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<p><br/><br/></p>
<h1> THE WRITINGS OF THOMAS PAINE<br/><br/>VOLUME I. </h1>
<p><br/></p>
<h3> COLLECTED AND EDITED BY MONCURE DANIEL CONWAY </h3>
<h2> 1774 - 1779 </h2>
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<blockquote>
<p><big><b>CONTENTS</b></big></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> THE AMERICAN CRISIS. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0003"> EDITOR'S PREFACE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0004"> THE CRISIS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0005"> THE CRISIS I. (THESE ARE THE TIMES THAT TRY
MEN'S SOULS) </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> THE CRISIS II. TO LORD HOWE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> THE CRISIS III. (IN THE PROGRESS OF POLITICS)</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> THE CRISIS IV. (THOSE WHO EXPECT TO REAP THE
BLESSINGS OF FREEDOM) </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> THE CRISIS. V. TO GEN. SIR WILLIAM HOWE. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> THE CRISIS VI. (TO THE EARL OF CARLISLE AND
GENERAL CLINTON) </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0011"> THE CRISIS VII. TO THE PEOPLE OF ENGLAND. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012"> THE CRISIS VIII. ADDRESS TO THE PEOPLE OF
ENGLAND. </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013"> THE CRISIS IX. (HAD AMERICA PURSUED HER
ADVANTAGES) </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0014"> THE CRISIS X. ON THE KING OF ENGLAND'S SPEECH.</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0015"> THE CRISIS. XI. ON THE PRESENT STATE OF NEWS.</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0016"> THE CRISIS. XII. TO THE EARL OF SHELBURNE.</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0017"> THE CRISIS. XIII. THOUGHTS ON THE PEACE, AND
PROBABLE ADVANTAGES </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0018"> A SUPERNUMERARY CRISIS: TO THE PEOPLE OF
AMERICA. </SPAN></p>
</blockquote>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"></SPAN></p>
<h1> THE AMERICAN CRISIS. </h1>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> EDITOR'S PREFACE. </h2>
<p>THOMAS PAINE, in his Will, speaks of this work as The American Crisis,
remembering perhaps that a number of political pamphlets had appeared in
London, 1775-1776, under general title of "The Crisis." By the blunder of
an early English publisher of Paine's writings, one essay in the London
"Crisis" was attributed to Paine, and the error has continued to cause
confusion. This publisher was D. I. Eaton, who printed as the first number
of Paine's "Crisis" an essay taken from the London publication. But his
prefatory note says: "Since the printing of this book, the publisher is
informed that No. 1, or first Crisis in this publication, is not one of
the thirteen which Paine wrote, but a letter previous to them."
Unfortunately this correction is sufficiently equivocal to leave on some
minds the notion that Paine did write the letter in question, albeit not
as a number of his "Crisis "; especially as Eaton's editor unwarrantably
appended the signature "C. S.," suggesting "Common Sense." There are,
however, no such letters in the London essay, which is signed "Casca." It
was published August, 1775, in the form of a letter to General Gage, in
answer to his Proclamation concerning the affair at Lexington. It was
certainly not written by Paine. It apologizes for the Americans for
having, on April 19, at Lexington, made "an attack upon the King's troops
from behind walls and lurking holes." The writer asks: "Have not the
Americans been driven to this frenzy? Is it not common for an enemy to
take every advantage?" Paine, who was in America when the affair occurred
at Lexington, would have promptly denounced Gage's story as a falsehood,
but the facts known to every one in America were as yet not before the
London writer. The English "Crisis" bears evidence throughout of having
been written in London. It derived nothing from Paine, and he derived
nothing from it, unless its title, and this is too obvious for its origin
to require discussion. I have no doubt, however, that the title was
suggested by the English publication, because Paine has followed its
scheme in introducing a "Crisis Extraordinary." His work consists of
thirteen numbers, and, in addition to these, a "Crisis Extraordinary" and
a "Supernumerary Crisis." In some modern collections all of these have
been serially numbered, and a brief newspaper article added, making
sixteen numbers. But Paine, in his Will, speaks of the number as thirteen,
wishing perhaps, in his characteristic way, to adhere to the number of the
American Colonies, as he did in the thirteen ribs of his iron bridge. His
enumeration is therefore followed in the present volume, and the numbers
printed successively, although other writings intervened.</p>
<p>The first "Crisis" was printed in the Pennsylvania Journal, December 19,
1776, and opens with the famous sentence, "These are the times that try
men's souls"; the last "Crisis" appeared April 19,1783, (eighth
anniversary of the first gun of the war, at Lexington,) and opens with the
words, "The times that tried men's souls are over." The great effect
produced by Paine's successive publications has been attested by
Washington and Franklin, by every leader of the American Revolution, by
resolutions of Congress, and by every contemporary historian of the events
amid which they were written. The first "Crisis" is of especial historical
interest. It was written during the retreat of Washington across the
Delaware, and by order of the Commander was read to groups of his
dispirited and suffering soldiers. Its opening sentence was adopted as the
watchword of the movement on Trenton, a few days after its publication,
and is believed to have inspired much of the courage which won that
victory, which, though not imposing in extent, was of great moral effect
on Washington's little army.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h1> THE CRISIS </h1>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CRISIS I. (THESE ARE THE TIMES THAT TRY MEN'S SOULS) </h2>
<p>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 their
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: it is dearness
only that gives every thing its value. Heaven knows how to put a proper
price upon its goods; and it would be strange indeed if so celestial an
article as FREEDOM should not be highly rated. Britain, with an army to
enforce her tyranny, has declared that she has a right (not only to TAX)
but "to BIND us in ALL CASES WHATSOEVER," and if being bound in that
manner, is not slavery, then is there not such a thing as slavery upon
earth. Even the expression is impious; for so unlimited a power can belong
only to God.</p>
<p>Whether the independence of the continent was declared too soon, or
delayed too long, I will not now enter into as an argument; my own simple
opinion is, that had it been eight months earlier, it would have been much
better. We did not make a proper use of last winter, neither could we,
while we were in a dependent state. However, the fault, if it were one,
was all our own*; we have none to blame but ourselves. But no great deal
is lost yet. All that Howe has been doing for this month past, is rather a
ravage than a conquest, which the spirit of the Jerseys, a year ago, would
have quickly repulsed, and which time and a little resolution will soon
recover.</p>
<p>* The present winter is worth an age, if rightly employed; but, if<br/>
lost or neglected, the whole continent will partake of the evil; and<br/>
there is no punishment that man does not deserve, be he who, or what, or<br/>
where he will, that may be the means of sacrificing a season so precious<br/>
and useful.<br/></p>
<p>I have as little superstition in me as any man living, but my secret
opinion has ever been, and still is, that God Almighty will not give up a
people to military destruction, or leave them unsupportedly to perish, who
have so earnestly and so repeatedly sought to avoid the calamities of war,
by every decent method which wisdom could invent. Neither have I so much
of the infidel in me, as to suppose that He has relinquished the
government of the world, and given us up to the care of devils; and as I
do not, I cannot see on what grounds the king of Britain can look up to
heaven for help against us: a common murderer, a highwayman, or a
house-breaker, has as good a pretence as he.</p>
<p>'Tis surprising to see how rapidly a panic will sometimes run through a
country. All nations and ages have been subject to them. Britain has
trembled like an ague at the report of a French fleet of flat-bottomed
boats; and in the fourteenth [fifteenth] century the whole English army,
after ravaging the kingdom of France, was driven back like men petrified
with fear; and this brave exploit was performed by a few broken forces
collected and headed by a woman, Joan of Arc. Would that heaven might
inspire some Jersey maid to spirit up her countrymen, and save her fair
fellow sufferers from ravage and ravishment! Yet panics, in some cases,
have their uses; they produce as much good as hurt. Their duration is
always short; the mind soon grows through them, and acquires a firmer
habit than before. But their peculiar advantage is, that they are the
touchstones of sincerity and hypocrisy, and bring things and men to light,
which might otherwise have lain forever undiscovered. In fact, they have
the same effect on secret traitors, which an imaginary apparition would
have upon a private murderer. They sift out the hidden thoughts of man,
and hold them up in public to the world. Many a disguised Tory has lately
shown his head, that shall penitentially solemnize with curses the day on
which Howe arrived upon the Delaware.</p>
<p>As I was with the troops at Fort Lee, and marched with them to the edge of
Pennsylvania, I am well acquainted with many circumstances, which those
who live at a distance know but little or nothing of. Our situation there
was exceedingly cramped, the place being a narrow neck of land between the
North River and the Hackensack. Our force was inconsiderable, being not
one-fourth so great as Howe could bring against us. We had no army at hand
to have relieved the garrison, had we shut ourselves up and stood on our
defence. Our ammunition, light artillery, and the best part of our stores,
had been removed, on the apprehension that Howe would endeavor to
penetrate the Jerseys, in which case Fort Lee could be of no use to us;
for it must occur to every thinking man, whether in the army or not, that
these kind of field forts are only for temporary purposes, and last in use
no longer than the enemy directs his force against the particular object
which such forts are raised to defend. Such was our situation and
condition at Fort Lee on the morning of the 20th of November, when an
officer arrived with information that the enemy with 200 boats had landed
about seven miles above; Major General [Nathaniel] Green, who commanded
the garrison, immediately ordered them under arms, and sent express to
General Washington at the town of Hackensack, distant by the way of the
ferry = six miles. Our first object was to secure the bridge over the
Hackensack, which laid up the river between the enemy and us, about six
miles from us, and three from them. General Washington arrived in about
three-quarters of an hour, and marched at the head of the troops towards
the bridge, which place I expected we should have a brush for; however,
they did not choose to dispute it with us, and the greatest part of our
troops went over the bridge, the rest over the ferry, except some which
passed at a mill on a small creek, between the bridge and the ferry, and
made their way through some marshy grounds up to the town of Hackensack,
and there passed the river. We brought off as much baggage as the wagons
could contain, the rest was lost. The simple object was to bring off the
garrison, and march them on till they could be strengthened by the Jersey
or Pennsylvania militia, so as to be enabled to make a stand. We staid
four days at Newark, collected our out-posts with some of the Jersey
militia, and marched out twice to meet the enemy, on being informed that
they were advancing, though our numbers were greatly inferior to theirs.
