance only as will be easily accomplished at another effort.    I very much regret that my absence on a visit to mr Madison, which was only of two days, happened exactly when I might otherwise have had the pleasure of seeing you at Monticello. believe me there is no one whom I should have recieved there with more satisfaction. our acquaintance has been of more than half a century, and if my recollection is not defective there is no one now living whom I have known so long as yourself. certainly I feel a pleasure of a much higher order in meeting the friends of my early days, than with those of later times. I am happy you are still able to take journies across the mountains; and in your next, hope I shall be more fortunate. Accept assurances of my constant & affectionate attachment & respect.

Th: Jefferson

PoC (MHi); at foot of text: “James Lyle esq.”; endorsed by TJ.

ordered my crop of tobo: probably so instructed in a letter of 21 Sep. to Burgess Griffin, TJ’s manager at Poplar Forest (recorded in SJL but not found).

TJ may have informed Robert Kinnan, the agent for Farell & Jones, of a final payment in a letter of 17 Sep., recorded in SJL but not found. Subsequent correspondence between the two revealed that a balance remained (TJ to Kinnan, 6 May 1805).

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