Thomas Jefferson Papers
Documents filtered by: Period="Washington Presidency" AND Correspondent="Cosway, Maria" AND Correspondent="Jefferson, Thomas"
sorted by: relevance
Permanent link for this document:
https://founders.archives.gov/documents/Jefferson/01-16-02-0321

From Thomas Jefferson to Maria Cosway, 23 June 1790

To Maria Cosway

New York June 23. 1790.

I received, my dear friend, your favor of Apr. 6. It gives me a foretaste of the sensations we are to feel in the next world, on the arrival of any new-comer from the circle of friends we have left behind. I am now fixed here, and look back to Europe only on account of that circle. Could it be transferred here, the measure of all I could desire in this world would be filled up, for I have no desire but to enjoy the affections of my heart, which are divided now by a wide sea. You know I always ranted about your bringing your pencil and harp here. They would go well with our groves, our birds, and our sun. Trumbull is painting away but being at Philadelphia I cannot have the solace of talking with him about you. They tell me que vous allez faire un enfant. Je vous en felicite de tout mon coeur. This will wean you from your harp and your pencil, by filling your heart with joys still more bewitching. You may make children there, but this is the country to transplant them to. There is no comparison between the sum of happiness enjoyed here and there. All the distractions of your great Cities are but feathers in the scale against the domestic enjoiments and rural occupations, and neighborly societies we live amidst here. I summon you then as a mother to come and join us. You must tell me you will, whether you mean it, or no. En attendant je vous aimerai toujours. Adieu, my Dear Maria, Yours affectionately,

Th: Jefferson

Tr (DLC); in a 19th century hand.

TJ learned from Mrs. Paradise of the approaching birth of Mrs. Cosway’s only child, Louisa Paolina Angelica Cosway, named for her godmother the Countess of Albany, her godfather, General Paoli, and her mother’s friend and her own patron, Angelica Kauffmann. The child is generally assumed to have been born in 1789 but was actually born about the time the above letter was written (Horace Walpole’s Correspondence with Mary and Agnes Berry, ed. W. S. Lewis, i, 285, n.; Helen Duprey Bullock, My head and my heart, p. 135–6; Mrs. Paradise to TJ, 2 Mch. 1790; Gouverneur Morris, Diary, ed. Davenport, i, 541). Mrs. Cosway went to Italy in Sep. 1790 accompanied by the Italian singer, Luigi Marchesi; Walpole thought it odd “to drop a child and her husband and country all in a breath,” but she returned in 1794 and both she and her husband did portraits of the child before it died in 1796.

Index Entries