Howe, in my little opinion, committed a great error in generalship in not
throwing a body of forces off from Staten Island through Amboy, by which
means he might have seized all our stores at Brunswick, and intercepted
our march into Pennsylvania; but if we believe the power of hell to be
limited, we must likewise believe that their agents are under some
providential control.</p>
<p>I shall not now attempt to give all the particulars of our retreat to the
Delaware; suffice it for the present to say, that both officers and men,
though greatly harassed and fatigued, frequently without rest, covering,
or provision, the inevitable consequences of a long retreat, bore it with
a manly and martial spirit. All their wishes centred in one, which was,
that the country would turn out and help them to drive the enemy back.
Voltaire has remarked that King William never appeared to full advantage
but in difficulties and in action; the same remark may be made on General
Washington, for the character fits him. There is a natural firmness in
some minds which cannot be unlocked by trifles, but which, when unlocked,
discovers a cabinet of fortitude; and I reckon it among those kind of
public blessings, which we do not immediately see, that God hath blessed
him with uninterrupted health, and given him a mind that can even flourish
upon care.</p>
<p>I shall conclude this paper with some miscellaneous remarks on the state
of our affairs; and shall begin with asking the following question, Why is
it that the enemy have left the New England provinces, and made these
middle ones the seat of war? The answer is easy: New England is not
infested with Tories, and we are. I have been tender in raising the cry
against these men, and used numberless arguments to show them their
danger, but it will not do to sacrifice a world either to their folly or
their baseness. The period is now arrived, in which either they or we must
change our sentiments, or one or both must fall. And what is a Tory? Good
God! what is he? I should not be afraid to go with a hundred Whigs against
a thousand Tories, were they to attempt to get into arms. Every Tory is a
coward; for servile, slavish, self-interested fear is the foundation of
Toryism; and a man under such influence, though he may be cruel, never can
be brave.</p>
<p>But, before the line of irrecoverable separation be drawn between us, let
us reason the matter together: Your conduct is an invitation to the enemy,
yet not one in a thousand of you has heart enough to join him. Howe is as
much deceived by you as the American cause is injured by you. He expects
you will all take up arms, and flock to his standard, with muskets on your
shoulders. Your opinions are of no use to him, unless you support him
personally, for 'tis soldiers, and not Tories, that he wants.</p>
<p>I once felt all that kind of anger, which a man ought to feel, against the
mean principles that are held by the Tories: a noted one, who kept a
tavern at Amboy, was standing at his door, with as pretty a child in his
hand, about eight or nine years old, as I ever saw, and after speaking his
mind as freely as he thought was prudent, finished with this unfatherly
expression, "Well! give me peace in my day." Not a man lives on the
continent but fully believes that a separation must some time or other
finally take place, and a generous parent should have said, "If there must
be trouble, let it be in my day, that my child may have peace;" and this
single reflection, well applied, is sufficient to awaken every man to
duty. Not a place upon earth might be so happy as America. Her situation
is remote from all the wrangling world, and she has nothing to do but to
trade with them. A man can distinguish himself between temper and
principle, and I am as confident, as I am that God governs the world, that
America will never be happy till she gets clear of foreign dominion. Wars,
without ceasing, will break out till that period arrives, and the
continent must in the end be conqueror; for though the flame of liberty
may sometimes cease to shine, the coal can never expire.</p>
<p>America did not, nor does not want force; but she wanted a proper
application of that force. Wisdom is not the purchase of a day, and it is
no wonder that we should err at the first setting off. From an excess of
tenderness, we were unwilling to raise an army, and trusted our cause to
the temporary defence of a well-meaning militia. A summer's experience has
now taught us better; yet with those troops, while they were collected, we
were able to set bounds to the progress of the enemy, and, thank God! they
are again assembling. I always considered militia as the best troops in
the world for a sudden exertion, but they will not do for a long campaign.
Howe, it is probable, will make an attempt on this city [Philadelphia];
should he fail on this side the Delaware, he is ruined. If he succeeds,
our cause is not ruined. He stakes all on his side against a part on ours;
admitting he succeeds, the consequence will be, that armies from both ends
of the continent will march to assist their suffering friends in the
middle states; for he cannot go everywhere, it is impossible. I consider
Howe as the greatest enemy the Tories have; he is bringing a war into
their country, which, had it not been for him and partly for themselves,
they had been clear of. Should he now be expelled, I wish with all the
devotion of a Christian, that the names of Whig and Tory may never more be
mentioned; but should the Tories give him encouragement to come, or
assistance if he come, I as sincerely wish that our next year's arms may
expel them from the continent, and the Congress appropriate their
possessions to the relief of those who have suffered in well-doing. A
single successful battle next year will settle the whole. America could
carry on a two years' war by the confiscation of the property of
disaffected persons, and be made happy by their expulsion. Say not that
this is revenge, call it rather the soft resentment of a suffering people,
who, having no object in view but the good of all, have staked their own
all upon a seemingly doubtful event. Yet it is folly to argue against
determined hardness; eloquence may strike the ear, and the language of
sorrow draw forth the tear of compassion, but nothing can reach the heart
that is steeled with prejudice.</p>
<p>Quitting this class of men, I turn with the warm ardor of a friend to
those who have nobly stood, and are yet determined to stand the matter
out: I call not upon a few, but upon all: not on this state or that state,
but on every state: up and help us; lay your shoulders to the wheel;
better have too much force than too little, when so great an object is at
stake. Let it be told to the future world, that in the depth of winter,
when nothing but hope and virtue could survive, that the city and the
country, alarmed at one common danger, came forth to meet and to repulse
it. Say not that thousands are gone, turn out your tens of thousands;
throw not the burden of the day upon Providence, but "show your faith by
your works," that God may bless you. It matters not where you live, or
what rank of life you hold, the evil or the blessing will reach you all.
The far and the near, the home counties and the back, the rich and the
poor, will suffer or rejoice alike. The heart that feels not now is dead;
the blood of his children will curse his cowardice, who shrinks back at a
time when a little might have saved the whole, and made them happy. I love
the man that can smile in trouble, that can gather strength from distress,
and grow brave by reflection. 'Tis the business of little minds to shrink;
but he whose heart is firm, and whose conscience approves his conduct,
will pursue his principles unto death. My own line of reasoning is to
myself as straight and clear as a ray of light. Not all the treasures of
the world, so far as I believe, could have induced me to support an
offensive war, for I think it murder; but if a thief breaks into my house,
burns and destroys my property, and kills or threatens to kill me, or
those that are in it, and to "bind me in all cases whatsoever" to his
absolute will, am I to suffer it? What signifies it to me, whether he who
does it is a king or a common man; my countryman or not my countryman;
whether it be done by an individual villain, or an army of them? If we
reason to the root of things we shall find no difference; neither can any
just cause be assigned why we should punish in the one case and pardon in
the other. Let them call me rebel and welcome, I feel no concern from it;
but I should suffer the misery of devils, were I to make a whore of my
soul by swearing allegiance to one whose character is that of a sottish,
stupid, stubborn, worthless, brutish man. I conceive likewise a horrid
idea in receiving mercy from a being, who at the last day shall be
shrieking to the rocks and mountains to cover him, and fleeing with terror
from the orphan, the widow, and the slain of America.</p>
<p>There are cases which cannot be overdone by language, and this is one.
