Thomas Jefferson Papers
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From Thomas Jefferson to Richard Henry Lee, 22 April 1786

To Richard Henry Lee

London Apr. 22. 1786.

Dear Sir

In your letter of October the 29th. you desired me to send you one of the new lamps. I tried at every probable place in Paris, and could not get a tolerable one. I have been glad of it, since I came here, as I find them much better made here. I now deliver one with this letter into the hands of Mr. Fulwar Skipwith, a merchant from Virginia settled here, who promises to send it to you, with one for Mr. C. Thomson. Of this be pleased to accept from me. It is now found that they may be used with almost any oil.

I expect to leave this place in about three days. Our public letters, joint and separate, will inform you what has been done, and what could not be done here. With respect to a commercial treaty with this country be assured that the government not only has it not in contemplation at present to make any, but that they do not conceive that any circumstances will arise which shall render it expedient for them to have any political connection with us. They think we shall be glad of their commerce on their own terms. There is no party in our favor here, either in power, or out of power. Even the opposition concur with the ministry and the nation in this. I can scarcely consider as a party the Marquis of Lansdowne, and a half dozen characters about him, such as Dr. Price. &c. who are impressed with the utility of a friendly connection with us. The former does not venture this sentiment in parliament, and the latter are not in situations to be heard. The Marquis of Lansdowne spoke to me affectionately of your brother, Doctr. Lee, and desired his respects to him, which I beg leave to communicate through you. Were he to come into the ministry (of which there is not the most distant prospect) he must adopt the king’s system, or go out again, as he did before, for daring to depart from it. When we see that through all the changes of ministry which have taken place during the present reign, there has never been a change of system with respect to America, we cannot reasonably doubt that this is the system of the king himself. His obstinacy of character we know; his hostility we have known, and it is embittered by ill success. If ever this nation, during his life, enters into arrangements with us, it must be in consequence of events of which they do not at present see a possibility. The object of the present ministry is to buoy up the nation with flattering calculations of their present prosperity, and to make them believe they are better without us than with us. This they seriously believe; for what is it men cannot be made to believe! I dined the other day in company of the ministerial party. A General Clarke sat next to me, a Scotchman and ministerialist. He introduced the subject of American affairs, and in the course of the conversation told me that were America to petition parliament to be again received on their former footing, the petition would be very generally rejected. He was serious in this, and I think it was the sentiment of the company, and is the sentiment perhaps of the nation. In this they are wise, but for a foolish reason. They think they lost more by suffering us to participate of their commercial privileges at home and abroad, than they lose by our political severance. The true reason however why such an application should be rejected, is that in a very short time we should oblige them to add another hundred millions to their debt in unsuccesful attempts to retain the subjection offered to them. They are at present in a frenzy, and will not be recovered from it till they shall have leaped the precipice they are now so boldly advancing to. Writing from England, I write you nothing but English news. The Continent at present furnishes nothing interesting. I shall hope the favor of your letters at times. The proceedings and views of Congress, and of the assemblies, the opinions and dispositions of our people in general, which in governments like ours must be the foundation of measures, will always be interesting to me, as will whatever respects your own health and happiness, being with great esteem Dear Sir Your most obedient and most humble servant,

Th: Jefferson

RC (MH). PrC (DLC).

I dined the other day in a company of the ministerial party: tj’s host on this occasion was Sir John Sinclair, who had been rewarded by Pitt with a baronetcy just two months earlier and who quoted TJ as saying of himself “that there was no other individual in London [in 1786] who had paid him any particular attention, which rendered my civilities to him peculiarly gratifying” (Sir John Sinclair, Correspondence, London, 1831, ii, 40). If, as is likely, TJ made such a remark, he could only have meant that there was no other individual closely connected with the ministry who had shown particular attention to him; he certainly had been entertained and had had courtesies extended to him by such American sympathizers as Thomas Brand Hollis, Benjamin Vaughan, the Marquis of Lansdowne, and others (see TJ to Short, 28 Mch.; note to an interlude at Dolly’s Chop House, 21 Mch.; see also TJ to Sinclair, 25 Apr. 1786). So far as known, however, Sinclair was the only one close to the ministry who is known to have shown civilities to TJ. See TJ to William Temple Franklin, 7 May 1786.

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