SPRING SALE đź“š Buy 3+ Books | Get 25% Off

The co-op bookstore for avid readers
Book Cover for: Jefferson's Demons: Portrait of a Restless Mind, Michael Knox Beran

Jefferson's Demons: Portrait of a Restless Mind

Michael Knox Beran

"I have often wondered for what good end the sensations of Grief could be intended."

-- Thomas Jefferson

Thomas Jefferson suffered during his life from periodic bouts of dejection and despair, shadowed intervals during which he was full of "gloomy forebodings" about what lay ahead.

Not long before he composed the Declaration of Independence, the young Jefferson lay for six weeks in idleness and ill health at Monticello, paralyzed by a mysterious "malady." Similar lapses were to recur during anxious periods in his life, often accompanied by violent headaches. In Jefferson's Demons, Michael Knox Beran illuminates an optimistic man's darker side -- Jefferson as we have rarely seen him before.

The worst of these moments came after his wife died in 1782. But two years later, after being dispatched to Europe, Jefferson recovered nerve and spirit in the salons of Paris, where he fell in love with a beautiful young artist, Maria Cosway. When their affair ended, Jefferson's health again broke down. He set out for the palms and temples of southern Europe, and though he did not know where the therapeutic journey would take him or where it would end, his encounter with the old civilizations of the Mediterranean was transformative. The Greeks and Romans taught him that a man could make productive use of his demons.

Jefferson's immersion in the mystic truths of the Old World gave him insights into mysteries of life and art that Enlightenment philosophy had failed to supply. Beran skillfully shows how Jefferson drew on the esoteric lore he encountered to transform anxiety into action. On his return to America, Jefferson entered the most productive period of his life: He created a new political party, was elected president, and doubled the size of the country. His private labors were no less momentous...among them, the artistry of Monticello and the University of Virginia.

Jefferson's Demons is an elegantly composed account of the strangeness and originality of one Founder's genius. Michael Knox Beran uncovers the maps Jefferson used to find his way out of dejection and to forge a new democratic culture for America. Here is a Jefferson who, with all his failings, remains one of his country's greatest teachers and prophets.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Free Press
  • Publish Date: Jun 27th, 2007
  • Pages: 288
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.00in - 6.00in - 0.73in - 0.78lb
  • EAN: 9781416568254
  • Categories: • Presidents & Heads of State• United States - Colonial Period (1600-1775)• Historical

About the Author

Beran, Michael Knox: - Michael Knox Beran has written for The Wall Street Journal, National Review, and The New Yorker. A graduate of Columbia, Cambridge, and Yale Law School, he is a lawyer and lives in Westchester County, New York, with his wife and daughter.

Praise for this book

Louis Auchincloss Beran has written a fascinating account of the glories, complexities, and discrepancies of the philosophic thinking of the most imaginative and scholarly of our presidents. He shows us how Jefferson used his knowledge of the spiritual rites of ancient civilizations to help direct his inner genius or "demon" to convert ."..lust into love, passion into noble architecture, bloody revolution into ordered liberty, and so on." But he also shows us the occasional bad moments when the sage of Monticello became the victim of the manifold contradictions of his protean nature.
Arthur Herman author of "How the Scots Invented the Modern World" Michael Knox Beran gives us a Thomas Jefferson we have not met before. This is not the intrepid Founding Father and sage from Monticello, or the slave-owning ravisher of Sally Hemings. This is Jefferson in flesh and blood, in mind and soul, a man haunted by the sights, smells, ideas, obsessions, of his own age. Michael Beran has given us a book of brilliance and imagination.
Arthur Herman

author of "How the Scots Invented the Modern World"

Michael Knox Beran gives us a Thomas Jefferson we have not met before. This is not the intrepid Founding Father and sage from Monticello, or the slave-owning ravisher of Sally Hemings. This is Jefferson in flesh and blood, in mind and soul, a man haunted by the sights, smells, ideas, obsessions, of his own age. Michael Beran has given us a book of brilliance and imagination.

Louis Auchincloss

Beran has written a fascinating account of the glories, complexities, and discrepancies of the philosophic thinking of the most imaginative and scholarly of our presidents. He shows us how Jefferson used his knowledge of the spiritual rites of ancient civilizations to help direct his inner genius or "demon" to convert .,."lust into love, passion into noble architecture, bloody revolution into ordered liberty, and so on." But he also shows us the occasional bad moments when the sage of Monticello became the victim of the manifold contradictions of his protean nature.