Thomas Jefferson to John Browne Cutting and Thomas Law, 12 December 1822
To John Browne Cutting and Thomas Law
Monticello Dec. 12. 22.
Th: Jefferson salutes Dr Cutting with antient & friendly recollections, and with a mind which does not easily part with early impressions. he hopes the years which have intervened since they last saw each other have been to Dr Cutting years of health and pleasantness, & that he yet has many such to come.
Marching abreast with mr Law in the Calendar of time, it is his particular lot to suffer by two dislocated wrists now stiffened by age, and rendering writing slow, painful, and all but impossible. he is happy to find by the pamphlet mr Law has so kindly sent him, that his mind is still equal to the continuation of his useful labors, and that his zeal for the general good is1 unabated. where they are next to meet, in this, or some other untried state of being, he knows not, but if we carry with us the affections of this world he shall there greet mr Law with unchanged esteem and respect.
RC (CLSU). PoC (DLC); endorsed by TJ as a letter to Cutting and Law and so recorded in SJL.
1. TJ here canceled “still.”
Index Entries
- Additional Facts, Remarks, and Arguments. Illustrative of the Advantage to the People of the United States, of a National Circulating Medium. By the Author of Homo and Justinian (T. Law) search
- Cutting, John Browne; as amanuensis for T. Law search
- Cutting, John Browne; letter to search
- Jefferson, Thomas; Books & Library; receives works search
- Jefferson, Thomas; Correspondence; fatiguing or painful to search
- Law, Thomas; Additional Facts, Remarks, and Arguments. Illustrative of the Advantage to the People of the United States, of a National Circulating Medium. By the Author of Homo and Justinian search
- Law, Thomas; J. B. Cutting as amanuensis for search
- Law, Thomas; letters to search
- Law, Thomas; sends works to TJ search