WORKS DISCUSSED IN THIS ESSAY
Kennikat Press, 190 pp., $26.50
University of Chicago Press, 7 volumes, 1840 pp., $175.00
The Public Interest, No. 86, $4.50
Brigham Young University Press, 163 pp., $12.95 (paper)
University of Chicago Press, 5 volumes, 3520 pp., $300.00
Macmillan, 395 pp., $24.95
University Press of Virginia, 347 pp., $5.95 (paper)
The Free Press, 334 pp., $29.95
Simon and Schuster, 287 pp., $19.95
Cornell University Press, 238 pp., $24.95
No other modern state has what is called a 'founding' in quite the way the United States has. We Americans attribute to the revolutionary generation and to the creation of the Constitution a sacred, quasi-religious character. The Founding Fathers come to resemble Moses and Aeneas more than they do statesmen (which is why 'debunking' and 'humanizing' them has remained such a cottage industry). We believe that there is something unique about this 'Founding' generation of political leaders, that they were giants, or demigods, or what Henry Steele Commager has called 'a galaxy of public leaders we have never been able remotely to duplicate since.' We look back at them with awe, with the feeling that they are irretrievably lost to us. Many Americans believe that there at the 'Founding' some permanent truths about politics were established, and that we depart from them at our peril.
Review, 9138 words
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