There are persons, too, who see not the full extent of the evil which
threatens them; they solace themselves with hopes that the enemy, if he
succeed, will be merciful. It is the madness of folly, to expect mercy
from those who have refused to do justice; and even mercy, where conquest
is the object, is only a trick of war; the cunning of the fox is as
murderous as the violence of the wolf, and we ought to guard equally
against both. Howe's first object is, partly by threats and partly by
promises, to terrify or seduce the people to deliver up their arms and
receive mercy. The ministry recommended the same plan to Gage, and this is
what the tories call making their peace, "a peace which passeth all
understanding" indeed! A peace which would be the immediate forerunner of
a worse ruin than any we have yet thought of. Ye men of Pennsylvania, do
reason upon these things! Were the back counties to give up their arms,
they would fall an easy prey to the Indians, who are all armed: this
perhaps is what some Tories would not be sorry for. Were the home counties
to deliver up their arms, they would be exposed to the resentment of the
back counties who would then have it in their power to chastise their
defection at pleasure. And were any one state to give up its arms, that
state must be garrisoned by all Howe's army of Britons and Hessians to
preserve it from the anger of the rest. Mutual fear is the principal link
in the chain of mutual love, and woe be to that state that breaks the
compact. Howe is mercifully inviting you to barbarous destruction, and men
must be either rogues or fools that will not see it. I dwell not upon the
vapors of imagination; I bring reason to your ears, and, in language as
plain as A, B, C, hold up truth to your eyes.</p>
<p>I thank God, that I fear not. I see no real cause for fear. I know our
situation well, and can see the way out of it. While our army was
collected, Howe dared not risk a battle; and it is no credit to him that
he decamped from the White Plains, and waited a mean opportunity to ravage
the defenceless Jerseys; but it is great credit to us, that, with a
handful of men, we sustained an orderly retreat for near an hundred miles,
brought off our ammunition, all our field pieces, the greatest part of our
stores, and had four rivers to pass. None can say that our retreat was
precipitate, for we were near three weeks in performing it, that the
country might have time to come in. Twice we marched back to meet the
enemy, and remained out till dark. The sign of fear was not seen in our
camp, and had not some of the cowardly and disaffected inhabitants spread
false alarms through the country, the Jerseys had never been ravaged. Once
more we are again collected and collecting; our new army at both ends of
the continent is recruiting fast, and we shall be able to open the next
campaign with sixty thousand men, well armed and clothed. This is our
situation, and who will may know it. By perseverance and fortitude we have
the prospect of a glorious issue; by cowardice and submission, the sad
choice of a variety of evils—a ravaged country—a depopulated
city—habitations without safety, and slavery without hope—our
homes turned into barracks and bawdy-houses for Hessians, and a future
race to provide for, whose fathers we shall doubt of. Look on this picture
and weep over it! and if there yet remains one thoughtless wretch who
believes it not, let him suffer it unlamented.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.</p>
<p>December 23, 1776.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CRISIS II. TO LORD HOWE. </h2>
<p>"What's in the name of lord, that I should fear<br/>
To bring my grievance to the public ear?"<br/>
CHURCHILL.<br/></p>
<p>UNIVERSAL empire is the prerogative of a writer. His concerns are with all
mankind, and though he cannot command their obedience, he can assign them
their duty. The Republic of Letters is more ancient than monarchy, and of
far higher character in the world than the vassal court of Britain; he
that rebels against reason is a real rebel, but he that in defence of
reason rebels against tyranny has a better title to "Defender of the
Faith," than George the Third.</p>
<p>As a military man your lordship may hold out the sword of war, and call it
the "ultima ratio regum": the last reason of kings; we in return can show
you the sword of justice, and call it "the best scourge of tyrants." The
first of these two may threaten, or even frighten for a while, and cast a
sickly languor over an insulted people, but reason will soon recover the
debauch, and restore them again to tranquil fortitude. Your lordship, I
find, has now commenced author, and published a proclamation; I have
published a Crisis. As they stand, they are the antipodes of each other;
both cannot rise at once, and one of them must descend; and so quick is
the revolution of things, that your lordship's performance, I see, has
already fallen many degrees from its first place, and is now just visible
on the edge of the political horizon.</p>
<p>It is surprising to what a pitch of infatuation, blind folly and obstinacy
will carry mankind, and your lordship's drowsy proclamation is a proof
that it does not even quit them in their sleep. Perhaps you thought
America too was taking a nap, and therefore chose, like Satan to Eve, to
whisper the delusion softly, lest you should awaken her. This continent,
sir, is too extensive to sleep all at once, and too watchful, even in its
slumbers, not to startle at the unhallowed foot of an invader. You may
issue your proclamations, and welcome, for we have learned to "reverence
ourselves," and scorn the insulting ruffian that employs you. America, for
your deceased brother's sake, would gladly have shown you respect and it
is a new aggravation to her feelings, that Howe should be forgetful, and
raise his sword against those, who at their own charge raised a monument
to his brother. But your master has commanded, and you have not enough of
nature left to refuse. Surely there must be something strangely
degenerating in the love of monarchy, that can so completely wear a man
down to an ingrate, and make him proud to lick the dust that kings have
trod upon. A few more years, should you survive them, will bestow on you
the title of "an old man": and in some hour of future reflection you may
probably find the fitness of Wolsey's despairing penitence—"had I
served my God as faithful as I have served my king, he would not thus have
forsaken me in my old age."</p>
<p>The character you appear to us in, is truly ridiculous. Your friends, the
Tories, announced your coming, with high descriptions of your unlimited
powers; but your proclamation has given them the lie, by showing you to be
a commissioner without authority. Had your powers been ever so great they
were nothing to us, further than we pleased; because we had the same right
which other nations had, to do what we thought was best. "The UNITED
STATES of AMERICA," will sound as pompously in the world or in history, as
"the kingdom of Great Britain"; the character of General Washington will
fill a page with as much lustre as that of Lord Howe: and the Congress
have as much right to command the king and Parliament in London to desist
from legislation, as they or you have to command the Congress. Only
suppose how laughable such an edict would appear from us, and then, in
that merry mood, do but turn the tables upon yourself, and you will see
how your proclamation is received here. Having thus placed you in a proper
position in which you may have a full view of your folly, and learn to
despise it, I hold up to you, for that purpose, the following quotation
from your own lunarian proclamation.—"And we (Lord Howe and General
Howe) do command (and in his majesty's name forsooth) all such persons as
are assembled together, under the name of general or provincial
congresses, committees, conventions or other associations, by whatever
name or names known and distinguished, to desist and cease from all such
treasonable actings and doings."</p>
<p>You introduce your proclamation by referring to your declarations of the
14th of July and 19th of September. In the last of these you sunk yourself
below the character of a private gentleman. That I may not seem to accuse
you unjustly, I shall state the circumstance: by a verbal invitation of
yours, communicated to Congress by General Sullivan, then a prisoner on
his parole, you signified your desire of conferring with some members of
that body as private gentlemen. It was beneath the dignity of the American
Congress to pay any regard to a message that at best was but a genteel
affront, and had too much of the ministerial complexion of tampering with
private persons; and which might probably have been the case, had the
gentlemen who were deputed on the business possessed that kind of easy
virtue which an English courtier is so truly distinguished by. Your
request, however, was complied with, for honest men are naturally more
tender of their civil than their political fame. The interview ended as
every sensible man thought it would; for your lordship knows, as well as
the writer of the Crisis, that it is impossible for the King of England to
promise the repeal, or even the revisal of any acts of parliament;
wherefore, on your part, you had nothing to say, more than to request, in
the room of demanding, the entire surrender of the continent; and then, if
that was complied with, to promise that the inhabitants should escape with
their lives. This was the upshot of the conference. You informed the
conferees that you were two months in soliciting these powers. We ask,
what powers? for as commissioner you have none. If you mean the power of
pardoning, it is an oblique proof that your master was determined to
sacrifice all before him; and that you were two months in dissuading him
from his purpose. Another evidence of his savage obstinacy! From your own
account of the matter we may justly draw these two conclusions: 1st, That
you serve a monster; and 2d, That never was a messenger sent on a more
foolish errand than yourself. This plain language may perhaps sound
uncouthly to an ear vitiated by courtly refinements, but words were made
for use, and the fault lies in deserving them, or the abuse in applying
them unfairly.</p>
<p>Soon after your return to New York, you published a very illiberal and
unmanly handbill against the Congress; for it was certainly stepping out
of the line of common civility, first to screen your national pride by
soliciting an interview with them as private gentlemen, and in the
conclusion to endeavor to deceive the multitude by making a handbill
attack on the whole body of the Congress; you got them together under one
name, and abused them under another. But the king you serve, and the cause
you support, afford you so few instances of acting the gentleman, that out
of pity to your situation the Congress pardoned the insult by taking no
notice of it.</p>
<p>You say in that handbill, "that they, the Congress, disavowed every
purpose for reconciliation not consonant with their extravagant and
inadmissible claim of independence." Why, God bless me! what have you to
do with our independence? We ask no leave of yours to set it up; we ask no
money of yours to support it; we can do better without your fleets and
armies than with them; you may soon have enough to do to protect
yourselves without being burdened with us. We are very willing to be at
peace with you, to buy of you and sell to you, and, like young beginners
in the world, to work for our living; therefore, why do you put yourselves
out of cash, when we know you cannot spare it, and we do not desire you to
run into debt? I am willing, sir, that you should see your folly in every
point of view I can place it in, and for that reason descend sometimes to
tell you in jest what I wish you to see in earnest. But to be more serious
with you, why do you say, "their independence?" To set you right, sir, we
tell you, that the independency is ours, not theirs. The Congress were
authorized by every state on the continent to publish it to all the world,
and in so doing are not to be considered as the inventors, but only as the
heralds that proclaimed it, or the office from which the sense of the
people received a legal form; and it was as much as any or all their heads
were worth, to have treated with you on the subject of submission under
any name whatever. But we know the men in whom we have trusted; can
England say the same of her Parliament?</p>
<p>I come now more particularly to your proclamation of the 30th of November
last. Had you gained an entire conquest over all the armies of America,
and then put forth a proclamation, offering (what you call) mercy, your
conduct would have had some specious show of humanity; but to creep by
surprise into a province, and there endeavor to terrify and seduce the
inhabitants from their just allegiance to the rest by promises, which you
neither meant nor were able to fulfil, is both cruel and unmanly: cruel in
its effects; because, unless you can keep all the ground you have marched
over, how are you, in the words of your proclamation, to secure to your
proselytes "the enjoyment of their property?" What is to become either of
your new adopted subjects, or your old friends, the Tories, in Burlington,
Bordentown, Trenton, Mount Holly, and many other places, where you proudly
lorded it for a few days, and then fled with the precipitation of a
pursued thief? What, I say, is to become of those wretches? What is to
become of those who went over to you from this city and State? What more
can you say to them than "shift for yourselves?" Or what more can they
hope for than to wander like vagabonds over the face of the earth? You may
now tell them to take their leave of America, and all that once was
theirs. Recommend them, for consolation, to your master's court; there
perhaps they may make a shift to live on the scraps of some dangling
parasite, and choose companions among thousands like themselves. A traitor
is the foulest fiend on earth.</p>
<p>In a political sense we ought to thank you for thus bequeathing estates to
the continent; we shall soon, at this rate, be able to carry on a war
without expense, and grow rich by the ill policy of Lord Howe, and the
generous defection of the Tories. Had you set your foot into this city,
you would have bestowed estates upon us which we never thought of, by
bringing forth traitors we were unwilling to suspect. But these men,
you'll say, "are his majesty's most faithful subjects;" let that honor,
then, be all their fortune, and let his majesty take them to himself.</p>
<p>I am now thoroughly disgusted with them; they live in ungrateful ease, and
bend their whole minds to mischief. It seems as if God had given them over
to a spirit of infidelity, and that they are open to conviction in no
other line but that of punishment. It is time to have done with tarring,
feathering, carting, and taking securities for their future good behavior;
every sensible man must feel a conscious shame at seeing a poor fellow
hawked for a show about the streets, when it is known he is only the tool
of some principal villain, biassed into his offence by the force of false
reasoning, or bribed thereto, through sad necessity. We dishonor ourselves
by attacking such trifling characters while greater ones are suffered to
escape; 'tis our duty to find them out, and their proper punishment would
be to exile them from the continent for ever. The circle of them is not so
great as some imagine; the influence of a few have tainted many who are
not naturally corrupt. A continual circulation of lies among those who are
not much in the way of hearing them contradicted, will in time pass for
truth; and the crime lies not in the believer but the inventor. I am not
for declaring war with every man that appears not so warm as myself:
difference of constitution, temper, habit of speaking, and many other
things, will go a great way in fixing the outward character of a man, yet
simple honesty may remain at bottom. Some men have naturally a military
turn, and can brave hardships and the risk of life with a cheerful face;
others have not; no slavery appears to them so great as the fatigue of
arms, and no terror so powerful as that of personal danger. What can we
say? We cannot alter nature, neither ought we to punish the son because
the father begot him in a cowardly mood. However, I believe most men have
more courage than they know of, and that a little at first is enough to
begin with. I knew the time when I thought that the whistling of a cannon
ball would have frightened me almost to death; but I have since tried it,
and find that I can stand it with as little discomposure, and, I believe,
with a much easier conscience than your lordship. The same dread would
return to me again were I in your situation, for my solemn belief of your
cause is, that it is hellish and damnable, and, under that conviction,
every thinking man's heart must fail him.</p>
<p>From a concern that a good cause should be dishonored by the least
disunion among us, I said in my former paper, No. I. "That should the
enemy now be expelled, I wish, with all the sincerity of a Christian, that
the names of Whig and Tory might never more be mentioned;" but there is a
knot of men among us of such a venomous cast, that they will not admit
even one's good wishes to act in their favor. Instead of rejoicing that
heaven had, as it were, providentially preserved this city from plunder
and destruction, by delivering so great a part of the enemy into our hands
with so little effusion of blood, they stubbornly affected to disbelieve
it till within an hour, nay, half an hour, of the prisoners arriving; and
the Quakers put forth a testimony, dated the 20th of December, signed
"John Pemberton," declaring their attachment to the British government.*
These men are continually harping on the great sin of our bearing arms,
but the king of Britain may lay waste the world in blood and famine, and
they, poor fallen souls, have nothing to say.</p>
<p>* I have ever been careful of charging offences upon whole societies<br/>
of men, but as the paper referred to is put forth by an unknown set of<br/>
men, who claim to themselves the right of representing the whole:<br/>
and while the whole Society of Quakers admit its validity by a silent<br/>
acknowledgment, it is impossible that any distinction can be made by<br/>
the public: and the more so, because the New York paper of the 30th of<br/>
December, printed by permission of our enemies, says that "the Quakers<br/>
begin to speak openly of their attachment to the British Constitution."<br/>
We are certain that we have many friends among them, and wish to know<br/>
them.<br/></p>
<p>In some future paper I intend to distinguish between the different kind of
persons who have been denominated Tories; for this I am clear in, that all
are not so who have been called so, nor all men Whigs who were once
thought so; and as I mean not to conceal the name of any true friend when
there shall be occasion to mention him, neither will I that of an enemy,
who ought to be known, let his rank, station or religion be what it may.
