The American Crisis

These are the times that try men’s souls: The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of his country; but he that stands it NOW, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph. What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly:—’Tis dearness only that gives every thing its value. Heaven knows how to set a proper price upon its goods; and it would be strange indeed, if so celestial an article as FREEDOM should not be highly rated.

These words don’t need much commentary, but they mean even more if you know the circumstances in which they were written. The writer was Thomas Paine, the author of Common Sense; the place was Philadelphia; the time was December 1776, when things were looking bleaker for the American revolutionaries than they ever had since the beginning of the war. The British and Hessian forces had beaten them badly, again and again, forcing them to retreat out of New York, through New Jersey, and into Pennsylvania. Winter came on, which was helpful in a way, because armies in the 18th century generally suspended operations until spring; but then the Americans had a new enemy — the winter itself — and they were poorly equipped to deal with it.

Paine had been with the army while they were retreating across New Jersey, so he knew what things were really like, and he knew they were at a crisis. He wrote a new pamphlet, titled The American Crisis, and began it with the words quoted above. Now, 244 years later, his words are just as applicable as they were then.

See what else happened in December 1776

Independence at Last

In the State House in Philadelphia, later known as Independence Hall, the Continental Congress voted on July 2, 1776, to become independent from England.

The final vote for independence was taken in the Continental Congress on July 2, 1776. Twelve of the thirteen colonies voted for it. One (New York) didn’t vote at all, because the delegates hadn’t yet been authorized by their constituents to do so (but soon thereafter, they received authorization and gave their vote for independence).

Continue reading “Independence at Last”

The Tyrannical Rabble of America

Being an American, and inclined to approve of the Revolution, I tend to emphasize the things that put the Americans in a good light — though I can add, in fairness to myself, that the Americans wrote more about the war than the British did, and not surprisingly, since most of it was happening on their doorstep instead of across the sea. I can’t claim to be unbiased, but I do try to be fair.

Another reason why it’s easier to find things that were said in favor of the Revolution than against it is because that some people were intimated from speaking against it. For example, one person in Philadelphia wrote home to England on August 1, 1775, condemning the revolutionaries, but didn’t want anybody to know about it, because they were afraid of reprisals. They wrote:

You would hardly conceive, without seeing it, to what a height the political fury of this Country is arrived. I most heartily wish myself at home among free-born Englishmen, not among this tyrannical and arbitrary rabble of America. They have made many protestations of respect for England, and of their desire of union with the Mother Country, but you may take my word for it, my dear friend, it is the meanest and basest hypocrisy that ever was assumed. … You would feel the indignation I do every day, when I hear my King and Country vilified and abused by a parcel of wretches who owe their very existence to it. … Are the friends of Great Britain and their property to be left exposed at this rate to the dictates of an inhuman rabble? I expect, with many others, if I do not join in the seditious and traitorous acts in vogue, to be hauled away and confined in a prison, with the confiscation of all I have in the world. … Conceal my name; or I should run a great risk of my life and property, were it discovered here that I had sent you any account of these proceedings. Indeed, I incur some danger in writing at all; nor should I, if I could not confide in my conveyance.

American Archives, 4th Series, vol. 3, pp. 3-5

While being grateful for what came of the Revolution, let’s not forget that there were mobs and other things that we shouldn’t be proud of in the Revolution. As the above writer mentioned, the people, and not just a king or dictator, can be tyrannical.

Also on this day, recruiters for the Royal Highland Emigrants started enlisting soldiers in Quebec to fight against the Americans.