To James Madison from Thomas Jefferson, 20 August 1807
Monticello Aug. 20. 07.
Th. J. to J. Madison
Your letter to Dayton I think perfectly right, unless perhaps the expression of personal sympathy in the 1st. page might be misconstrued, & coupled with the circumstance that we had not yet instituted a prosecution against him altho’ possessed of evidence. Poor Yznardi seems to have been worked up into distraction by the persecutions of Meade. I inclose you a letter I have recieved from him, also one from Warden, attested by Armstrong, by which you will see that the feuds there are not subsiding.
By yesterday’s or this day’s mails you will have received the information that Bonaparte has annihilated the allied armies. The result will doubtless be peace on the continent, an army dispatched through Persia to India, & the main army brought back to their former position on the channel. This will oblige England to withdraw every thing home, & leave us an open field. An account, apparently worthy of credit, in the Albany paper is that the British authorities are withdrawing all their cannon & magazines from Upper Canada to Quebec, considering the former not tenable, & the latter their only fast-hold. I salute you with sincere affection.
P. S. I had forgotten to express my opinion that deserters ought never to be enlisted: but I think you may go farther & say to Erskine, that if ever such a practice has prevailed it has been without the knolege of the government, and would have been forbidden if known; & if any examples of it have existed (which is doubted) they must have been few, or they would have become known. The case presented from the Chichester, if true, does not prove the contrary, as the persons there said to have been enlisted are believed to have been American citizens, who whether impressed or enlisted into the British service were equally right in returning to the duties they owed their country.
DLC: Papers of James Madison.