Much pains have been taken by some to set your lordship's private
character in an amiable light, but as it has chiefly been done by men who
know nothing about you, and who are no ways remarkable for their
attachment to us, we have no just authority for believing it. George the
Third has imposed upon us by the same arts, but time, at length, has done
him justice, and the same fate may probably attend your lordship. You
avowed purpose here is to kill, conquer, plunder, pardon, and enslave: and
the ravages of your army through the Jerseys have been marked with as much
barbarism as if you had openly professed yourself the prince of ruffians;
not even the appearance of humanity has been preserved either on the march
or the retreat of your troops; no general order that I could ever learn,
has ever been issued to prevent or even forbid your troops from robbery,
wherever they came, and the only instance of justice, if it can be called
such, which has distinguished you for impartiality, is, that you treated
and plundered all alike; what could not be carried away has been
destroyed, and mahogany furniture has been deliberately laid on fire for
fuel, rather than the men should be fatigued with cutting wood.* There was
a time when the Whigs confided much in your supposed candor, and the
Tories rested themselves in your favor; the experiments have now been
made, and failed; in every town, nay, every cottage, in the Jerseys, where
your arms have been, is a testimony against you. How you may rest under
this sacrifice of character I know not; but this I know, that you sleep
and rise with the daily curses of thousands upon you; perhaps the misery
which the Tories have suffered by your proffered mercy may give them some
claim to their country's pity, and be in the end the best favor you could
show them.</p>
<p>* As some people may doubt the truth of such wanton destruction, I<br/>
think it necessary to inform them that one of the people called Quakers,<br/>
who lives at Trenton, gave me this information at the house of Mr.<br/>
Michael Hutchinson, (one of the same profession,) who lives near Trenton<br/>
ferry on the Pennsylvania side, Mr. Hutchinson being present.<br/></p>
<p>In a folio general-order book belonging to Col. Rhal's battalion, taken at
Trenton, and now in the possession of the council of safety for this
state, the following barbarous order is frequently repeated, "His
excellency the Commander-in-Chief orders, that all inhabitants who shall
be found with arms, not having an officer with them, shall be immediately
taken and hung up." How many you may thus have privately sacrificed, we
know not, and the account can only be settled in another world. Your
treatment of prisoners, in order to distress them to enlist in your
infernal service, is not to be equalled by any instance in Europe. Yet
this is the humane Lord Howe and his brother, whom the Tories and their
three-quarter kindred, the Quakers, or some of them at least, have been
holding up for patterns of justice and mercy!</p>
<p>A bad cause will ever be supported by bad means and bad men; and whoever
will be at the pains of examining strictly into things, will find that one
and the same spirit of oppression and impiety, more or less, governs
through your whole party in both countries: not many days ago, I
accidentally fell in company with a person of this city noted for
espousing your cause, and on my remarking to him, "that it appeared clear
to me, by the late providential turn of affairs, that God Almighty was
visibly on our side," he replied, "We care nothing for that you may have
Him, and welcome; if we have but enough of the devil on our side, we shall
do." However carelessly this might be spoken, matters not, 'tis still the
insensible principle that directs all your conduct and will at last most
assuredly deceive and ruin you.</p>
<p>If ever a nation was made and foolish, blind to its own interest and bent
on its own destruction, it is Britain. There are such things as national
sins, and though the punishment of individuals may be reserved to another
world, national punishment can only be inflicted in this world. Britain,
as a nation, is, in my inmost belief, the greatest and most ungrateful
offender against God on the face of the whole earth. Blessed with all the
commerce she could wish for, and furnished, by a vast extension of
dominion, with the means of civilizing both the eastern and western world,
she has made no other use of both than proudly to idolize her own
"thunder," and rip up the bowels of whole countries for what she could
get. Like Alexander, she has made war her sport, and inflicted misery for
prodigality's sake. The blood of India is not yet repaid, nor the
wretchedness of Africa yet requited. Of late she has enlarged her list of
national cruelties by her butcherly destruction of the Caribbs of St.
Vincent's, and returning an answer by the sword to the meek prayer for
"Peace, liberty and safety." These are serious things, and whatever a
foolish tyrant, a debauched court, a trafficking legislature, or a blinded
people may think, the national account with heaven must some day or other
be settled: all countries have sooner or later been called to their
reckoning; the proudest empires have sunk when the balance was struck; and
Britain, like an individual penitent, must undergo her day of sorrow, and
the sooner it happens to her the better. As I wish it over, I wish it to
come, but withal wish that it may be as light as possible.</p>
<p>Perhaps your lordship has no taste for serious things; by your connections
in England I should suppose not; therefore I shall drop this part of the
subject, and take it up in a line in which you will better understand me.</p>
<p>By what means, may I ask, do you expect to conquer America? If you could
not effect it in the summer, when our army was less than yours, nor in the
winter, when we had none, how are you to do it? In point of generalship
you have been outwitted, and in point of fortitude outdone; your
advantages turn out to your loss, and show us that it is in our power to
ruin you by gifts: like a game of drafts, we can move out of one square to
let you come in, in order that we may afterwards take two or three for
one; and as we can always keep a double corner for ourselves, we can
always prevent a total defeat. You cannot be so insensible as not to see
that we have two to one the advantage of you, because we conquer by a
drawn game, and you lose by it. Burgoyne might have taught your lordship
this knowledge; he has been long a student in the doctrine of chances.</p>
<p>I have no other idea of conquering countries than by subduing the armies
which defend them: have you done this, or can you do it? If you have not,
it would be civil in you to let your proclamations alone for the present;
otherwise, you will ruin more Tories by your grace and favor, than you
will Whigs by your arms.</p>
<p>Were you to obtain possession of this city, you would not know what to do
with it more than to plunder it. To hold it in the manner you hold New
York, would be an additional dead weight upon your hands; and if a general
conquest is your object, you had better be without the city than with it.
When you have defeated all our armies, the cities will fall into your
hands of themselves; but to creep into them in the manner you got into
Princeton, Trenton, &c. is like robbing an orchard in the night before
the fruit be ripe, and running away in the morning. Your experiment in the
Jerseys is sufficient to teach you that you have something more to do than
barely to get into other people's houses; and your new converts, to whom
you promised all manner of protection, and seduced into new guilt by
pardoning them from their former virtues, must begin to have a very
contemptible opinion both of your power and your policy. Your authority in
the Jerseys is now reduced to the small circle which your army occupies,
and your proclamation is no where else seen unless it be to be laughed at.
The mighty subduers of the continent have retreated into a nutshell, and
the proud forgivers of our sins are fled from those they came to pardon;
and all this at a time when they were despatching vessel after vessel to
England with the great news of every day. In short, you have managed your
Jersey expedition so very dexterously, that the dead only are conquerors,
because none will dispute the ground with them.</p>
<p>In all the wars which you have formerly been concerned in you had only
armies to contend with; in this case you have both an army and a country
to combat with. In former wars, the countries followed the fate of their
capitals; Canada fell with Quebec, and Minorca with Port Mahon or St.
