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THE

LIVES

OF

GEORGE WASHINGTON

AND

THOMAS JEFFERSON:

WITH A PARALLEL.

"MARCUS CATO and CAIUS CESAR were both extraordinary men,
but of a genius widely different. Greatness of soul they equally
possessed, and they equally reached the summit of glory; yet it was
a glory peculiar to each, and certainly acquired by very opposite

methods."-SALLUST.

BY STEPHEN SIMPSON.

PHILADELPHIA:

PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY HENRY YOUNG,
N.-E. Corner of Passyunk Road and Shippen Street.

1833.

THE NEW YORK
PUBLIC LIBRARY
163965

ASTOR, LENOX AND
TILDEN FOUNDATIONS.
1899.

Eastern District of Pennsylvania, to wit :

BE IT REMEMBERED,

That, on the twenty-second day of March, A. D. one thousand eight hundred and thirty-three, STEPHEN SIMPSON, of the said District, hath deposited in this Office the title of a book, the title of which is in the following words to wit:

The Lives of GEORGE WASHINGTON and THOMAS JEFFERSON, with a Parallel.'

Marcus Cato and Caius Cæsar were both extraordinary men, but of a genius widely different. Greatness of soul they equally possessed, and they equally reached the summit of glory; yet it was a glory peculiar to each, and certainly acquired by very opposite methods.'-SALLUST. BY STEPHEN SIMPSON. The right whereof he claims as Author, in conformity with an Act of Congress, entitled An Act to amend the several Acts respecting Copy-rights."

FRANCIS HOPKINSON,

Clerk of the Eastern District.

DEDICATΙΟΝ.

TO THE PEOPLE OF THE UNITED STATES.

FELLOW CITIZENS,

THIS volume, containing the Lives of the

TWO. GREAT FOUNDERS OF THE AMERICAN

REPUBLIC, GEORGE WASHINGTON and THOMAS JEFFERSON, is respectfully dedicated to you by the Author, in the hope and expectation, that their common services to their Country, and their joint labours in rearing the inestimable fabric of our FREE CONSTITUTION, may endear their virtues, wisdom, and patriotism to future generations: and that POSTERITY may derive as useful a lesson from the history of their lives, as their own generations experienced blessings from their labours.

In the example of great and illustrious men, our children will always find the best and most instructive lessons of social duty, and public spirit: and however you may be divided by party, or differ in principle, you cannot fail to derive a lesson of wisdom and tolerance from the historical fact, that the two great Fathers of our Republic, who differed so vitally upon the genius and nature of our federal government, both administered its supreme functions, under the same Constitution, with an equal measure of liberty, happiness, and prosperity to

all.

STEPHEN SIMPSON.

HAMILTON, March 17, 1833.

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