Holograph draft paragraph for MINT00281 (Mint 19/2/78-9), followed by the deleted draft of a Latin paragraph [for Book Two of the second (1713) edition of the Principia]
The Crown of Florence & Leghorn or pieceW. 1dwt. 16dwt 18gr
The changing of the & considered the ways of preserving the coyn & considered the ways of preserving the coyn.
The As for the alteration of the standard we are humbly of opinion that the value of the several species to be herafter coyned be diminished without changing the denomination, & it will occasion the melting down & recoyning the species already coyned & bringing the same silver to the Mint to be recoyned for the profit that may be made thereby. And if the value be encreased Merch Merchants the people will value their goods {illeg}by the old money already coyned in wch they are to be paid & the new money of more value will be pickt out (if any shall be coyned) will be pickt out for exportation & goldsmiths uses where by the & the Importer who coyns it will lose the overvalue to he discouragement of ye coynage & in payments made by tale to forreigners, the nation will also lose the overvalue // Yet if small money were coyned of based But if it be proposed to retain the value of the several species {illeg} allay (suppose sixpences, groats, thre pences & two pence But if the valuebe retained && to alter only the standweight & allay altered {illeg} only, we are humbly of opinion that it would be betterwould might be convenient better more uniform to coyn the {illeg} si{illeg}lver eleven ounces fine as the gold is coyned here & als the st both gold & silver are coyned in France Spain & portugall, Pistoles in Italy & some silver money in Italy Holland & Swedeland. {illeg} & other places, & for this end to cut the pound weight into 3£. 1.s 6d. For this is readier for computation & where the {illeg}oer money goes abroad, the odd two penny weight of silver above 11 ounces is apt to be lost in recconings. But if the I And if small money (copper suppose sixpences gro twowch by continual use weares away fast & is apt to be lost, (suppose pence, two pences, three pences & groats & perhaps sixpences} were coyned of coarse allay as {illeg} is done in {illeg} several countries abroad, it wouldprovided it were well coyned to precent counterfeiting such money would lastweare longer & be less apt to be lost or melted down or exported.
In secunda had editione quae correctior Proposiones aliquod in Sectione secunda ac tertiam (benefici Corollarij tertij Prop. VI & Corollarij tertij Prop VII & Scholia Prop. X & XVII] inventia virium quibus corpora in figuris fatis revolvi possint, facilior redditurfacilior redditur per Cor 3 Prop VI & Cor 3 Prop VII & Scholia Prop X & XVII Lib. V facilior redditur Theoria Resistentiae fluidorum accuratius demonstratur & investigatur & {illeg} demonstrat in Sect VII Lib II & haec Theoria & {illeg} novis experimentus in Prop. X{illeg} confirmatur in Pro Lib II ejus Scholia Prop XI confirmatir Sect VII Lib II Theoria Lunæ in Scholia Prop. XXXV. Lib. III & Præcessio Æquinoctiorum ex Principijs suis {illeg} {illeg}itur {illeg} in Scholia Prop. XXXV Lib III Precessio Æquinoctiorum ex Principijs suis plre{illeg}tius decuc{illeg}tur & {illeg} {illeg} Theoria Cometarum pluribus et accurationibus Ex {illeg} exemplis confirmatur in eodum {illeg}, & {illeg}alim {illeg} nom pauca Libro III. {illeg} emendantur, & 4 ut praeter& {illeg} {illeg}mata Typographia passim corr ut alia præterum. 26 Martij. 1712 J. N.
Source
MINT 19/2/99, National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey, UKBefore 2 July 1702 (the draft letter), with the draft for the second edition of the Principia undersigned 26 March 1712, c. 564 words.