Letter to George Washington (July 1778)
“I shall within a few days divest myself of the anxieties and the labors with which I have been oppressed, and retire with inexpressible delight to my family, my friends, my farms, and books. There I may indulge at length in that tranquillity and those pursuits from which I have been divorced by the character of the times in which I have lived, and which have forced me into the line of political life under a sense of duty and against a great and constant aversion to it.”
Letter to David Baillie Warden (25 February 1809)
1800s, Second Presidential Administration (1805-1809)
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Thomas Jefferson 456
3rd President of the United States of America 1743–1826Related quotes
Source: A Day In the Life of Brunello Cucinelli https://www.harpersbazaar.com/fashion/designers/a17874/brunello-cucinelli-profile/ Harper's Bazaar, Lauren McCarthy, 15 September 2016
Letter to George Washington (July 1778)
Responding to suggestions that he run for President in 1856, as quoted at wheatland.org http://www.wheatland.org.
Before his execution in Jerusalem (1 June 1962), as quoted in Becoming Eichmann: Rethinking the Life, Crimes, and Trial of a "Desk Murderer" by David Cesarani (2006), p. 321. ISBN 978-0-306-81539-3.
Letter to Edward Seymour, Lord Protector (28 January 1549), quoted in Leah Marcus, Janel Mueller and Mary Rose (eds.), Elizabeth I: Collected Works (The University of Chicago Press, 2002), p. 24.
Preface, p. v
The Differential and Integral Calculus (1836)