THE ART OF LIVING
In an effort to describe Jefferson’s idea of “the
Good Life,” the noted historian H. W. van Loon speaks of him as
the American counterpart of the English yeoman. While yeoman
is of uncertain meaning, he sees it as referring to those younger
sons of a family of free landowners who did not share in the
inheritance with their older brothers and who therefore by way of
individual initiative worked their way to the top. The yeomen were
proud of their freedom; they belonged to no group and refused to be
categorized as either nobles or lords. They were what might be called
the “natural aristocracy” in that they achieved nobility
of character and wealth through self application.
A yeoman might be poor, but he realized he had certain
natural rights and these were precious to him. His cottage, no matter
how simple or dilapidated, was his own, and even the king himself
could not cross the threshold of that edifice unless he had provided
himself with an official warrant. Mr. van Loon quotes William Pitt as
saying of the yeomen: “Even the poorest of them may, in his own
cottage, bid defiance to all the forces of the Crown. That cottage
may be frail; its roof may shake; the wind may blow through the seams
of the walls. The storms may enter it. The rain may enter it. But the
King of England cannot enter and all of the King’s forces dare
not cross the threshold of the rhined tenement of a free man.”
One begins to grasp Jefferson’s sense of the good
life when he weighs the meaning of a freeman.
Freedom to Jefferson not only meant that a
man is a king in his own house, which was so precious to the yeomen,
but it made possible the two virtues he stressed beyond all others:
self-reliance and self-respect.
Jefferson was philosophically speaking a utilitarian,
which means that he believed happiness should
be one’s goal in life. Jeremy Bentham, a British philosopher
who was contemporary with Jefferson, fathered utilitarianism through
his teaching that the only intrinsic good is pleasure and the only
intrinsic evil is pain. His adage was that the social institutions
should produce “the greatest happiness for the greatest
number.” Jefferson wrote much the same way. While he admitted
that “perfect happiness was never intended by the Deity to be
the lot of one of his creatures in this world” he nonetheless
believed that God “has very much put in our power the nearness
of our approaches to it.”
He liked to quote Horace: “Enjoy today and put as
little trust as possible in the morrow.” And Euripides: “More
easily shalt thou bear thy sickness with quietness and a noble
courage; to suffer is man’s fate.” And Cicero: “We
follow our fate here and there wherever it takes us. Whatever will
happen, destiny must be overcome, by bearing it.” These
quotations sound more stoical than utilitarian, and he was of course
greatly influenced by the ethics of the Stoics. But it was the
Epicureans that supported his happiness principle.
Speaking of the influence of these ancient philosophies
upon Jefferson’s thinking, Adrienne Koch says: “Epicureanism
seemed to provide the goal for the good life, Stoic discipline was
the method of attaining it.” (The
Philosophy of Thomas Jefferson, p. 7) The goal for man is the
greatest possible happiness; the method of
attaining it is discipline of the will.
As much as he stressed the stoical concept of
self-discipline, still he believed that circumstances
could not be ignored. To be happy one must
place himself in that circumstance most conducive to happiness. It is
here that his hatred for big cities finds expression. He thought of
the people in the crowded slums of Europe’s big cities as so
many “sardines in a box.” He hated such conditions with a
passion, and he believed that such urban life is the cause of most
human misery. He contrasted such scenes with the wide open spaces of
his own beloved Virginia, where every man could have a bit of soil he
could call his own. It was his conviction that man’s only real
chance for happiness is to be close to the soil, for it is there that
he finds freedom and independence. The good life, therefore, is the
rural life. The Creator never intended that man live as they do in
the tenements of big cities.
Central to Jeffersonian ethics is self-understanding.
It is the man who knows himself that is free. Man has the natural
right to be himself. It is morally wrong for any man, whether he be
king or priest, to have such power over another that he cannot act
and think for himself. Monticello was something sacred to him, not
simply because it was his home all his life, but, as van Loon puts
it, “there he could be himself and to be one’s self
seemed to him the highest form of human happiness.”
