Memoirs Of Aaron Burr, Volume 1 by Matthew L. Davis (read any book .TXT) π
Was A German By Birth, And Of Noble Parentage. Shortly After His
Arrival In North America, He Settled In Fairfield, Connecticut, Where
He Purchased A Large Tract Of Land, And Reared A Numerous Family.
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- Author: Matthew L. Davis
Read book online Β«Memoirs Of Aaron Burr, Volume 1 by Matthew L. Davis (read any book .TXT) πΒ». Author - Matthew L. Davis
Sensibility! How Mortifying And Heart-Sickening To The Intellectual,
The Artless, The Fallen Fair!
Among These Manuscripts Were Many The Production Of Highly Cultivated
Minds. They Were Calculated To Excite The Sympathy Of The Brother--The
Parent--The Husband. They Were, Indeed, Testimonials Of The Weakness
Of The Weaker Sex, Even Where Genius And Learning Would Seem To Be
Towering Above The Arts Of The Seducer. Why They Were Thus Carefully
Preserved, Is Left To Conjecture. Can It Be True That Moore Is
Correct, When, In His Life Of Lord Byron, He Says, "The Allusions
Which He (Byron) Makes To Instances Of _Successful Passion_ In His
Career, Were Not Without Their Influence On The Fancies Of That Sex,
Whose Weakness It Is To Be Most Easily Won By Those Who Come
Recommended By The Greatest Number Of Triumphs Over Others? Some Of
These Productions Had Been Penned More Than Sixty Years. They Were All
Committed To The Flames, However, Immediately After The Decease Of
Colonel Burr. Of Them, It Is Believed, "Not A Wreck Remains."
The Faithful Biographer Could Not Pass Over In Silence This Strong And
Revolting Trait In The Character Of Colonel Burr. It Will Not Again Be
Referred To. From Details, The Moralist And The Good Man Must Shrink
With Disgust And Abhorrence. In This Particular, Burr Appears To Have
Been Unfeeling And Heartless. And Yet, By A Fascinating Power Almost
Peculiar To Himself, He So Managed As To Retain The Affection, In Some
Instances, The Devotion, Of His Deluded Victims. In Every Other
Respect He Was Kind And Charitable. No Man Would Go Farther To
Alleviate The Sufferings Of Another. No Man Was More Benevolent. No
Man Would Make Greater Sacrifices To Promote The Interest Or The
Happiness Of A Friend. How Strange, How Inconsistent, How Conflicting
Are These Allusions! They Are Nevertheless Strictly True.
Many Of The Letters To And From Colonel Burr Contain Hints And
Opinions As To Public Men And Measures. Thus Far, They Are Links In
The Chain Of History, In Relation To The Times When They Were Written.
They Serve, Also, To Illustrate The Character And The Principles Of
The Writers Themselves. With These Views They Are Occasionally
Selected. Theodore Sedgwick Is A Name Recorded In The Annals Of Our
Country With Distinction. He Writes To Burr:--
Chapter VII (He Writes To Burr) Pg 74
Sheffield, 7Th August, 1776.
My Dear Burr,
If You Remember, Some Months Since, You And I Mutually Engaged To
Correspond By Letter. I Told You Then That You Were Not To Expect Any
Thing Either Entertaining, Or In Any Degree Worth The Trouble Of
Perusing. What Can A Reasonable Being Expect From An Inhabitant Of
Such An Obscure, Remote, And Dead Place As Sheffield, To Amuse,
Instruct, Or Even To Merit The Attention Of A Young, Gay,
Enterprising, Martial Genius? I Know You Will Expect Nothing, And I
Dare Pledge My Honour, Therefore, That You Will Not, Either Now Or In
Future, In This Respect, Be Disappointed.
