Volume III : page 326

8vo. 8 leaves including the last blank; dated at the end: City of Washington, January 15th, 1801.
Sabin 105152.
Bryan, page 159.
The first paragraph reads: Since writing the previous numbers on the Government of the Territory of Columbia, I have met with a production, entitled ‘Enquiries into the necessity or expediency of assuming exclusive legislation over the District of Columbia; respectfully submitted to the Members of Congress; by a private citizen of the District , thus giving the clue to the date of that pamphlet, q.v., no. 3255 above.
[3257]
Considerations on the government of the Territory of Columbia. By Augustus B. Woodward. No. VII . . . Alexandria, Territory of Columbia: printed by S. Snowden & Co.--sold by Rapine and by Stickney, Washington, and Bishop, Alexandria, where the previous numbers may be procured. January, 1802.
8vo. 13 leaves. Dated at the end: Alexandria, January 23d, 1802.
The complete set has eight numbers; all were published anonymously by Woodward, friend of Jefferson, other works by whom appear in this catalogue.
[3258]
6. T. Jefferson’s Inaugural speech.

d o. French.

d o. Italian.

d o. German.
JEFFERSON, Thomas.
Speech of Thomas Jefferson, President of the United States, delivered at his Instalment, March 4, 1801, at the city of Washington. To which are prefixed, his Farewell Address to the Senate: and a brief account of the proceedings at the Instalment. Philadelphia: printed by Cochran & M’Laughlin, for Mathew Carey, 1801.
12mo. 12 leaves.
Sabin 35916.
Johnston, page 16.
Three autograph drafts, with corrections, of Jefferson’s speech are in the Jefferson Papers in the Library of Congress, which contain also the original draft of the first speech in this pamphlet, that to the Senate on February 28, and the originals of the letters sent to him by the Senate.
The passage We are all Republicans; We are all Federalists, printed in large capitals in this and all the printed editions of the speech, is not emphasized in any way in Jefferson’s drafts.
[3259]
Speech of Thomas Jefferson, President of the United States, delivered at his instalment, March 4, 1801, at the city of Washington. Without name of place or printer [ 1801]. [-- Discours de Thomas Jefferson . . .-- Discorso di Tommaso Jefferson . . .-- Rede des Praesidenten der Vereinigten Staaten . . .]
4 parts in 1, each with a caption title, no title-page. The last page has the offset from an inscription in ink by Jefferson on the first page of the next pamphlet.
[3260]
Discorso del Signor Tommaso Jefferson. Without name of place or printer [? Pisa], 1801.
Sm. 8vo. 6 leaves, printed on blue paper.
On the title-page Jefferson has written: translated by Philip Mazzei.
Sent to Jefferson by Mazzei on July 30, 1801.
In a letter to James Madison dated from Pisa, 28 ( ~x)bre, 1803, Mazzei wrote:

Volume III : page 326

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