Phillips; by subduing those, the conquerors opened a way into, and became
masters of the country: here it is otherwise; if you get possession of a
city here, you are obliged to shut yourselves up in it, and can make no
other use of it, than to spend your country's money in. This is all the
advantage you have drawn from New York; and you would draw less from
Philadelphia, because it requires more force to keep it, and is much
further from the sea. A pretty figure you and the Tories would cut in this
city, with a river full of ice, and a town full of fire; for the immediate
consequence of your getting here would be, that you would be cannonaded
out again, and the Tories be obliged to make good the damage; and this
sooner or later will be the fate of New York.</p>
<p>I wish to see the city saved, not so much from military as from natural
motives. 'Tis the hiding place of women and children, and Lord Howe's
proper business is with our armies. When I put all the circumstances
together which ought to be taken, I laugh at your notion of conquering
America. Because you lived in a little country, where an army might run
over the whole in a few days, and where a single company of soldiers might
put a multitude to the rout, you expected to find it the same here. It is
plain that you brought over with you all the narrow notions you were bred
up with, and imagined that a proclamation in the king's name was to do
great things; but Englishmen always travel for knowledge, and your
lordship, I hope, will return, if you return at all, much wiser than you
came.</p>
<p>We may be surprised by events we did not expect, and in that interval of
recollection you may gain some temporary advantage: such was the case a
few weeks ago, but we soon ripen again into reason, collect our strength,
and while you are preparing for a triumph, we come upon you with a defeat.
Such it has been, and such it would be were you to try it a hundred times
over. Were you to garrison the places you might march over, in order to
secure their subjection, (for remember you can do it by no other means,)
your army would be like a stream of water running to nothing. By the time
you extended from New York to Virginia, you would be reduced to a string
of drops not capable of hanging together; while we, by retreating from
State to State, like a river turning back upon itself, would acquire
strength in the same proportion as you lost it, and in the end be capable
of overwhelming you. The country, in the meantime, would suffer, but it is
a day of suffering, and we ought to expect it. What we contend for is
worthy the affliction we may go through. If we get but bread to eat, and
any kind of raiment to put on, we ought not only to be contented, but
thankful. More than that we ought not to look for, and less than that
heaven has not yet suffered us to want. He that would sell his birthright
for a little salt, is as worthless as he who sold it for pottage without
salt; and he that would part with it for a gay coat, or a plain coat,
ought for ever to be a slave in buff. What are salt, sugar and finery, to
the inestimable blessings of "Liberty and Safety!" Or what are the
inconveniences of a few months to the tributary bondage of ages? The
meanest peasant in America, blessed with these sentiments, is a happy man
compared with a New York Tory; he can eat his morsel without repining, and
when he has done, can sweeten it with a repast of wholesome air; he can
take his child by the hand and bless it, without feeling the conscious
shame of neglecting a parent's duty.</p>
<p>In publishing these remarks I have several objects in view.</p>
<p>On your part they are to expose the folly of your pretended authority as a
commissioner; the wickedness of your cause in general; and the
impossibility of your conquering us at any rate. On the part of the
public, my intention is, to show them their true and sold interest; to
encourage them to their own good, to remove the fears and falsities which
bad men have spread, and weak men have encouraged; and to excite in all
men a love for union, and a cheerfulness for duty.</p>
<p>I shall submit one more case to you respecting your conquest of this
country, and then proceed to new observations.</p>
<p>Suppose our armies in every part of this continent were immediately to
disperse, every man to his home, or where else he might be safe, and
engage to reassemble again on a certain future day; it is clear that you
would then have no army to contend with, yet you would be as much at a
loss in that case as you are now; you would be afraid to send your troops
in parties over to the continent, either to disarm or prevent us from
assembling, lest they should not return; and while you kept them together,
having no arms of ours to dispute with, you could not call it a conquest;
you might furnish out a pompous page in the London Gazette or a New York
paper, but when we returned at the appointed time, you would have the same
work to do that you had at first.</p>
<p>It has been the folly of Britain to suppose herself more powerful than she
really is, and by that means has arrogated to herself a rank in the world
she is not entitled to: for more than this century past she has not been
able to carry on a war without foreign assistance. In Marlborough's
campaigns, and from that day to this, the number of German troops and
officers assisting her have been about equal with her own; ten thousand
Hessians were sent to England last war to protect her from a French
invasion; and she would have cut but a poor figure in her Canadian and
West Indian expeditions, had not America been lavish both of her money and
men to help her along. The only instance in which she was engaged singly,
that I can recollect, was against the rebellion in Scotland, in the years
1745 and 1746, and in that, out of three battles, she was twice beaten,
till by thus reducing their numbers, (as we shall yours) and taking a
supply ship that was coming to Scotland with clothes, arms and money, (as
we have often done,) she was at last enabled to defeat them. England was
never famous by land; her officers have generally been suspected of
cowardice, have more of the air of a dancing-master than a soldier, and by
the samples which we have taken prisoners, we give the preference to
ourselves. Her strength, of late, has lain in her extravagance; but as her
finances and credit are now low, her sinews in that line begin to fail
fast. As a nation she is the poorest in Europe; for were the whole
kingdom, and all that is in it, to be put up for sale like the estate of a
bankrupt, it would not fetch as much as she owes; yet this thoughtless
wretch must go to war, and with the avowed design, too, of making us
beasts of burden, to support her in riot and debauchery, and to assist her
afterwards in distressing those nations who are now our best friends. This
ingratitude may suit a Tory, or the unchristian peevishness of a fallen
Quaker, but none else.</p>
<p>'Tis the unhappy temper of the English to be pleased with any war, right
or wrong, be it but successful; but they soon grow discontented with ill
fortune, and it is an even chance that they are as clamorous for peace
next summer, as the king and his ministers were for war last winter. In
this natural view of things, your lordship stands in a very critical
situation: your whole character is now staked upon your laurels; if they
wither, you wither with them; if they flourish, you cannot live long to
look at them; and at any rate, the black account hereafter is not far off.
What lately appeared to us misfortunes, were only blessings in disguise;
and the seeming advantages on your side have turned out to our profit.
Even our loss of this city, as far as we can see, might be a principal
gain to us: the more surface you spread over, the thinner you will be, and
the easier wiped away; and our consolation under that apparent disaster
would be, that the estates of the Tories would become securities for the
repairs. In short, there is no old ground we can fail upon, but some new
foundation rises again to support us. "We have put, sir, our hands to the
plough, and cursed be he that looketh back."</p>
<p>Your king, in his speech to parliament last spring, declared, "That he had
no doubt but the great force they had enabled him to send to America,
would effectually reduce the rebellious colonies." It has not, neither can
it; but it has done just enough to lay the foundation of its own next
year's ruin. You are sensible that you left England in a divided,
distracted state of politics, and, by the command you had here, you became
a principal prop in the court party; their fortunes rest on yours; by a
single express you can fix their value with the public, and the degree to
which their spirits shall rise or fall; they are in your hands as stock,
and you have the secret of the alley with you. Thus situated and
connected, you become the unintentional mechanical instrument of your own
and their overthrow. The king and his ministers put conquest out of doubt,
and the credit of both depended on the proof. To support them in the
interim, it was necessary that you should make the most of every thing,
and we can tell by Hugh Gaine's New York paper what the complexion of the
London Gazette is. With such a list of victories the nation cannot expect
you will ask new supplies; and to confess your want of them would give the
lie to your triumphs, and impeach the king and his ministers of
treasonable deception. If you make the necessary demand at home, your
party sinks; if you make it not, you sink yourself; to ask it now is too
late, and to ask it before was too soon, and unless it arrive quickly will
be of no use. In short, the part you have to act, cannot be acted; and I
am fully persuaded that all you have to trust to is, to do the best you
can with what force you have got, or little more. Though we have greatly
exceeded you in point of generalship and bravery of men, yet, as a people,
we have not entered into the full soul of enterprise; for I, who know
England and the disposition of the people well, am confident, that it is
easier for us to effect a revolution there, than you a conquest here; a
few thousand men landed in England with the declared design of deposing
the present king, bringing his ministers to trial, and setting up the Duke
of Gloucester in his stead, would assuredly carry their point, while you
are grovelling here, ignorant of the matter. As I send all my papers to
England, this, like Common Sense, will find its way there; and though it
may put one party on their guard, it will inform the other, and the nation
in general, of our design to help them.</p>
<p>Thus far, sir, I have endeavored to give you a picture of present affairs:
you may draw from it what conclusions you please. I wish as well to the
true prosperity of England as you can, but I consider INDEPENDENCE as
America's natural right and interest, and never could see any real
disservice it would be to Britain. If an English merchant receives an
order, and is paid for it, it signifies nothing to him who governs the
country. This is my creed of politics. If I have any where expressed
myself over-warmly, 'tis from a fixed, immovable hatred I have, and ever
had, to cruel men and cruel measures. I have likewise an aversion to
monarchy, as being too debasing to the dignity of man; but I never
troubled others with my notions till very lately, nor ever published a
syllable in England in my life. What I write is pure nature, and my pen
and my soul have ever gone together. My writings I have always given away,
reserving only the expense of printing and paper, and sometimes not even
that. I never courted either fame or interest, and my manner of life, to
those who know it, will justify what I say. My study is to be useful, and
if your lordship loves mankind as well as I do, you would, seeing you
cannot conquer us, cast about and lend your hand towards accomplishing a
peace. Our independence with God's blessing we will maintain against all
the world; but as we wish to avoid evil ourselves, we wish not to inflict
it on others. I am never over-inquisitive into the secrets of the cabinet,
but I have some notion that, if you neglect the present opportunity, it
will not be in our power to make a separate peace with you afterwards; for
whatever treaties or alliances we form, we shall most faithfully abide by;
wherefore you may be deceived if you think you can make it with us at any
time. A lasting independent peace is my wish, end and aim; and to
accomplish that, I pray God the Americans may never be defeated, and I
trust while they have good officers, and are well commanded, and willing
to be commanded, that they NEVER WILL BE.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.<br/>
<br/>
PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 13, 1777.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CRISIS III. (IN THE PROGRESS OF POLITICS) </h2>
<p>IN THE progress of politics, as in the common occurrences of life, we are
not only apt to forget the ground we have travelled over, but frequently
neglect to gather up experience as we go. We expend, if I may so say, the
knowledge of every day on the circumstances that produce it, and journey
on in search of new matter and new refinements: but as it is pleasant and
sometimes useful to look back, even to the first periods of infancy, and
trace the turns and windings through which we have passed, so we may
likewise derive many advantages by halting a while in our political
career, and taking a review of the wondrous complicated labyrinth of
little more than yesterday.</p>
<p>Truly may we say, that never did men grow old in so short a time! We have
crowded the business of an age into the compass of a few months, and have
been driven through such a rapid succession of things, that for the want
of leisure to think, we unavoidably wasted knowledge as we came, and have
left nearly as much behind us as we brought with us: but the road is yet
rich with the fragments, and, before we finally lose sight of them, will
repay us for the trouble of stopping to pick them up.</p>
<p>Were a man to be totally deprived of memory, he would be incapable of
forming any just opinion; every thing about him would seem a chaos: he
would have even his own history to ask from every one; and by not knowing
how the world went in his absence, he would be at a loss to know how it
ought to go on when he recovered, or rather, returned to it again. In like
manner, though in a less degree, a too great inattention to past
occurrences retards and bewilders our judgment in everything; while, on
the contrary, by comparing what is past with what is present, we
frequently hit on the true character of both, and become wise with very
little trouble. It is a kind of counter-march, by which we get into the
rear of time, and mark the movements and meaning of things as we make our
return. There are certain circumstances, which, at the time of their
happening, are a kind of riddles, and as every riddle is to be followed by
its answer, so those kind of circumstances will be followed by their
events, and those events are always the true solution. A considerable
space of time may lapse between, and unless we continue our observations
from the one to the other, the harmony of them will pass away unnoticed:
but the misfortune is, that partly from the pressing necessity of some
instant things, and partly from the impatience of our own tempers, we are
frequently in such a hurry to make out the meaning of everything as fast
as it happens, that we thereby never truly understand it; and not only
start new difficulties to ourselves by so doing, but, as it were,
embarrass Providence in her good designs.</p>
<p>I have been civil in stating this fault on a large scale, for, as it now
stands, it does not appear to be levelled against any particular set of
men; but were it to be refined a little further, it might afterwards be
applied to the Tories with a degree of striking propriety: those men have
been remarkable for drawing sudden conclusions from single facts. The
least apparent mishap on our side, or the least seeming advantage on the
part of the enemy, have determined with them the fate of a whole campaign.
