Jefferson's copy of Don Quixote‘The Knight of Monticello’: A Poem on Thomas Jefferson by Mary Jane Myers The Society April 25, 2024 Beauty, Culture, Poetry 16 Comments . The Knight of Monticello Everywhere and always, Jefferson read. His library stocked a sage’s daily bread. Four volumes, leather-bound, well-thumbed, perused: Don Quixote, his most peculiar muse. He understood as written, Spanish words, no episodes obscured, no meanings blurred. Delighting in that knight’s befuddled thoughts, he seemed to mold his own audacious plots after Mancha’s whimsical ideals— to dream, then bring some fantasy to heel, some hare-brained notion, ludicrous, yet bold, a mesmerized hidalgo’s bright fools-gold. Outré, to build a magisterial home atop a waterless hill, a Palladian dome for charting stars. All scoffed, said no one could, employing rustic red-brick, limestone, wood. He penned a Declaration of Independence: intrepid, daring brutal British vengeance. Louisiana, a gambler president’s throw, to win an outsize realm, soon westward grow. The goals of Lewis’s costly exploration: pinpoint maps; perceptive observation. This Founding Father represents our best, eccentric polymath on offbeat quests. Cervantes, thanks! Your singular brain-child inspired brash exploits in Virginia’s wild. . . Mary Jane Myers resides in Springfield, Illinois. She is a retired JD/CPA tax specialist. Her debut short story collection Curious Affairs was published by Paul Dry Books in 2018. NOTE TO READERS: If you enjoyed this poem or other content, please consider making a donation to the Society of Classical Poets. The Society of Classical Poets does not endorse any views expressed in individual poems or commentary. Share this:Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)Click to print (Opens in new window)Click to share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window)Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window)Click to email a link to a friend (Opens in new window)Click to share on Pinterest (Opens in new window)Trending now: 16 Responses Roy Eugene Peterson April 25, 2024 What a fantastic poem about intrepid Thomas Jefferson as related to Don Quixote, not only charging at windmills but also overcoming obstacles that made others shy away. Your brilliant words shine through and were a treat to the mind and soul. Reply Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Roy Apologies for not responding. Thank you for your kind words. A visit to Monticello inspired me to write this poem. Most sincerely, Mary Jane Reply Wayne April 25, 2024 wonderful history lesson writen in poetry, Reply Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Wayne Apologies for my late response. Thank you for your kind words. Most sincerely Mary Jane Reply ABB April 25, 2024 Nice to see a resurgence of quality patriotic verse about the founders, a sensibility which has been out of vogue for so long now. Quixote is an inspired comparison. Reply Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Dear ABB Thank you for your kind words. Apologies for this late response. I wrote the first version of this poem some 10 years ago. PC of course was rampant, though the more toxic “woke-ness” had not yet reared its ugly head. I was participating in an on-line poetry-writing class. The instructor, a thirty-something woman, was not happy. It seems I hadn’t gotten the memo, that Jefferson abused Sally Hemings, etc. etc. I used to think these throwaway comments were mere nonsense, but unfortunately this puerile cynicism has now infected the general public, and poses a serious attack on our founding principles. Most sincerely, Mary Jane Reply Jeremiah Johnson April 25, 2024 I’ve heard that the skewed American reading of Don Quixote as a heroic visionary was partly the result of the musical “The Man of La Mancha” – didn’t know it went back even farther! Reply Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Dear Jeremiah Thank you for your comment–apologies for my late response. Thank goodness for skewed American mis-readings! A people can build a prosperous nation out of such! Most sincerely Mary Jane Reply Joseph S. Salemi April 25, 2024 Myers’ poem is clear, intelligent, sophisticated, and composed with an impressive command of diction. She links Jefferson with his fictional hero in terms of daring, imaginative leaps, and dreams — but in fact Jefferson was different from the knight of la Mancha. His purchase of the Louisiana territory was an absolutely brilliant piece of statesmanship and diplomacy that doubled the size of the United States and set the stage for the fulfillment of our manifest destiny. His sending of the Lewis and Clark exploration team gave us crucial knowledge that made the absorption and assimilation of this vast territory easier and smoother. Don Quixote could never have pulled off this kind of sharp political maneuvering. He was purely a dreamer. Jefferson may indeed have been an eccentric polymath who was occasionally offbeat, but he was also a shrewd political operator who knew how to maintain and promote his nation’s best interests. I’m glad to see poems with a deep sense of history. Reply Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Dear Joseph Thank you for your kind and intelligent words. Apologies for not responding earlier. The Idea of America seems to have been cobbled together by geniuses from two disparate worlds: frugal Yankees and spendthrift Southern planters (as illustrated by the John Adams/Jefferson rivalry, explained so well in David McCollough’s biography of Adams). I agree with you: Jefferson was a shrewd politician, who knew how to “get hard things done.” Most sincerely Mary Jane Reply Linda Marie Hilton April 25, 2024 isn’t it amazing what inspires humans? excellent poem!!! Reply Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Thank you Marie for your kind words. Apologies for my late response. Most sincerely Mary Jane Reply Margaret Coats April 26, 2024 The poem offers an unusual perspective into Jefferson’s imagination. The Founding Father was also, as Joseph Salemi remarks, a shrewd politician, and you, Mary Jane, call him a “sage” in your second line. Indeed, creative vision with wise competence made this Virginian a shaper of American destiny. Reply Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Dear Margaret Thank you for your kind comments. Apologies for my late response. My “unusual perspective” arose from a visit to Monticello 10 years ago. I was nosing around a side-room in the library, having broken away (slightly!)from the guided group in the main library room. (At Monticello, guided groups are mandatory, and individuals are not free to wander around solo; though it’s always possible to go slightly AWOL!) I noticed several volumes of Don Quixote on a bookshelf. Ah hah! So self-evident truths include the pursuit of windmills! I was “grinning out loud”–and that night started scribbling a draft of this poem. I’m definitely taking poetic license! Most sincerely, Mary Jane Reply Warren Burt Bonham April 29, 2024 This was a well-crafted and educational work. I knew Jefferson had wide-ranging interests but had no idea about the connection to Don Quixote. It would be interesting to see what is on the bookshelves of recent Presidents. I don’t get the sense that politicians do much deep thinking anymore. Reply Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Dear Warren Thank you for your kind words. Apologies for my late response. The Founders were well-read men. I agree with you. The “ideas” of today’s politicians seem limited to 30-second sound bytes and to the 280-character-limit in a Tweet! Most sincerely Mary Jane Reply Leave a Reply Cancel ReplyYour email address will not be published.CommentName* Email* Website Notify me of follow-up comments by email. Notify me of new posts by email. Δ This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.
