Memoirs of Aaron Burr, Volume 1. by Matthew L. (Matthew Livingston) Davis
page 52 of 542 (09%)
page 52 of 542 (09%)
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in the forepart of March. If I had known of this want of yours sooner,
I would have paid it before this. "Your affectionate uncle, "TIMOTHY EDWARDS" CHAPTER IV. In May, 1774, he left the Rev. Mr. Bellamy's, and went to the house of his brother-in-law, Tappan Reeve, where his time was occupied in reading, principally history; but especially those portions of it which related to wars, and battles, and sieges, which tended to inflame his natural military ardour. The absorbing topics of taxation and the rights of the people were agitating the then British colonies from one extreme to the other. These subjects, therefore, could not pass unnoticed by a youth of the inquiring mind and ardent feelings of Burr. Constitutional law, and the relative rights of the crown and the colonists, were examined with all the acumen which he possessed, and he became a Whig from reflection and conviction, as well as from feeling. At this period, Burr's most intimate and confidential correspondent was Matthias Ogden, of New-Jersey, subsequently Colonel Ogden, a gallant and distinguished revolutionary officer. He writes to Burr, dated |
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