By this hasty judgment they have converted a retreat into a defeat;
mistook generalship for error; while every little advantage purposely
given the enemy, either to weaken their strength by dividing it, embarrass
their councils by multiplying their objects, or to secure a greater post
by the surrender of a less, has been instantly magnified into a conquest.
Thus, by quartering ill policy upon ill principles, they have frequently
promoted the cause they designed to injure, and injured that which they
intended to promote.</p>
<p>It is probable the campaign may open before this number comes from the
press. The enemy have long lain idle, and amused themselves with carrying
on the war by proclamations only. While they continue their delay our
strength increases, and were they to move to action now, it is a
circumstantial proof that they have no reinforcement coming; wherefore, in
either case, the comparative advantage will be ours. Like a wounded,
disabled whale, they want only time and room to die in; and though in the
agony of their exit, it may be unsafe to live within the flapping of their
tail, yet every hour shortens their date, and lessens their power of
mischief. If any thing happens while this number is in the press, it will
afford me a subject for the last pages of it. At present I am tired of
waiting; and as neither the enemy, nor the state of politics have yet
produced any thing new, I am thereby left in the field of general matter,
undirected by any striking or particular object. This Crisis, therefore,
will be made up rather of variety than novelty, and consist more of things
useful than things wonderful.</p>
<p>The success of the cause, the union of the people, and the means of
supporting and securing both, are points which cannot be too much attended
to. He who doubts of the former is a desponding coward, and he who
wilfully disturbs the latter is a traitor. Their characters are easily
fixed, and under these short descriptions I leave them for the present.</p>
<p>One of the greatest degrees of sentimental union which America ever knew,
was in denying the right of the British parliament "to bind the colonies
in all cases whatsoever." The Declaration is, in its form, an almighty
one, and is the loftiest stretch of arbitrary power that ever one set of
men or one country claimed over another. Taxation was nothing more than
the putting the declared right into practice; and this failing, recourse
was had to arms, as a means to establish both the right and the practice,
or to answer a worse purpose, which will be mentioned in the course of
this number. And in order to repay themselves the expense of an army, and
to profit by their own injustice, the colonies were, by another law,
declared to be in a state of actual rebellion, and of consequence all
property therein would fall to the conquerors.</p>
<p>The colonies, on their part, first, denied the right; secondly, they
suspended the use of taxable articles, and petitioned against the practice
of taxation: and these failing, they, thirdly, defended their property by
force, as soon as it was forcibly invaded, and, in answer to the
declaration of rebellion and non-protection, published their Declaration
of Independence and right of self-protection.</p>
<p>These, in a few words, are the different stages of the quarrel; and the
parts are so intimately and necessarily connected with each other as to
admit of no separation. A person, to use a trite phrase, must be a Whig or
a Tory in a lump. His feelings, as a man, may be wounded; his charity, as
a Christian, may be moved; but his political principles must go through
all the cases on one side or the other. He cannot be a Whig in this stage,
and a Tory in that. If he says he is against the united independence of
the continent, he is to all intents and purposes against her in all the
rest; because this last comprehends the whole. And he may just as well
say, that Britain was right in declaring us rebels; right in taxing us;
and right in declaring her "right to bind the colonies in all cases
whatsoever." It signifies nothing what neutral ground, of his own
creating, he may skulk upon for shelter, for the quarrel in no stage of it
hath afforded any such ground; and either we or Britain are absolutely
right or absolutely wrong through the whole.</p>
<p>Britain, like a gamester nearly ruined, has now put all her losses into
one bet, and is playing a desperate game for the total. If she wins it,
she wins from me my life; she wins the continent as the forfeited property
of rebels; the right of taxing those that are left as reduced subjects;
and the power of binding them slaves: and the single die which determines
this unparalleled event is, whether we support our independence or she
overturn it. This is coming to the point at once. Here is the touchstone
to try men by. He that is not a supporter of the independent States of
America in the same degree that his religious and political principles
would suffer him to support the government of any other country, of which
he called himself a subject, is, in the American sense of the word, A
TORY; and the instant that he endeavors to bring his toryism into
practice, he becomes A TRAITOR. The first can only be detected by a
general test, and the law hath already provided for the latter.</p>
<p>It is unnatural and impolitic to admit men who would root up our
independence to have any share in our legislation, either as electors or
representatives; because the support of our independence rests, in a great
measure, on the vigor and purity of our public bodies. Would Britain, even
in time of peace, much less in war, suffer an election to be carried by
men who professed themselves to be not her subjects, or allow such to sit
in Parliament? Certainly not.</p>
<p>But there are a certain species of Tories with whom conscience or
principle has nothing to do, and who are so from avarice only. Some of the
first fortunes on the continent, on the part of the Whigs, are staked on
the issue of our present measures. And shall disaffection only be rewarded
with security? Can any thing be a greater inducement to a miserly man,
than the hope of making his Mammon safe? And though the scheme be fraught
with every character of folly, yet, so long as he supposes, that by doing
nothing materially criminal against America on one part, and by expressing
his private disapprobation against independence, as palliative with the
enemy, on the other part, he stands in a safe line between both; while, I
say, this ground be suffered to remain, craft, and the spirit of avarice,
will point it out, and men will not be wanting to fill up this most
contemptible of all characters.</p>
<p>These men, ashamed to own the sordid cause from whence their disaffection
springs, add thereby meanness to meanness, by endeavoring to shelter
themselves under the mask of hypocrisy; that is, they had rather be
thought to be Tories from some kind of principle, than Tories by having no
principle at all. But till such time as they can show some real reason,
natural, political, or conscientious, on which their objections to
independence are founded, we are not obliged to give them credit for being
Tories of the first stamp, but must set them down as Tories of the last.</p>
<p>In the second number of the Crisis, I endeavored to show the impossibility
of the enemy's making any conquest of America, that nothing was wanting on
our part but patience and perseverance, and that, with these virtues, our
success, as far as human speculation could discern, seemed as certain as
fate. But as there are many among us, who, influenced by others, have
regularly gone back from the principles they once held, in proportion as
we have gone forward; and as it is the unfortunate lot of many a good man
to live within the neighborhood of disaffected ones; I shall, therefore,
for the sake of confirming the one and recovering the other, endeavor, in
the space of a page or two, to go over some of the leading principles in
support of independence. It is a much pleasanter task to prevent vice than
to punish it, and, however our tempers may be gratified by resentment, or
our national expenses eased by forfeited estates, harmony and friendship
is, nevertheless, the happiest condition a country can be blessed with.</p>
<p>The principal arguments in support of independence may be comprehended
under the four following heads.</p>
<p>1st, The natural right of the continent to independence.<br/>
2d, Her interest in being independent.<br/>
3d, The necessity,—and<br/>
4th, The moral advantages arising therefrom.<br/></p>
<p>I. The natural right of the continent to independence, is a point which
never yet was called in question. It will not even admit of a debate. To
deny such a right, would be a kind of atheism against nature: and the best
answer to such an objection would be, "The fool hath said in his heart
there is no God."</p>
<p>II. The interest of the continent in being independent is a point as
clearly right as the former. America, by her own internal industry, and
unknown to all the powers of Europe, was, at the beginning of the dispute,
arrived at a pitch of greatness, trade and population, beyond which it was
the interest of Britain not to suffer her to pass, lest she should grow
too powerful to be kept subordinate. She began to view this country with
the same uneasy malicious eye, with which a covetous guardian would view
his ward, whose estate he had been enriching himself by for twenty years,
and saw him just arriving at manhood. And America owes no more to Britain
for her present maturity, than the ward would to the guardian for being
twenty-one years of age. That America hath flourished at the time she was
under the government of Britain, is true; but there is every natural
reason to believe, that had she been an independent country from the first
settlement thereof, uncontrolled by any foreign power, free to make her
own laws, regulate and encourage her own commerce, she had by this time
been of much greater worth than now. The case is simply this: the first
settlers in the different colonies were left to shift for themselves,
unnoticed and unsupported by any European government; but as the tyranny
and persecution of the old world daily drove numbers to the new, and as,
by the favor of heaven on their industry and perseverance, they grew into
importance, so, in a like degree, they became an object of profit to the
greedy eyes of Europe. It was impossible, in this state of infancy,
however thriving and promising, that they could resist the power of any
armed invader that should seek to bring them under his authority. In this
situation, Britain thought it worth her while to claim them, and the
continent received and acknowledged the claimer. It was, in reality, of no
very great importance who was her master, seeing, that from the force and
ambition of the different powers of Europe, she must, till she acquired
strength enough to assert her own right, acknowledge some one. As well,
perhaps, Britain as another; and it might have been as well to have been
under the states of Holland as any. The same hopes of engrossing and
profiting by her trade, by not oppressing it too much, would have operated
alike with any master, and produced to the colonies the same effects. The
clamor of protection, likewise, was all a farce; because, in order to make
that protection necessary, she must first, by her own quarrels, create us
enemies. Hard terms indeed!</p>
<p>To know whether it be the interest of the continent to be independent, we
need only ask this easy, simple question: Is it the interest of a man to
be a boy all his life? The answer to one will be the answer to both.
