[dateline] New York December 28 1796
[salute] My dear Sir
Your kind letter of the last week I have received.
1 Your ideas respecting a young man’s having a Record of a regular education in the
Law I think are perfectly right with regard to my Young friend Malcom his age will
not permit his taking an examination until near fifteen months after he leaves my
office which will be in June next His uncle M
r Joshua Sands is his guardian and has since my first acquaintance with him been such
a friend as is not to be ranked among the many
2 It has been M
r Sands object to give my pupil as good an education as this State can afford knowing
that the fortune left to him is such that he will not be obliged to toil through the
drugery of the law for a maintainance he had proposed to send him for a year or two
to Europe and if possible to procure him the place of Secretary to M
r King. I wish not to say too much of the merits of my eléve but it would be wrong
to conceal the gratitude I owe not only to him as one of the most attentive students
I ever knew but to
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his family and connections who have invariably endeavored to promote my interest and
wellfare
The multiplicity of Banks and unlimited Speculations have caused the most deplorable
scarcity of money The calculation of money now due to our Merchants from England and
France is enormous. The failure of payment of petty debts creates a distress that
can hardly be conceived I can give you a specimen which I know is not singular I had
the other day many outstanding debts in the way of my business to the amount of about
two hundred and fifty dollars and those due from perhaps sixty different people I
wanted to collect them and spent two days in the business and obtain[ed] but eight
dollars. The complaint is universal [….] man whose word would pass for fifty thousand
dollars tells you he cannot command twenty at the moment. Tom Paines pamphlet I have
read I shall make no comments but give the Motto I think the American People will
give to it
My dear Mother has this day sent me a pamphlet containing a sett of papers under the
signature of Aurelius,
3 they are well intended though the author does not discover a knowlege of the minutia
of business Infinitely more might have been said: Whatever confidence you may place
in me shall be sacred and on this declaration I would inquire what if any has ever
been the coolness between Hamilton and yourself. I have been informed and that by
a person although he will
lie could not have hoped to escape detection in this instance That Hamilton had declared
in his presence in the Chancellors, Brockholst Livingstons, and Troups that his most
earnest and sincere wish was that Pinkney might be elected President.
4 If So “There’s something rotten in the State of Denmark” My dear M
rs Adams and her little one who if she could speak would join us send to you the compliments
of the season and that my fathers conduct may during his life be admired by the virtuous
is the ardent wish and the assured hope of his / Affectionate son