Roy Eugene Peterson April 25, 2024 What a fantastic poem about intrepid Thomas Jefferson as related to Don Quixote, not only charging at windmills but also overcoming obstacles that made others shy away. Your brilliant words shine through and were a treat to the mind and soul. Reply
Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Roy Apologies for not responding. Thank you for your kind words. A visit to Monticello inspired me to write this poem. Most sincerely, Mary Jane Reply
Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Wayne Apologies for my late response. Thank you for your kind words. Most sincerely Mary Jane Reply
ABB April 25, 2024 Nice to see a resurgence of quality patriotic verse about the founders, a sensibility which has been out of vogue for so long now. Quixote is an inspired comparison. Reply
Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Dear ABB Thank you for your kind words. Apologies for this late response. I wrote the first version of this poem some 10 years ago. PC of course was rampant, though the more toxic “woke-ness” had not yet reared its ugly head. I was participating in an on-line poetry-writing class. The instructor, a thirty-something woman, was not happy. It seems I hadn’t gotten the memo, that Jefferson abused Sally Hemings, etc. etc. I used to think these throwaway comments were mere nonsense, but unfortunately this puerile cynicism has now infected the general public, and poses a serious attack on our founding principles. Most sincerely, Mary Jane Reply
Jeremiah Johnson April 25, 2024 I’ve heard that the skewed American reading of Don Quixote as a heroic visionary was partly the result of the musical “The Man of La Mancha” – didn’t know it went back even farther! Reply
Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Dear Jeremiah Thank you for your comment–apologies for my late response. Thank goodness for skewed American mis-readings! A people can build a prosperous nation out of such! Most sincerely Mary Jane Reply
Joseph S. Salemi April 25, 2024 Myers’ poem is clear, intelligent, sophisticated, and composed with an impressive command of diction. She links Jefferson with his fictional hero in terms of daring, imaginative leaps, and dreams — but in fact Jefferson was different from the knight of la Mancha. His purchase of the Louisiana territory was an absolutely brilliant piece of statesmanship and diplomacy that doubled the size of the United States and set the stage for the fulfillment of our manifest destiny. His sending of the Lewis and Clark exploration team gave us crucial knowledge that made the absorption and assimilation of this vast territory easier and smoother. Don Quixote could never have pulled off this kind of sharp political maneuvering. He was purely a dreamer. Jefferson may indeed have been an eccentric polymath who was occasionally offbeat, but he was also a shrewd political operator who knew how to maintain and promote his nation’s best interests. I’m glad to see poems with a deep sense of history. Reply
Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Dear Joseph Thank you for your kind and intelligent words. Apologies for not responding earlier. The Idea of America seems to have been cobbled together by geniuses from two disparate worlds: frugal Yankees and spendthrift Southern planters (as illustrated by the John Adams/Jefferson rivalry, explained so well in David McCollough’s biography of Adams). I agree with you: Jefferson was a shrewd politician, who knew how to “get hard things done.” Most sincerely Mary Jane Reply
Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Thank you Marie for your kind words. Apologies for my late response. Most sincerely Mary Jane Reply
Margaret Coats April 26, 2024 The poem offers an unusual perspective into Jefferson’s imagination. The Founding Father was also, as Joseph Salemi remarks, a shrewd politician, and you, Mary Jane, call him a “sage” in your second line. Indeed, creative vision with wise competence made this Virginian a shaper of American destiny. Reply
Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Dear Margaret Thank you for your kind comments. Apologies for my late response. My “unusual perspective” arose from a visit to Monticello 10 years ago. I was nosing around a side-room in the library, having broken away (slightly!)from the guided group in the main library room. (At Monticello, guided groups are mandatory, and individuals are not free to wander around solo; though it’s always possible to go slightly AWOL!) I noticed several volumes of Don Quixote on a bookshelf. Ah hah! So self-evident truths include the pursuit of windmills! I was “grinning out loud”–and that night started scribbling a draft of this poem. I’m definitely taking poetic license! Most sincerely, Mary Jane Reply
Warren Burt Bonham April 29, 2024 This was a well-crafted and educational work. I knew Jefferson had wide-ranging interests but had no idea about the connection to Don Quixote. It would be interesting to see what is on the bookshelves of recent Presidents. I don’t get the sense that politicians do much deep thinking anymore. Reply
Mary Jane Myers May 17, 2024 Dear Warren Thank you for your kind words. Apologies for my late response. The Founders were well-read men. I agree with you. The “ideas” of today’s politicians seem limited to 30-second sound bytes and to the 280-character-limit in a Tweet! Most sincerely Mary Jane Reply