Some thirty years ago the famous American historian
James Truslow Adams produced a book entitled Jeffersonian
Principles in which he listed those
principles of “The Art of Living” that he thought most
noteworthy in Jefferson’s thinking. One he mentions is
Jefferson’s insistence that the human mind gains more by
looking forward than backward. This was part of his effort to free
the mind from the bigotry caused by the clerical canonization of the
past. Adams also refers to Jefferson’s reference to indolence,
extravagance and infidelity to duty as cardinal sins. Many of us
would shrink from his plea that “the maxim of buying nothing
without the money in our pocket to pay for it would make of our
country one of the happiest upon earth.”
Adams is also impressed with his insistence that man
make proper use of his time. Indolence is a cause of much
unhappiness. He sees industry as the means to mental health: “No
laborious person was ever yet hysterical. Exercise and application
produce order in our affairs, health of body and cheerfulness of
mind, and these make us precious to our friends. It is while we are
young that the habit of industry is formed.”
He speaks of “the inestimable value of
intellectual pleasures,” and he avows that “nothing is
ours which another may deprive us of.” And he includes sympathy
in his description of the good life: “What more sublime delight
than to mingle tears with one whom the hand of heaven hath smitten
. . . and to share our bread with one to whom misfortune
has left none!” The alleviation of human misery is the good
man’s goal in life: “This world abounds indeed with
misery: to lighten it’s burden we must divide it with another.”
In spelling out some rules of good society, Jefferson
mentions good humor as a preservative of peace and tranquility. He
also states that one should make it a rule never to enter into an
argument with another. It never pays to contradict anybody.
“Conviction is the effect of our own dispassionate reasoning,
either in solitude, or weighing within ourselves, dispassionately,
what we hear from others, standing uncommitted in argument ourselves.
It was one of the rules that made Doctor Franklin the most amiable of
men in society, ‘never to contradict anybody.’ If he was
urged to announce an opinion, he did it rather by asking questions,
as if for information, or by suggesting doubts.”
He believed that pride costs us more than hunger,
thirst, and cold; and one of his adages was “Take things by
their smooth handle.” Another was: “We never repent of
having eaten too little.” And another: “Never trouble
another for what you can do for yourself.”
From our study of his religious philosophy we may
conclude that there was a religious base for Jefferson’s
ethics. Indeed to him religion had to pass a moral test: “I
must ever believe that religion substantially good which produces an
honest life, and we have been authorized by one whom you and I
equally respect, to judge of the tree by its fruit.”
He revealed in a letter to John Adams how he related
morality to religion:
If by religion we are to understand
sectarian dogmas, in which no two of them agree, then your
exclamation on them is just, “that this would be the best of
all possible worlds if there were no religion in it.” But if
the moral precepts, innate in man, and made part of his physical
constitution, as necessary for a social being, if the sublime
doctrines of philanthropy and deism taught us by Jesus of Nazareth,
in which all agree, constitute true religion, then without it, this
would be, as you again say, “something not fit to be named
even, indeed, a hell.”
Jefferson’s view of the nature of man made him
neither an optimist nor a pessimist. Though he spoke often of a moral
sense being implanted by God within man,
which is as much a part of man as a leg or arm, still he believed
that this moral sense was given to men in varying degrees. It is
something that must be strengthened by exercise and cultivation. His
melioristic view of human nature (that is, that man’s condition
is sinful or evil, but he is capable of greatly improving his
condition) led him to say: “Although I do not, with some
enthusiasts, believe that the human condition will ever advance to
such a state of perfection as that there shall no longer be pain or
vice in the world, yet I believe it susceptible of much improvement,
and, most of all, in matters of government and religion.”
(Koch, P. 118)
“I do not believe that fourteen out of fifteen
men are rogues,” he wrote one time from Monticello, then added:
“but I have always found that rogues would be uppermost, and I
do not know that the proportion is too strong for the higher orders,
and for those who, rising above the swinish multitude, always
contrive to nestle themselves into places of power and profit.”
Though all men are not rogues, the rogues are usually in power. His
faith in human nature is protected by the principle of eternal
vigilance. While he believed that man’s natural benevolence
must be viewed in the light of his disposition to self-interest (“All
know the influence of interest on the mind of man, and how
unconsciously his judgment is warped by that influence”), he
had faith in man’s improvement and progress.
