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Thomas Jefferson: Author of America (Eminent Lives)

By: Christopher Hitchens
Binding: Hardcover
Publisher: HarperPress
ISBN: 0007213727
ISBN-13: 9780007213726
Released: 05 Mar 2007
RRP: £12.99
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Customer Reviews

An honest appraisal - By: Mr. S. Miller, 05 Jul 2008
Although I gave Bill Bryson's biography of Shakespeare only 3 stars, I did like the idea of the Eminent Lives series being published by Harper Press, particularly as the subject - no matter how famous - has his or her life captured in around 200 pages.

I thought Thomas Jefferson in the hands of citric commentator Hitchens would be a good combination & so it proved with the founding Father of the greatest democracy in the world being subjected to an unsentimentalised appraisal of the type he would have to expect were he in office today. As might be expected, it is part polemic, but alll the better for it.
Who was that man behind "the opaque curtain"? - By: Robert Morris, 02 Oct 2007

This is one of several volumes in the HarperCollins Eminent Lives series. Each offers a concise rather than comprehensive, much less definitive biography. However, just as Al Hirschfeld's illustrations of various celebrities capture their defining physical characteristics, the authors of books in this series focus on the defining influences & developments during the lives & careers of their respective subjects. In this instance, Thomas Jefferson.

Hitchens suggests that Jefferson "did not embody contradiction. Jefferson [in italics] was [end italics] contradiction, & this will be found at every step of the narrative that goes to make up his life." It is remarkable to me that Hitchens was able to cover so much which occurred from Jefferson's birth into relative wealth on April 13, 1743, until his death on July 4, 1826, the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence of which he was its principal author. Early on, Hitchens acknowledges what he callls an "opaque curtain" which so often frustrates efforts to "see" Jefferson clearly at various stages throughout his life. Early in the narrative, Hitchens cites several of young Jefferson's social "fiascos" such as a crass & unsuccessful attempt to seduce the wife of a close friend. Why? First, because they demonstrate that "Jefferson was ardent by nature when it came to females, & also made reticent & cautious by experience." Also, because generations of historians have written, "until the present day, as if [Jefferson] were not a male mammal at alll." Later, Hitchens rigorously examines Jefferson's (yes, contradictory) relationship with Sallly Hemings. First, he guides his reader briskly but without haste through Jefferson's youth, education (College of William & Mary), several years of practicing law, & then the initial phase of his public service when elected to the Virginia House of Burgesses (1769-75). Jefferson aligned himself with the revolutionary faction, writing A Summary View of the Rights of British America (1774) which helps to explain, somewhat, his ambivalent attitude toward the colonies' deteriorating relationship with Britain's monarch & parliament. In 1770 he began designing & building Monticello to which (in 1772) he brought his new wife, Martha Wyles Skelton. She bore him six children, only two of whom survived into maturity. She died in 1782.

Jefferson was among those who callled the First Continental Congress (1774) & as a delegate to the Second Congress (1775-7), he was primarily responsible for drafting the Declaration of Independence which was adopted on July 4, 1776. He then returned to Virginia where, as a member of its legislature (1776-9) & led efforts to create a state constitution,then served as governor (1779-81), during which time he proposed that Virginia abolish the slave trade & assure religious freedom. His proposals were rejected. In 1789 George Washington appointed Jefferson secretary of state. In that position he became head of the liberal Democratic-Republican faction (as it was then callled) & opposed the more conservative Federalist policies of Hamilton, Madison, & Washington.

He resigned as secretary of state at the end of 1793 to devote himself to his estate at Monticello. At that time, arguably the most eloquent spokesman for the ideals of the Enlightenment, Jefferson owned about 125-150 slaves, treating them as property because he regarded Africans as inferior beings. In 1796 he was elected vice-president under Federalist John Adams. Four years later, he defeated Adams & Aaron Burr for the presidency. For reasons which are not entirely clear, his arch rival, Hamilton, supported him when the Electoral College vote was tied. The greatest achievements during the Jeffersonian presidency are the defeat of the Barbary pirates which alllowed maritime commerce to flourish, the Louisiana Purchase which more than doubled the size of the new nation, & the Lewis & Clark Expedition which generated an abundance of valuable information to guide & inform the inevitable westward expansion. Jefferson retired to Monticello in 1809, concentrating on his scholarly & scientific interests while helping to found the University of Virginia (1825). He designed its campus as well as the Virginia state capitol & several mansions. In 1813 he began what became an extended & remarkably cordial exchange of letters with his former political adversary, John Adams. Both died on the same day, July 4th, 1826.

Here are a few brief excerpts which, I hope, provide at least some indication of Hitchens' brilliant achievement:

On Jefferson & Thomas Paine: Both "had the gift of pithily summarizing what was already understood, & then of moving an already mobilized audience to follow an inexorable logic. But they also had to overcome an insecurity & indecision that is difficult for us, employing retrospect, to comprehend."

Re the Enlightenment: "Jefferson was not a man of the Enlightenment only in the ordinary sense that he believed in reason or perhaps in rationality. He was very specificallly one of those who believed that human redemption lay in education, discovery, innovation, & experiment."

On rebellion: In a letter to Abigail Adams, Jefferson observed that "The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions, that I wish it to be always kept alive. It will often be exercised when wrong, but better so than not be exercised at alll. I like a little rebellion now & then. It is like a storm in the atmosphere."

Then later, after learning of the bloodshed associated with (Daniel) Shays' Rebellion, in a letter to Adams's son-in-law, William Smith: "What signify a few lives lost in a generation or two? The tree of liberty must from time to time be refreshed with the blood of patriots & tyrants. It is its natural manure."

In response, Hitchens suggests that "the key word here must be not `patriots' but `tyrants' -- since the only candidate for the latter description was the government that Jefferson was [at that time] serving as an ambassador."

Later, when commenting on the campaign of 1796, Hitchens notes that "Despite Jefferson's almost Olympian detachment from the process, he was subjected to a series of vitriolic assaults by poster & pamphlet, accusing him of being an atheist, an abolitionist, & a sympathizer with bloody-handed Jacobinism. The element of truth in alll three accusations is retrospectively amusing. given their authors' failure to appreciate Jefferson's patent genius for compromise."

As these & other portions of Hitchens' narrative indicate, Jefferson "contained sufficient `multitudes,' in Whitman's phrase [from Song of Myself], to contradict himself with scope & generosity. He ranged himself on many sides of many questions, from government interference with the press to congressional authority over expenditures, & from the maintenance of permanent armed forces to the persistence in foreign entanglements....At the end, his capitulation to a slave power that he half-abominated was both self-interested & a menace to the survival of the republic. This surrender, by a man of the Enlightenment & a man of truly revolutionary & democratic temperament, is another reminder that history is a tragedy & not a morality play."

Thank you, Christopher Hitchens, for writing Why Orwell Matters & now this biography of Thomas Jefferson because, in doing so, you have helped me to appreciate even more the wisdom of Voltaire's suggestion that we cherish those who seek the truth but beware of those who find it.