Sign in  |  Register

The New Criterion

It operates as a refuge for a civilizing element in short supply in contemporary America: honest criticism
- The Wall Street Journal

Features

January 1997

Jefferson on race & revolution

by Hadley Arkes

On The Long Affair: Thomas Jefferson & the French Revolution, 1785–1800 by Conor Cruise O’Brien

Edmund Burke remarked famously—and often—on those men, seized with grand theories, who busied themselves making, unmaking, and remaking the French Revolution. They were counting, he said, on “bungling practice [to correct] absurd theory.” For Burke, the sweeping proclamations on “the Rights of Man” were belied by a spirit of lawlessness; a passion to resist authority running so deep that it would finally detach itself from all manner of moral and legal restraints. But for Thomas Jefferson, viewing France from afar—delivered from the embassy in Paris, installed now as secretary of state in the administration of George Washington—the same record of mayhem did not produce the same impressions or inspire the same judgments. The French Revolution would lurch from confiscation to murderous violence, and yet nothing in this record would mar, for Jefferson, the beauty of the idea itself. The idea was, of course, & ...

This article is available to subscribers and for individual purchase

Subscribe to TNC (Print and Online editions)

Subscribe to TNC (Online only)

Purchase article credit and clip this article

If you already have an account login first

Hadley Arkes


more from this author

This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 15 January 1997, on page 26

Copyright © 2009 The New Criterion | www.newcriterion.com

http://www.newcriterion.com/articles.cfm/Jefferson-on-race---revolution-3403
rate this article for your user profile

E-mail to friend


The New Criterion

By the author

The prophets today

by Hadley Arkes

A review of The Prophets, by Norman Podhoretz.

Liberalism & the law

by Hadley Arkes

The fifth in a series titled The betrayal of liberalism

Paul Johnson's America

by Hadley Arkes

On A History of the American People by Paul Johnson

You might also enjoy

The state despotic

by Mark Steyn

On our gradual slide into servitude.

The permanent transient

by Joseph Epstein

Santayana in his letters.

Cheerfulness breaks in

by Pat Rogers

On two new biographies of the incomparable Dr. Johnson.

Most popular

view more >

download
first delivery

The New Criterion is now optimized for Mobile Devices

New from The New Criterion:
40 page special issue
on our conference

"Free speech in
an age of Jihad"

Events

July 16 2009

OPEN CHICAGO EVENT


Webcasts

"Taking the Occasion," poems by Daniel Brown
The eighth annual New Criterion Poetry Prize winner reads selections from his book at an evening with the Friends of The New Criterion.


Jay Nordlinger on the future of classical music, from an evening with the Friends of The New Criterion.


A profile of the abstract painter Thornton WIllis
Directed by Michael Feldman. Featuring Thornton Willis and commentary by James Panero. Produced in coordination with Willis's March 2009 exhibition at Elizabeth Harris Gallery, New York

Weblog