"Always take hold of things by the smooth handle"
About this Quote
“Always take hold of things by the smooth handle” is Jefferson at his most deceptively folksy: a homespun rule that smuggles in a full theory of power. The line treats problems like tools, not mysteries. Don’t grab the blade; don’t lead with the sharp edge of an argument; don’t force a conflict to be maximal when you can find the leverage point that makes compliance feel easy. It’s a metaphor for statecraft as friction management.
The intent is practical prudence, but the subtext is political psychology. Jefferson is advising you to approach people and events through the path of least resistance, to find the angle that flatters, reassures, or simplifies. That’s not cowardice; it’s a recognition that most decisions are made emotionally and defended rationally. If you can make the first grip comfortable, you control the rest of the motion.
Context matters because Jefferson’s public persona traded on reason, liberty, and moral clarity, while his governing life required compromise, coalition-building, and, at times, breathtaking contradiction. In a young republic full of factional panic, fragile institutions, and personal rivalries, “the smooth handle” is a survival tactic: keep disputes from becoming existential, keep opponents from feeling cornered, keep the machinery of government from seizing.
The line still lands because it captures a darker truth about persuasion: principle often rides shotgun behind technique. Jefferson isn’t urging dishonesty so much as reminding you that the “right” outcome can be lost by grabbing the wrong part of the problem.
The intent is practical prudence, but the subtext is political psychology. Jefferson is advising you to approach people and events through the path of least resistance, to find the angle that flatters, reassures, or simplifies. That’s not cowardice; it’s a recognition that most decisions are made emotionally and defended rationally. If you can make the first grip comfortable, you control the rest of the motion.
Context matters because Jefferson’s public persona traded on reason, liberty, and moral clarity, while his governing life required compromise, coalition-building, and, at times, breathtaking contradiction. In a young republic full of factional panic, fragile institutions, and personal rivalries, “the smooth handle” is a survival tactic: keep disputes from becoming existential, keep opponents from feeling cornered, keep the machinery of government from seizing.
The line still lands because it captures a darker truth about persuasion: principle often rides shotgun behind technique. Jefferson isn’t urging dishonesty so much as reminding you that the “right” outcome can be lost by grabbing the wrong part of the problem.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | Unverified source: Thomas Jefferson to Paul A. Clay (Canons of Conduct) (Thomas Jefferson, 1817)
Evidence: pp. 525–526 (Retirement Series, vol. 11); the quote appears in the numbered list as item 8. Primary-source wording is "take things always by their smooth handle" (not "Always take hold of things..."). This is an enclosure to Jefferson’s letter to Charles Clay dated 12 July 1817 (addressed to Paul... Other candidates (1) Thomas Jefferson (Thomas Jefferson) compilation55.6% the evils which have never happened take things always by their smooth handle wh |
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