2009-04-11

Thomas Jefferson Encylopedia

Came across this passage on the Thomas Jefferson Encyclopedia:

18 624? Is that it? Pft. I wonder if he had carpal tunnel.

"In proposing a new edition of the Jefferson Papers in 1943, Julian P. Boyd estimated that Thomas Jefferson had written 18,624 letters in his lifetime. Ever since then people have been rounding up or down from that estimate. Despite its curious precision, there is no reason to regard it as anything but the loosest of estimates. For the period prior to Jefferson’s acquisition of copying machines and his creation of the epistolary record in which he logged most of his incoming and outgoing letters from 1783 to 1826, one would need a time machine to come up with anything but a wild guess. There is also plenty of room for disagreement over the definition of "letter": Jefferson did not record brief letters of invitation or one-line grocery orders to local merchants in his epistolary record, but he addressed them and sent them, and one could certainly describe them as letters. They seldom survive and are, again, hard to quantify. When the Papers of Thomas Jefferson are complete, it will enable one to undertake a solid count of letters printed, noted, and no longer extant but known to have existed. For the reasons stated above, this will still supply only a lower bound. That lower bound may well be somewhere near the ballpark figure established by Boyd. Until then, it is probably reasonable to use a figure of roughly 19,000 letters written by Thomas Jefferson in his lifetime, if only because it is idle speculation to try to get more precise at this point."

4 comments:

  1. Paul Costopoulos4/12/2009

    People in those years did write a lot. Victor Hugo besides his huge litterary production and his political discourses in parliament his several thousands pages of all sorts of notes also wrote 4000 letters all copied and kept by his mistress and secratary, Julie Drouet. George Sand (Aurore Du Pin Baronne Dudevant) wrote novels, poems, books and several thousand letters to her various lovers. All written in longhand and copied either with machines or in longhand.
    Commentator you must be a direct descendant of those guys.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Only with a lower IQ.

    Do rants count?

    ReplyDelete
  3. Paul Costopoulos4/12/2009

    Well Hugo ranted a lot and Sand got real mad at Chopin.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Well then, rants count.

    ReplyDelete

Mysterious and anonymous comments as well as those laced with cyanide and ad hominen attacks will be deleted. Thank you for your attention, chumps.