Name
Jay, John, 1745-1829 (Author)
Morris, Robert, 1734-1806 (Addressee)
Title
[Document, 1782 April 25]
Abstract
Fears letters have gone astray, thanks for the picture and the arrival of [Morris'] sons in Europe. Concerned about Caty's health but happy she has the friendship of the Morris family. Mrs. Jay cheerful and nursing. Moving to Aranjuez for several weeks. The number of soldiers guarding the place detract from its many natural charms; compares the freedom of America with the subjection and absolute po wer found in Spain. Thinks the Spanish people would form a strong, friendly nation if had several long-lasting, stable reigns. Does not know many people there; the Spanish court's indecisiveness over America holds back a number of people who would have approached him. Attributes coldness to the "prudence which naturally grows out of a jealous and absolute government". Thinks American affairs are going so well that Spain will have to decide in their favor, and more people will extend their friendship. Shall be patient until this happens.
Subjects
United States--History--Revolution, 1775-1783; Jay, John, 1745-1829
Format
correspondence
Genre
correspondence
Date
April 25, 1782
Physical Description
3 pages
Language
English
Library Location
Browse Location’s Digital Content
Also In
The papers of John Jay
Persistent URL
https://dx.doi.org/10.7916/xghg-h946