XXVIII TO MRS. SARAH BACHE! Passy, 26 January, 1784. My DEAR CHILD: —Your care in sending me the newspapers is very agreeable to me. I received by Captain Barney those relating to the Cincinnata. My opinion of the institution cannot be of much importance. I only wonder that, when the united wisdom of our nation had, in the Articles of Con- federation, manifested their dislike of establishing ranks of nobility, by authority either of the Con- gress or of any particular State, a number of private persons should think proper to distinguish themselves and their posterity, from their fellow-citizens, and form an order of hereditary knights, in direct oppo- sition to the solemnly declared sense of their coun- try! 1 imagine it must be likewise contrary to the good sense of most of those drawn into it by the persuasion of its projectors, who have been too much struck with the ribands and crosses they have seen hanging to the button-holes of foreign officers. And 1 Dr. Franklin's only daughter, married to a merchant in Phila- delphia, 226