The relationship between Thomas Jefferson and William Short, the
eldest son of an established Virginia family and relative of Martha
Jefferson, began as a patron-protégé arrangement conventional for
the era. Jefferson encouraged Short's legal career and gave him his
first legal work. Thus began a bond of forty years that that both men
characterized in paternal and filial terms and that sheds considerable
light on the enigmatic Founding Father.In the aftermath of Jefferson's
precipitous "flight from Monticello," Short underwrote substantial
short-term loans to him. Jefferson took the younger man to France as
his private secretary in 1784 but, quickly concluding that his moral
well-being and political judgment were at risk, he urged Short to
return to America and settle down. Short, however, wished to pursue a
foreign service career and a long affair with a French aristocrat.
Jefferson wanted Short to embrace a Virginia way of looking at the
world, even buying him a farm near Monticello. Short resisted--and
rejected Jefferson's ideas about slavery, economics, marriage, the
practice of democratic government, and republican morality, but
without rejecting his "friend and father." He showed little respect
for Jefferson's political achievements, viewing him as a well-meaning
"visionary," yet he was conscious of living in the statesman's shadow.
William Short was not Thomas Jefferson's intellectual equal, was not a
political collaborator, and never became a neighbor, yet the elder man
invested considerable emotional energy and time in his "adoptive son,"
even during his vice-presidency and presidency. By efficiently
managing the younger man's financial affairs Jefferson enabled his
extended stay in France, but also diverted Short's money for his own
use. Although he believed Short's political judgment had been clouded
by his enjoyment of French society and savagely criticized his
reaction to the French Revolution, he never gave up on Short the
private individual._Heir through Hope_ reveals a figure who served as
a unique sounding board to a Founder, while underscoring the distinct
ways Jefferson envisioned the United States' destiny vis à vis
Europe. Fascinating in its own right, their complex relationship
highlights the tensions between the founding generation and its
successors while illuminating the operation of political power in
early national America and Revolutionary Europe.
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Thomas Jefferson's Lifelong Investment in William Short
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780197546857
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter