From Charles-Eléonor Dufriche de Valazé
	
ls: American Philosophical Society
	<Essey in Normandy, December 10, 1779, in French: I admire
	you and your countrymen to such a degree that I shall allow
	myself to give you some frank advice, brother to brother.
	Doubtless, you will win your independence and shake the yoke
	of three hundred years of tyranny but you should beware of
	another, ever so seductive yoke: luxury. You are aware of its
	pitfalls, of course, but let me remind you of its destructive
	power. Luxury enters and corrupts society through women, its
	natural victims. Greed and corruption soon follow, and violence.
	Farms are abandoned for cities, unnecessary goods are
	manufactured, marriages fail, population decreases, the nation
	is threatened by envious neighbors.
	As to the dividing line between the necessary and the superfluous,
	for a country it is growing enough food and extracting
	enough iron to survive; for a household, a minimum of furniture
	and cooking utensils. Yes, but what about the citizens
	thrown out of employment by such a reform? Send them back
	to the fields, make them replace the oxen and the horses, thus
	reducing the need for pastures and freeing land for agriculture.
	Worse yet than private luxury is the bad example set by the
	heads of state who have replaced laurel wreaths by gold crowns,
	and rough-hewn triumphal arches by magnificent monuments.
	It is up to the government to set a good example and you are
	the man to inspire a new order.
	One last word, but crucial: beware of hereditary nobility, the
	seed of dissension, hatred, and domestic wars. Whoever acts
	
	righteously in order to obtain a recompense is unworthy of the
	republic and of humanity.>