While Alexander Campbell thought much more in terms of
the glory and dignity of man than his sinfulness and degradation, he
too had a realistic view of human nature. “My acquaintance with
men and things,” he wrote in the 1838 Millennial
Harbinger, p. 386, “has very
reluctantly compelled me to think either that there is no common
sense view of justice or that there is at this day a great lack of
common honesty among mankind.” In another context he wrote:
“Some men would be the janitors of Pandemonium for a living.
They would invent machines for cursing, perjury, and blasphemy, if
they could find a ready market for them . . . Oh! what pitchy
darkness has sin thrown over the intellects of men! Many who once
could have reasoned like angels now reason as the demons of
perdition.” (Mill. Harb. 10,
p. 339)
Yet the “Dignity of Man” was one of his
favorite lecture topics. “At the bidding of the Almighty our
father’s body rose from the earth in all the symmetrical beauty
of stately stature, form and color,” he said to a college
audience in 1838, “a splendid monument of the consummate
wisdom, power and benevolence of the Creator, and stood erect in the
presence of God.”
Like Jefferson, who believed man had no business trying
to define God, Campbell was aware that men “impiously presume
to scan the Deity.” Yet because man is created in the image of
God, and since it is essential that man study the model of his own
being in order to understand himself, man should seek to know God to
the full extent of his revelation both in Nature and in the Bible.
Like Jefferson, the Sage of Bethany believed that
morality is the chief end of education, and he too was convinced that
God had implanted moral consciousness within man: “In our
judgment education does not wholly make nor unmake the man, but gives
form and character to all that is within him sown or planted by the
hand of his Creator.” (Mill. Harb. 9,
p. 530) Also like Jefferson, he believed that morality begins with
self-knowledge. Man is by nature a thinking
being; he ought not only to think, but to think for himself. To
do this one must free himself from the bondage of the past.
Even though God implants the moral sense, moral
character is cultivated only by one’s own efforts, Campbell
insisted. “It is an acquisition, the fruit not of a single
effort, but of a series of efforts terminating in fixed habits . . .
It is the combined result or compound product of the understanding,
conscience, and affections as displayed in all the actions of our
lives towards God and man, things temporal and eternal, celestial and
terrestrial.” (Ibid, p.
194) Along this same line of individual responsibility he stressed
that morality demands that one do good, and not merely that he
restrain from doing evil. Both Jefferson and Campbell believed that
morality consisted very largely of doing good works. Campbell
certainly stressed Christian morality
more than Jefferson, pointing out that one’s heart must be pure
before God, which is realized only when man yields his will to God,
still he saw no virtue in a man that professed Christianity whose
life was not a blessing to the world. In his many essays on morality
he liked to quote Isaiah’s “Cease to do evil-learn to do
well.”
Morality is thus something to be learned. He saw love
as the fulfillment of the whole law of morality. “The shortest
and most effectual way to cultivate all moral excellence is to
cultivate love.” A man will be good to the man that he loves.
“Love does no ill to its neighbor.” To cultivate love one
must involve himself with mankind, suffering with those that suffer
and rejoicing with those that rejoice. No man can be truly good
without love; love and morality are inseparable.
Campbell speaks pointedly in his essays on morality
about those things that promote immorality. The pulpit seems to be
uppermost as a promoter of “hypocrisy, insincerity,
irreverence, licentiousness, antinomianism, and profanity.” It
would take someone as anti-clerical as a Campbell or a Jefferson to
write: “I am still persuaded that the pulpit has been more
fatal to the souls of multitudes than the stage.” He also
chastizes the religious press for encouraging licentiousness. It
disturbed him to see a treatise on poultry and eggs alongside an
article on the New Birth in a newspaper.
He was sensitive to the occupations men choose who
profess Christian morality. Some callings are simply immoral, he
warned, such as the manufacturing of Bowie knives. “The maker
and the vender of such barbarous and savage instruments surely cannot
pray for a blessing upon their labors and profession.” The case
of the gallant soldier who carries his weapons openly is different.
But a man cannot pray for holiness and yet carry or manufacture
secret weapons.
The distillers come up for the strongest censure. The
10,000 distillers in the United States in 1839 (his own estimate)
were equally responsible for the thousands that were ruined annually
by drink. Speculators also are rebuked: “This calling, in all
its branches, is but sheer selfishness at work to enrich itself on
the labors of others.” It is the art of living upon nothing,
the art of making a fortune by cunning. Even politics is scored:
“Neither an Apostle nor a Christian could compatibly devote any
portion of his time to the trade of
politics.” He underscores trade, so
perhaps a Jefferson and even himself could indulge in politics
without making a trade of
it!
