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40 pages 1 hour read

Sarah Vowell

Lafayette in the Somewhat United States

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 2015

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Symbols & Motifs

George Washington’s Chair

During a tour of Independence Hall, Vowell sees the chair that George Washington sat in during the Constitutional Convention of 1787. There is a sun carved into the back. The delegates at the convention argued for months before approving the Constitution. Benjamin Franklin claimed to have looked at the back of Washington’s chair during the heated debates and wondered “whether it was rising or setting—which is to say, whether this was the beginning of a new republic or the end of a failed coalition” (13).

After the Constitution was ready to send to the states for ratification, Franklin said, “I have the happiness to know it is a rising, and not a setting sun” (13). Vowell’s viewpoint is more pessimistic than Franklin’s, however. Though the simple piece of furniture became an optimistic symbol, during tenuous periods, both past and present, she thinks of the chair and imagines it is a setting sun instead. Thus, the chair is truly a symbol of the opposite perspectives people can have, even when examining the same object or idea.

Lafayette Square

Lafayette Square, also known as Lafayette Park, is located across from the White House. Vowell refers to it as “the nation’s capital of protests, the place where we the people gather together to yell at our presidents” (263). The Square is a symbol of the freedom of speech because “Freedom of expression truly exists only when a society’s most repugnant nitwits are allowed to spew their nonsense in public” (264).

It also symbolizes the right to assemble, protest, and disagree with America’s leadership, as well as Lafayette’s legacy.

Father Figures

Orphaned as a child, Lafayette gravitated towards father figures in France. His early exposure to the Masons put him in contact with older men he considered wise and competent. His susceptibility to the teachings of Abbé Raynal aligns with Lafayette’s hatred of oppression; it also shows a young man taking comfort in a relationship with an older male mentor.

George Washington may have been the ultimate manifestation of Lafayette’s ideal father figure. Washington led by example, gave Lafayette increased responsibilities when he deserved them, encouraged him to pursue his ambitions, and always served as an authority figure.

On a larger scale, American history reveres the Founding Fathers as the creators of the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, and American itself. Vowell reminds the reader throughout the book that the larger-than-life figures of Washington, Jefferson, and other historical luminaries were also men with failings, appetites, insecurities, and who were capable of costly mistakes.

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By Sarah Vowell