You Recollect, Perhaps, That When I Had The Pleasure To See You Here,
I Informed You Of A Design To Visit New-York And The Southward. Soon
After My Business Called Me To Boston, And, On My Return, I Was
Obliged To Go With The Militia To Peekskill; From There I Should Have
Visited The City And My Friends, Had Not Some Foolish Accidents
Prevented. I Now Think, As Soon As I Can Leave Home, Of Making A Tour;
But This, Like Other Futurities, Is Wholly Uncertain.
The Insignificant Figure I Make, In My Own Opinion, In This Day Of
Political And Martial Exertions, Is An Humbling Consideration. To Be
Stoically Indifferent To The Great Events That Are Now Unfolding, Is
Altogether Inconsistent, Not Only With My Inclination, But Even With
My Natural Constitution; And To Pursue A Line Of Conduct Which
Indicates Such A Disposition (I Mean My Continuance At Home), Is A
Mystery For Which I Will Endeavour To Account. Remember, I Do Not
Intend To Libel The Colony To Which I Belong.
Amid The Confusion Which Was At Once The Cause And Consequence Of A
Dissolution Of Government, Men'S Minds As Well As Actions Became
Regardless Of All Legal Restraint. All Power Reverted Into The Hands
Of The People, Who Were Determined That Every One Should Be Convinced
That _The People_ Were The Fountain Of All Honour. The First Thing
They Did Was To Withdraw All Confidence From Every One Who Had Ever
Any Connexion With Government. Lawyers Were, Almost Universally,
Represented As The Pests Of Society. All Persons Who Would Pay Court
To These Extravagant And Unreasonable Prejudices Became Their Idols.
Abilities Were Represented As Dangerous, And Learning As A Crime, Or
Rather, The Certain Forerunner Of All Political Extravagances. They
Really Demonstrated That They Were Possessed Of Creating Power; _For,
By The Word Of Their Power, They Created Great Men Out Of Nothing_;
But I Cannot Say _That All Was Very Well_.
Observing These Violent Symptoms, I Could Not Pursue That Which Was
The Only Road To Preferment; And I Have Never Had An Offer To Go Into
The Army, Except The One I Accepted; While I Have Seen, In More Than
One Instance, Men Honoured With The Command Of A Regiment For Heading
Mobs. Well: With This, I Believe, I Have Troubled You Long Enough.
Pray, Say You, What Is It To Me Why You Have Not Been In The Army?
Why, Nothing, My Dear Friend; But It Is Something To Me. You Know, My
Dear Burr, I Love You, Or I Should Not Submit Such Nonsense To Your
Perusal. If Mr. Swift Still Lives, Give Him My Best Compliments.
Pamela Desires Me To Tell You She Loves You. Answer This Letter, And
Thereby Oblige
Your Sincere Friend,
Theodore Sedgwich.
Chapter VII (He Writes To Burr) Pg 75From Colonel M. Ogden.
Ticonderoga, July 26Th, 1776.
Dear Burr,
I Have Been Waiting With The Greatest Impatience To Know What Is Doing
In York And Jersey. There Are Twenty Different Reports, That
Contradict Each Other, Relative To Howe And His Fleet. It Has Once
Been Generally Believed That A French Fleet Had Arrived At New-York,
And Blocked Up The British Army. Independence Is Well Relished In This
Part Of The World. Generalship Is Now Dealt Out To The Army By Our
Worthy And Well-Esteemed General, Gates, Who Is Putting The Most
Disordered Army That Ever Bore The Name Into A State Of Regularity And
Defence. If Our Friends In Canada, Commanded By Burgoyne, Will Wait A
Few Days, We Shall Give Them A Very Proper Reception.
The Army Are Beginning To Recruit Fast, From The Effects Of A Little
Fresh Meat, And Some Rum, When On Fatigue. Ten Days Ago There Were Not
In Our Regiment Eighty Men Fit For Duty. We Have Now Upwards Of Two
Hundred And Thirty; And, In A Few Days, They Will Be All As Rugged As
New-Jersey Is Firm.
