Thomas Jefferson to James Monroe, 1 December 1822
To James Monroe
Monticello Dec. 1. 22.
I thank you, Dear Sir, for the opportunity of reading mr Taylor’s letter, which I now return. news that one can rely on from a country with which we have so little intercourse, and so much mutual interest is doubly grateful. I rejoice to learn that Iturbide’s is a mere usurpation and slenderly supported. altho we have no right to intermeddle with the form of government of other nations yet it is lawful to wish to see no emperors nor kings in our hemisphere, and that Brazil as well as Mexico will homologize with us.
The accident to my arm was slight; it is doing well, and free from pain.1 I thank you sincerely for your favor to Gibson. he is a worthy but unfortunate man. ever & affectionately yours
Th: Jefferson
RC (ViU: TJP); addressed (trimmed): “James Monroe President [. . .] Wash[ington]”; postmarked Charlottesville, 3 Dec. Dft (DLC); on verso of RC of Monroe to TJ, 25 Nov. 1822. Enclosure: enclosure to Monroe to TJ, 25 Nov. 1822.
1. Remainder added in Dft following canceled “ever & affectly.”
Index Entries
- Brazil; TJ on search
- Gibson, Alexander; seeks appointment search
- Gibson, Patrick; seeks appointment for son search
- Iturbide, Agustín de (later Agustín I, emperor of Mexico) search
- Jefferson, Thomas; Health; broken arm search
- Jefferson, Thomas; Health; injured in fall search
- Jefferson, Thomas; Opinions on; monarchical forms of government search
- Mexico; Empire of search
- Mexico; TJ on search
- Monroe, James; and appointments search
- Monroe, James; and TJ’s health search
- Monroe, James; letters to search
- Taylor, William (d.1850); reports on Mexican political affairs search