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Jefferson, Thomas, 1743-1826

"Memoir, Correspondence, And Miscellanies, From The Papers Of Thomas Jefferson, Volume 2"

I wish this return to true policy may be in
time to prevent evil. There has been a little foundation for the reports
and fears relative to the Marquis de la Fayette. He has, from the
beginning, taken openly part with those who demand a constitution; and
there was a moment that we apprehended the Bastile: but they ventured on
nothing more, than to take from him a temporary service, on which he
had been ordered; and this, more to save appearances for their own
authority, than any thing else; for at the very time they pretended
that they had put him into disgrace, they were constantly conferring and
communicating with him. Since this, he has stood on safe ground, and is
viewed as among the foremost of the patriots. Every body here is trying
their hand at forming declarations of rights. As something of that kind
is going on with you also, I send you two specimens from hence. The
one is by our friend of whom I have just spoken. You will see that it
contains the essential principles of ours, accommodated as much as
could be, to the actual state of things here. The other is from a very
sensible man, a pure theorist, of the sect called the _Economists_, of
which Turgot was considered as the head.


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