Colonel Winds Is Sent Home On A Fool'S Errand By The General, That He
May Be Out Of The Way Of Doing Any More Harm To The Regiment. The
General Assures Me That I Shall Not Be Troubled With Him Again. I
Suppose, By That, He Has Written To Have Him Detained Below. A Short
History Of This Man Will Convince You That He Ought To Be Nowhere But
On His Farm. He, In The First Place, Is A Professed Enemy To
Subordination, And Has An Utter Aversion To Discipline. He Is
Positive, And Prefers His Own Opinion To Even The General'S, Because
He Was In The Service Last War. He Is Not Possessed Of One
Qualification That Distinguishes A Gentleman, Nor Has He Genius Or
Education. His Whole Study Is To Gain The Applause Of The Private
Soldiers, At The Expense Of Every Officer In The Regiment. He Is Hated
By All His Own Officers Except _Two_, And Despised By Every Gentleman
In The Army.
We Are In Great Want Of Brigadier-Generals--Three, At Least. I Mean
For The Men That Are Now Here. General Arnold Will Command The
Water-Craft On The Lake In Person. There Are Three Brigades, Commanded
By The Colonels, Reed, Stark, And St. Clair. The Last Of These I
Sincerely Wish Was Appointed A Brigadier By Congress. There Is No
Better Man; The Other Two Have Full Enough Already.
Please To Forward The Enclosed, With The Letter To Mr. Spencer. My
Best Respects To Generals Putnam, Greene, And Mifflin, And To Colonel
Trumbull. Compliments To Webb. I Wait, With The Greatest Impatience,
Some Important News From New-York. Pray Write Particulars Relative To
The Conduct Of The Jerseymen. Should Any Fall, Mention Their Names.
I Am Yours Sincerely,
Matt. Ogden.
Chapter VII (He Writes To Burr) Pg 76To T. Edwards.
New-York, 10Th Of August, 1776.
Dear Uncle,
I Have Received Your Letters From Stockbridge, With My Watch, For
Which I Thank You. Our Six Galleys Which Went Up The North River
Attacked The British Ships. They Behaved Well, But Were Drove Off With
The Loss Of Three Killed And Twelve Or Thirteen Wounded. A Second
Attack Is Proposed. Vessels And Chevaux-De-Frises Are Sunk In The
North River. The Channel Is Said To Be Effectually Stopped. We Are
Endeavouring The Same In The East River. The British Fleet Have Been
Largely Re-Enforced At Different Times. They Are Now Said To Be
Upwards Of Two Hundred Sail Within The Narrows. They Have Drawn Up
Seven Of Their Heaviest Ships In A Line, Nearly Two Miles Advanced Of
The Rest.
By Two Virginia Gentlemen Who Went To England To Take The Gown, Who
Returned In A Packet And Landed On Staten Island, Where They Tarried
Several Days, And Were Permitted To Cross To Elizabethtown On Thursday
Last, We Have Some Intelligence Of The Enemy. Clinton Has Arrived With
His Shattered Fleet And About 3600 Men. By This It Appears That He Has
Either Fallen In With Part Of Dunmore'S Fleet, Or Picked Up The
Remainder Of His Own, Which Had Been Separated, And Were Not In The
Action Near Charlestown. Of The Hessians Only 1300 Or 1400 Have
Arrived. The Remainder, About 9000, Are Daily Expected. They Were Left
Near The Banks Of Newfoundland. Those Already Here Are Not Much
Esteemed As Soldiers.
The King'S Land-Army Is At Present About 15 Or 16,000 Strong. They
Expect Very Soon To Exceed 25,000. They Have Taken On Board All Their
Heavy Cannon From Staten Island, And Have Called In Several Of Their
Outposts. Thirty Transports Have Sailed Under Convoy Of Three
Frigates. They Are To Come Through The Sound, And Thus Invest Us By
The North And East Rivers. They Are Then To Land On Both Sides Of The
Island, _Join Their
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