Censoriousness is an especially ugly vice to Campbell.
He suggests that we should speak only of one’s virtues in his
absence, and if we speak of his faults in his presence it should be
with such a disposition that he would not be offended. A reprover
should be at least as old as the reproved. He points out that he
would question a man’s love for him who would reprove him
without any fear of offending him. “A censorious spirit is an
immoral spirit,” he insists. He quotes from Pope’s Universal Prayer: “Teach
me to feel another’s woe, To hide the fault I see.”
He also scores prevarication, equivocation, double
meanings, and mental reservations. Insincerity and dishonesty he
hated, and he found too much of these in the churches. He strikes at
the preachers for their lack of punctuality, even to counting up the
man hours and money lost by the audience when a preacher is late for
a speaking appointment. In an effort to make worldliness a matter of
the disposition of the heart he says: “To see a Christian in
love with a ballroom or a theatre is not more demonstrative of a
worldly and fleshly temper than to see him eager in the pursuit of
wealth or popularity at the expense of truth, honor, and generosity.”
CHARACTER AND PERSONALITY
Few men have been canonized with the world’s
greatest minds as have Jefferson and Campbell. It is noteworthy when
responsible men become so extravagant in their claims to greatness
for the honored dead as we find in the following eulogies.
If all the dust and bones of every Philip, Ferdinand and Charles of Spain and Portugal, of every Louis, Henry and Charles of France, and of all the Plantagenets, Tudors, Stuarts and Hanovers of England, were concentrated in one mighty urn, a single relic from Jefferson’s remains, as they lie moldering on the slopes of the Blue Ridge in Virginia, would be more precious than them all in the sight of a just God, and the eyes of every lover of the human race. (D. W. Voorhees, in Forty Years of American Oratory, chapter on Jefferson)
If Apelles alone could paint Alexander of
Macedon, who can paint Alexander Campbell? . . . In dignity and solid
judgment he was both Moses and Solomon. For forty years he was Moses
keeping flocks among these mountains, and communing with God.
Overlapping this period, he was Solomon for forty years discoursing
the wisdom of God. Incompatible as Moses and Solomon may seem to be
with John the Immerser, he was John the reformer and harbinger of the
New Covenant to thousands. . . Both Newton and Campbell seemed to
have truth imbred in their minds. (D. S. Burnet in Mill. Harb. 37,
p. 315)
What made Jefferson great? James Parton, America’s
first professional biographer, attributes his greatness to his love
for life. While in some respects he has been equaled and sometimes
even surpassed, “where has there been a lover
so tender, so warm, so constant, as he? Love
was his life. Few men have had so many sources of pleasure, so many
agreeable tastes and pursuits.” Parton enjoyed describing him
as a gentleman-farmer who could “calculate an eclipse, survey
an estate, tie an artery, plan an edifice, try a cause, break a
horse, dance a minuet, and play a violin.” Except for the
violin a similar description could be given Campbell, and in its
stead we could add “write a poem,” for he had composed
twenty of them in both rhyme and blank verse in his boyhood. Both men
loved nature, homelife, books, ideas, and people.
They were both at home on a horse or in the presence of
kings. They loved wine and good company. They were excellent in their
ability to communicate ideas, being among the very best
conversationalists in history. A good case can be made for their
attraction to women. In France Jefferson built lifelong friendships
with women, and his biographers assure us that they could have been
just as serious as he would want them: “She (Maria Cosway, a
highly cultured Anglo-Italian artist) liked Jefferson with a
continuity and devotion that might, it would seem from the distance,
have grown, had he cared to foster it, into a more ardent feeling.”
(Russell, p. 116)
Having the advantage of being single, his wife having
died when he was in his prime, Jefferson had women “taking
possession of him at their first meeting,” and they wrote love
letters to him even while he was in the White House. Having the
disadvantage of being already attached, having married again after
losing his first wife, and also in being a preacher, Campbell’s
attraction to women was apparently more one-sided, though possibly
enjoyed with as much pride!