America hath been one continued scene of legislative contention from the
first king's representative to the last; and this was unavoidably founded
in the natural opposition of interest between the old country and the new.
A governor sent from England, or receiving his authority therefrom, ought
never to have been considered in any other light than that of a genteel
commissioned spy, whose private business was information, and his public
business a kind of civilized oppression. In the first of these characters
he was to watch the tempers, sentiments, and disposition of the people,
the growth of trade, and the increase of private fortunes; and, in the
latter, to suppress all such acts of the assemblies, however beneficial to
the people, which did not directly or indirectly throw some increase of
power or profit into the hands of those that sent him.</p>
<p>America, till now, could never be called a free country, because her
legislation depended on the will of a man three thousand miles distant,
whose interest was in opposition to ours, and who, by a single "no," could
forbid what law he pleased.</p>
<p>The freedom of trade, likewise, is, to a trading country, an article of
such importance, that the principal source of wealth depends upon it; and
it is impossible that any country can flourish, as it otherwise might do,
whose commerce is engrossed, cramped and fettered by the laws and mandates
of another—yet these evils, and more than I can here enumerate, the
continent has suffered by being under the government of England. By an
independence we clear the whole at once—put an end to the business
of unanswered petitions and fruitless remonstrances—exchange Britain
for Europe—shake hands with the world—live at peace with the
world—and trade to any market where we can buy and sell.</p>
<p>III. The necessity, likewise, of being independent, even before it was
declared, became so evident and important, that the continent ran the risk
of being ruined every day that she delayed it. There was reason to believe
that Britain would endeavor to make an European matter of it, and, rather
than lose the whole, would dismember it, like Poland, and dispose of her
several claims to the highest bidder. Genoa, failing in her attempts to
reduce Corsica, made a sale of it to the French, and such trafficks have
been common in the old world. We had at that time no ambassador in any
part of Europe, to counteract her negotiations, and by that means she had
the range of every foreign court uncontradicted on our part. We even knew
nothing of the treaty for the Hessians till it was concluded, and the
troops ready to embark. Had we been independent before, we had probably
prevented her obtaining them. We had no credit abroad, because of our
rebellious dependency. Our ships could claim no protection in foreign
ports, because we afforded them no justifiable reason for granting it to
us. The calling ourselves subjects, and at the same time fighting against
the power which we acknowledged, was a dangerous precedent to all Europe.
If the grievances justified the taking up arms, they justified our
separation; if they did not justify our separation, neither could they
justify our taking up arms. All Europe was interested in reducing us as
rebels, and all Europe (or the greatest part at least) is interested in
supporting us as independent States. At home our condition was still
worse: our currency had no foundation, and the fall of it would have
ruined Whig and Tory alike. We had no other law than a kind of moderated
passion; no other civil power than an honest mob; and no other protection
than the temporary attachment of one man to another. Had independence been
delayed a few months longer, this continent would have been plunged into
irrecoverable confusion: some violent for it, some against it, till, in
the general cabal, the rich would have been ruined, and the poor
destroyed. It is to independence that every Tory owes the present safety
which he lives in; for by that, and that only, we emerged from a state of
dangerous suspense, and became a regular people.</p>
<p>The necessity, likewise, of being independent, had there been no rupture
between Britain and America, would, in a little time, have brought one on.
The increasing importance of commerce, the weight and perplexity of
legislation, and the entangled state of European politics, would daily
have shown to the continent the impossibility of continuing subordinate;
for, after the coolest reflections on the matter, this must be allowed,
that Britain was too jealous of America to govern it justly; too ignorant
of it to govern it well; and too far distant from it to govern it at all.</p>
<p>IV. But what weigh most with all men of serious reflection are, the moral
advantages arising from independence: war and desolation have become the
trade of the old world; and America neither could nor can be under the
government of Britain without becoming a sharer of her guilt, and a
partner in all the dismal commerce of death. The spirit of duelling,
extended on a national scale, is a proper character for European wars.
They have seldom any other motive than pride, or any other object than
fame. The conquerors and the conquered are generally ruined alike, and the
chief difference at last is, that the one marches home with his honors,
and the other without them. 'Tis the natural temper of the English to
fight for a feather, if they suppose that feather to be an affront; and
America, without the right of asking why, must have abetted in every
quarrel, and abided by its fate. It is a shocking situation to live in,
that one country must be brought into all the wars of another, whether the
measure be right or wrong, or whether she will or not; yet this, in the
fullest extent, was, and ever would be, the unavoidable consequence of the
connection. Surely the Quakers forgot their own principles when, in their
late Testimony, they called this connection, with these military and
miserable appendages hanging to it—"the happy constitution."</p>
<p>Britain, for centuries past, has been nearly fifty years out of every
hundred at war with some power or other. It certainly ought to be a
conscientious as well political consideration with America, not to dip her
hands in the bloody work of Europe. Our situation affords us a retreat
from their cabals, and the present happy union of the states bids fair for
extirpating the future use of arms from one quarter of the world; yet such
have been the irreligious politics of the present leaders of the Quakers,
that, for the sake of they scarce know what, they would cut off every hope
of such a blessing by tying this continent to Britain, like Hector to the
chariot wheel of Achilles, to be dragged through all the miseries of
endless European wars.</p>
<p>The connection, viewed from this ground, is distressing to every man who
has the feelings of humanity. By having Britain for our master, we became
enemies to the greatest part of Europe, and they to us: and the
consequence was war inevitable. By being our own masters, independent of
any foreign one, we have Europe for our friends, and the prospect of an
endless peace among ourselves. Those who were advocates for the British
government over these colonies, were obliged to limit both their arguments
and their ideas to the period of an European peace only; the moment
Britain became plunged in war, every supposed convenience to us vanished,
and all we could hope for was not to be ruined. Could this be a desirable
condition for a young country to be in?</p>
<p>Had the French pursued their fortune immediately after the defeat of
Braddock last war, this city and province had then experienced the woful
calamities of being a British subject. A scene of the same kind might
happen again; for America, considered as a subject to the crown of
Britain, would ever have been the seat of war, and the bone of contention
between the two powers.</p>
<p>On the whole, if the future expulsion of arms from one quarter of the
world would be a desirable object to a peaceable man; if the freedom of
trade to every part of it can engage the attention of a man of business;
if the support or fall of millions of currency can affect our interests;
if the entire possession of estates, by cutting off the lordly claims of
Britain over the soil, deserves the regard of landed property; and if the
right of making our own laws, uncontrolled by royal or ministerial spies
or mandates, be worthy our care as freemen;—then are all men
interested in the support of independence; and may he that supports it
not, be driven from the blessing, and live unpitied beneath the servile
sufferings of scandalous subjection!</p>
<p>We have been amused with the tales of ancient wonders; we have read, and
wept over the histories of other nations: applauded, censured, or pitied,
as their cases affected us. The fortitude and patience of the sufferers—the
justness of their cause—the weight of their oppressions and
oppressors—the object to be saved or lost—with all the
consequences of a defeat or a conquest—have, in the hour of
sympathy, bewitched our hearts, and chained it to their fate: but where is
the power that ever made war upon petitioners? Or where is the war on
which a world was staked till now?</p>
<p>We may not, perhaps, be wise enough to make all the advantages we ought of
our independence; but they are, nevertheless, marked and presented to us
with every character of great and good, and worthy the hand of him who
sent them. I look through the present trouble to a time of tranquillity,
when we shall have it in our power to set an example of peace to all the
world. Were the Quakers really impressed and influenced by the quiet
principles they profess to hold, they would, however they might disapprove
the means, be the first of all men to approve of independence, because, by
separating ourselves from the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, it affords an
opportunity never given to man before of carrying their favourite
principle of peace into general practice, by establishing governments that
shall hereafter exist without wars. O! ye fallen, cringing,
priest-and-Pemberton-ridden people! What more can we say of ye than that a
religious Quaker is a valuable character, and a political Quaker a real
Jesuit.</p>
<p>Having thus gone over some of the principal points in support of
independence, I must now request the reader to return back with me to the
period when it first began to be a public doctrine, and to examine the
progress it has made among the various classes of men. The area I mean to
begin at, is the breaking out of hostilities, April 19th, 1775. Until this
event happened, the continent seemed to view the dispute as a kind of
law-suit for a matter of right, litigating between the old country and the
new; and she felt the same kind and degree of horror, as if she had seen
an oppressive plaintiff, at the head of a band of ruffians, enter the
court, while the cause was before it, and put the judge, the jury, the
defendant and his counsel, to the sword. Perhaps a more heart-felt
convulsion never reached a country with the same degree of power and
rapidity before, and never may again. Pity for the sufferers, mixed with
indignation at the violence, and heightened with apprehensions of
undergoing the same fate, made the affair of Lexington the affair of the
continent. Every part of it felt the shock, and all vibrated together. A
general promotion of sentiment took place: those who had drank deeply into
Whiggish principles, that is, the right and necessity not only of
opposing, but wholly setting aside the power of the crown as soon as it
became practically dangerous (for in theory it was always so), stepped
into the first stage of independence; while another class of Whigs,
equally sound in principle, but not so sanguine in enterprise, attached
themselves the stronger to the cause, and fell close in with the rear of
the former; their partition was a mere point. Numbers of the moderate men,
whose chief fault, at that time, arose from entertaining a better opinion
of Britain than she deserved, convinced now of their mistake, gave her up,
and publicly declared themselves good Whigs. While the Tories, seeing it
was no longer a laughing matter, either sank into silent obscurity, or
contented themselves with coming forth and abusing General Gage: not a
single advocate appeared to justify the action of that day; it seemed to