D. S. Burnett inadvertently revealed Campbell’s
attraction to women when he wrote the following into his memorial
sermon about Campbell: “An admiring Kentucky lady hearer being
asked in 1825, when he wore a suit of Kentucky jeans, the fashion of
that time and region, how he was dressed, replied: ‘In a
splendid suit of black, of course, but I did not notice.’”
If Jefferson had them writing love letters to him from abroad,
Campbell had them following him home from Europe! Elisa Davies tells
the story of her lonely, tragic life in An
Earnest Life, in which she tells of seeing
Campbell for the first time. It was a case of falling in love — in
all good Christian faith, of course, but love just the same. She
desired to spend the rest of her life with him and his people. She
followed him back to America and was a visitor in his home for over a
year. Campbell’s magnanimity overwhelmed her. To her he was the
paragon of manhood. She testifies that having stayed in his home for
a year, during which time she helped nurse his sick and bury his
dead, she was still unable to detect any flaw in his character.
Professor Thornton of the University of Virginia in his Who Was Thomas Jefferson? (1909)
assures us that “No vulgar amour, no vinous debauch, no fever
of the card table ever smirched the fair fame of Thomas Jefferson.”
There were tales to the contrary, that he not only smoked and drank,
but that he gambled, swore, and even slept with his slave girl,
Sally, by whom he had five children who “looked remarkably like
him.” A New York physician once stated that he heard a southern
gentleman say, “I saw for myself, the daughter of Thomas
Jefferson sold in New Orleans, for one thousand dollars.” Ebony, a magazine for
Negroes, as recently at 1954 did a photographic study of several aged
Negroes who trace their ancestry to the illustrious Jefferson. The
more responsible Jeffersonian scholars assure us, however, that such
reports are wholly unreliable, that his life was as it appeared to
be, morally clean and intellectually honest.
As much calumny as he suffered otherwise, Campbell was
never accused of impropriety with the opposite sex. Both men suffered
much from grief and adversity, turning to philosophy and religion for
their answers to the problem of evil. Each lost his wife at a time
when his love for her seemed to be the greatest. They also buried
several of their beloved children amidst their tender years. The only
time in his entire life that Jefferson is described as being
“completely overcome by his feelings” was at his wife’s
death. His “violent grief” was not assuaged for three
long weeks. He wrote of the experience in these words: “I found
time and silence the only medicine, and these but assuage, they never
can suppress, the deep drawn sigh which recollection forever brings
up . . . “ Again he said: “I have often wondered for what
good end the sensations of grief could be intended . . . I wish the
pathologists would tell us what is the use of grief . . .”
Upon the death of little Wycliffe, his gifted
twelve-year-old son who drowned while he was in Europe, Campbell
wrote as follows: “How often do we see the sinner living to his
threescore years and ten, while many a pure and excellent strippling
is cut down as the green and tender herb, in the very morning of his
existence? . . . How then shall we explain the mystery?” He
goes on to suggest that there are other provinces in God’s
immense universe where the departed ones may be employed more happily
and more usefully than here. He concludes: “Hence the strong
probability that multitudes of pure and noble spirits are being
constantly drafted from earth to minister to the increasing wants, or
to the accumulating pleasures, of a universe more rapidly increasing
in its tenantry than we can form any idea of from all the ratios of
increasing population registered in the annals of our own little
world.” (Mill. Harb. 18,
p. 709)
Obviously Campbell had more to reach for amidst his
grief than did Jefferson.
By way of comparing personalities it is apparent that
Campbell was more aggressive, more of a reformer; Jefferson was
quieter, even “aloof and shy,” as his biographer
describes him, “except among intimates.” Campbell was a
better business man, more successful as a farmer, dying the richest
man in West Virginia; Jefferson was sometimes a poor manager, often
going broke and having to sell his books to pay his debts. Campbell
was a better speaker and debater, though not much better, and he
would do well to hold his own with Jefferson as a thinker and
scholar. As educational leaders andphilosophers they were much alike, strong in both theory
and practice, though Campbell would labor for the cause more directly
and Jefferson more through others. Jefferson was probably a wiser
manager of men, could work behind the scenes better; he knew how to
make use of the talents of others; he was far more patient than
Campbell. Campbell too had an uncanny knowledge of human nature, one
of his critics (President Humphreys of Amherst College in 1850)
attributing “his great knowledge of human nature” as a
reason for his success.
Both men were certainly amiable and charming; both were
domestic, loving their families; both were good fathers and husbands.
Both were eager to get back home almost as soon as they left; and
both were incidentally among the more-traveled men of their age.
Jefferson’s heart was always at Monticello, his biographers
tell us; Campbell spoke often of his longing to be at Bethany. Both
were gentlemen-farmers; both were great entertainers, wining and
dining the elite of Virginia and foreign visitors as well. As letter
writers they were much alike, first of all in that both of them did
so much of it, and also because it was a kind of catharsis, serving
as an outlet for grief and loneliness as well as an arena for the
confrontation of ideas. It is my suspicion that both men wrote
letters and essays in single draft, sending their stuff out “as
is” without revisions. While Jefferson wrote many books and
essays, he was not as prolific as Campbell. But I think he was as
good a writer as Campbell, not as verbose and perhaps clearer.
Jefferson and Campbell were both proud men; proud of
their success, their colleges, their beloved Virginia. Both were
tough competitors. Jefferson may have had more foresight, for he
planned years and years ahead, and he was quite willing to wait.
Campbell was more impromptu, though not reckless. Jefferson was a
better organizer, got more mileage out of those around him. Both were
calculating, coldly logical, more Lockean than Platonic. They were
less emotional and imaginative than most men of influence; facts
remained facts and never became allegories. Jefferson depended more
upon his pen than his tongue; Campbell was equally effective with
both. Jefferson was clear, precise, and meticulous in presentation of
facts; he disliked long sentences. Campbell was precise in
temperament, but his long sentences got in his way. Both were
interested in nearly everything, but Jefferson became more involved
in more things.
Both men were especially eager for quietness in which
to think and write. In France Jefferson stole away to a monastery
where he roomed with monks who had a rule against talking! Campbell
built his study out in his yard 150 feet away from the house, and
then stood to read and
think!
The men had enough physical resemblances to be kin to
each other. Neither had the disadvantage of being handsome, except
that they were strong physical specimens with fine masculine
features. They both had high cheekbones and a projecting chin; both
were moderately tall and had sandy hair that blossomed into white
early in life; both were graceful, striking, dignified. Jefferson
stood as straight as a gun-barrel, while Campbell was slightly
stooped; but Jefferson’s right shoulder was higher than the
other, and one account describes him as walking with a stoop just as
Campbell did. Their eyes were gray (or hopelessly nondescript) and
impressive. Both men are described as having a countenance that gave
assurance of a gentle heart and a sympathetic, inquisitive mind. Both
were innovators and individualists.
In one important respect they move away from each other
in different directions, for Jefferson was primarily a statesman and
Campbell a religious reformer, educator, and journalist. And yet each
also moved in the direction of the other’s primary interest.
Jefferson too was interested in religious reform, and, as strange as
it may seem, such a one as Williams Jennings Bryan, who virtually
worshiped Jefferson, saw him primarily as a religious
figure! As Bryan put it, “The people
loved Jefferson because, like the Christian Savior, he first loved
them. Greater than his intellect was his love for all mankind.”
(Peterson, p. 259)
And Campbell made a few political overtures, even after
saying that nothing is more inimical to the gospel than politics. He
wrote and spoke often on political questions, and in 1829 he served
in the Virginia Constitutional Convention where he worked with at
least two men who had been bosom friends of Jefferson in earlier
life, James Madison and James Monroe, both former presidents. He also
rubbed shoulders with Jefferson’s arch political enemy, former
Chief Justice John Marshall. He also spoke from time to time for
state legislatures, visited with at least one president (Buchanan) in
the White House, and on one occasion he addressed both houses of
Congress.
It was former President James Madison that pinpointed
the greatness of Alexander Campbell. Upon being asked what he thought
of him just after being associated with him in the state convention,
Madison spoke of his high opinion of his ability in the convention,
and then said: “But it is as a theologian that Mr. Campbell
must be known. It was my pleasure to hear him very often as a
preacher of the gospel, and I regard him as the ablest and most
original expounder of the Scriptures I have ever heard.”