appear to every one with the same magnitude, struck every one with the
same force, and created in every one the same abhorrence. From this period
we may date the growth of independence.</p>
<p>If the many circumstances which happened at this memorable time, be taken
in one view, and compared with each other, they will justify a conclusion
which seems not to have been attended to, I mean a fixed design in the
king and ministry of driving America into arms, in order that they might
be furnished with a pretence for seizing the whole continent, as the
immediate property of the crown. A noble plunder for hungry courtiers!</p>
<p>It ought to be remembered, that the first petition from the Congress was
at this time unanswered on the part of the British king. That the motion,
called Lord North's motion, of the 20th of February, 1775, arrived in
America the latter end of March. This motion was to be laid, by the
several governors then in being, before, the assembly of each province;
and the first assembly before which it was laid, was the assembly of
Pennsylvania, in May following. This being a just state of the case, I
then ask, why were hostilities commenced between the time of passing the
resolve in the House of Commons, of the 20th of February, and the time of
the assemblies meeting to deliberate upon it? Degrading and famous as that
motion was, there is nevertheless reason to believe that the king and his
adherents were afraid the colonies would agree to it, and lest they
should, took effectual care they should not, by provoking them with
hostilities in the interim. They had not the least doubt at that time of
conquering America at one blow; and what they expected to get by a
conquest being infinitely greater than any thing they could hope to get
either by taxation or accommodation, they seemed determined to prevent
even the possibility of hearing each other, lest America should disappoint
their greedy hopes of the whole, by listening even to their own terms. On
the one hand they refused to hear the petition of the continent, and on
the other hand took effectual care the continent should not hear them.</p>
<p>That the motion of the 20th February and the orders for commencing
hostilities were both concerted by the same person or persons, and not the
latter by General Gage, as was falsely imagined at first, is evident from
an extract of a letter of his to the administration, read among other
papers in the House of Commons; in which he informs his masters, "That
though their idea of his disarming certain counties was a right one, yet
it required him to be master of the country, in order to enable him to
execute it." This was prior to the commencement of hostilities, and
consequently before the motion of the 20th February could be deliberated
on by the several assemblies.</p>
<p>Perhaps it may be asked, why was the motion passed, if there was at the
same time a plan to aggravate the Americans not to listen to it? Lord
North assigned one reason himself, which was a hope of dividing them. This
was publicly tempting them to reject it; that if, in case the injury of
arms should fail in provoking them sufficiently, the insult of such a
declaration might fill it up. But by passing the motion and getting it
afterwards rejected in America, it enabled them, in their wicked idea of
politics, among other things, to hold up the colonies to foreign powers,
with every possible mark of disobedience and rebellion. They had applied
to those powers not to supply the continent with arms, ammunition, etc.,
and it was necessary they should incense them against us, by assigning on
their own part some seeming reputable reason why. By dividing, it had a
tendency to weaken the States, and likewise to perplex the adherents of
America in England. But the principal scheme, and that which has marked
their character in every part of their conduct, was a design of
precipitating the colonies into a state which they might afterwards deem
rebellion, and, under that pretence, put an end to all future complaints,
petitions and remonstrances, by seizing the whole at once. They had
ravaged one part of the globe, till it could glut them no longer; their
prodigality required new plunder, and through the East India article tea
they hoped to transfer their rapine from that quarter of the world to
this. Every designed quarrel had its pretence; and the same barbarian
avarice accompanied the plant to America, which ruined the country that
produced it.</p>
<p>That men never turn rogues without turning fools is a maxim, sooner or
later, universally true. The commencement of hostilities, being in the
beginning of April, was, of all times the worst chosen: the Congress were
to meet the tenth of May following, and the distress the continent felt at
this unparalleled outrage gave a stability to that body which no other
circumstance could have done. It suppressed too all inferior debates, and
bound them together by a necessitous affection, without giving them time
to differ upon trifles. The suffering likewise softened the whole body of
the people into a degree of pliability, which laid the principal
foundation-stone of union, order, and government; and which, at any other
time, might only have fretted and then faded away unnoticed and
unimproved. But Providence, who best knows how to time her misfortunes as
well as her immediate favors, chose this to be the time, and who dare
dispute it?</p>
<p>It did not seem the disposition of the people, at this crisis, to heap
petition upon petition, while the former remained unanswered. The measure
however was carried in Congress, and a second petition was sent; of which
I shall only remark that it was submissive even to a dangerous fault,
because the prayer of it appealed solely to what it called the prerogative
of the crown, while the matter in dispute was confessedly constitutional.
But even this petition, flattering as it was, was still not so harmonious
as the chink of cash, and consequently not sufficiently grateful to the
tyrant and his ministry. From every circumstance it is evident, that it
was the determination of the British court to have nothing to do with
America but to conquer her fully and absolutely. They were certain of
success, and the field of battle was the only place of treaty. I am
confident there are thousands and tens of thousands in America who wonder
now that they should ever have thought otherwise; but the sin of that day
was the sin of civility; yet it operated against our present good in the
same manner that a civil opinion of the devil would against our future
peace.</p>
<p>Independence was a doctrine scarce and rare, even towards the conclusion
of the year 1775; all our politics had been founded on the hope of
expectation of making the matter up—a hope, which, though general on
the side of America, had never entered the head or heart of the British
court. Their hope was conquest and confiscation. Good heavens! what
volumes of thanks does America owe to Britain? What infinite obligation to
the tool that fills, with paradoxical vacancy, the throne! Nothing but the
sharpest essence of villany, compounded with the strongest distillation of
folly, could have produced a menstruum that would have effected a
separation. The Congress in 1774 administered an abortive medicine to
independence, by prohibiting the importation of goods, and the succeeding
Congress rendered the dose still more dangerous by continuing it. Had
independence been a settled system with America, (as Britain has
advanced,) she ought to have doubled her importation, and prohibited in
some degree her exportation. And this single circumstance is sufficient to
acquit America before any jury of nations, of having a continental plan of
independence in view; a charge which, had it been true, would have been
honorable, but is so grossly false, that either the amazing ignorance or
the wilful dishonesty of the British court is effectually proved by it.</p>
<p>The second petition, like the first, produced no answer; it was scarcely
acknowledged to have been received; the British court were too determined
in their villainy even to act it artfully, and in their rage for conquest
neglected the necessary subtleties for obtaining it. They might have
divided, distracted and played a thousand tricks with us, had they been as
cunning as they were cruel.</p>
<p>This last indignity gave a new spring to independence. Those who knew the
savage obstinacy of the king, and the jobbing, gambling spirit of the
court, predicted the fate of the petition, as soon as it was sent from
America; for the men being known, their measures were easily foreseen. As
politicians we ought not so much to ground our hopes on the reasonableness
of the thing we ask, as on the reasonableness of the person of whom we ask
it: who would expect discretion from a fool, candor from a tyrant, or
justice from a villain?</p>
<p>As every prospect of accommodation seemed now to fail fast, men began to
think seriously on the matter; and their reason being thus stripped of the
false hope which had long encompassed it, became approachable by fair
debate: yet still the bulk of the people hesitated; they startled at the
novelty of independence, without once considering that our getting into
arms at first was a more extraordinary novelty, and that all other nations
had gone through the work of independence before us. They doubted likewise
the ability of the continent to support it, without reflecting that it
required the same force to obtain an accommodation by arms as an
independence. If the one was acquirable, the other was the same; because,
to accomplish either, it was necessary that our strength should be too
great for Britain to subdue; and it was too unreasonable to suppose, that
with the power of being masters, we should submit to be servants.* Their
caution at this time was exceedingly misplaced; for if they were able to
defend their property and maintain their rights by arms, they,
consequently, were able to defend and support their independence; and in
proportion as these men saw the necessity and correctness of the measure,
they honestly and openly declared and adopted it, and the part that they
had acted since has done them honor and fully established their
characters. Error in opinion has this peculiar advantage with it, that the
foremost point of the contrary ground may at any time be reached by the
sudden exertion of a thought; and it frequently happens in sentimental
differences, that some striking circumstance, or some forcible reason
quickly conceived, will effect in an instant what neither argument nor
example could produce in an age.</p>
<p>* In this state of political suspense the pamphlet Common Sense made<br/>
its appearance, and the success it met with does not become me to<br/>
mention. Dr. Franklin, Mr. Samuel and John Adams, were severally spoken<br/>
of as the supposed author. I had not, at that time, the pleasure either<br/>
of personally knowing or being known to the two last gentlemen. The<br/>
favor of Dr. Franklin's friendship I possessed in England, and my<br/>
introduction to this part of the world was through his patronage. I<br/>
happened, when a school-boy, to pick up a pleasing natural history of<br/>
Virginia, and my inclination from that day of seeing the western side<br/>
of the Atlantic never left me. In October, 1775, Dr. Franklin proposed<br/>
giving me such materials as were in his hands, towards completing a<br/>
history of the present transactions, and seemed desirous of having the<br/>
first volume out the next Spring. I had then formed the outlines of<br/>
Common Sense, and finished nearly the first part; and as I supposed the<br/>
doctor's design in getting out a history was to open the new year with<br/>
a new system, I expected to surprise him with a production on that<br/>
subject, much earlier than he thought of; and without informing him what<br/>
I was doing, got it ready for the press as fast as I conveniently could,<br/>
and sent him the first pamphlet that was printed off.<br/></p>
<p>I find it impossible in the small compass I am limited to, to trace out
the progress which independence has made on the minds of the different
classes of men, and the several reasons by which they were moved. With
some, it was a passionate abhorrence against the king of England and his
ministry, as a set of savages and brutes; and these men, governed by the
agony of a wounded mind, were for trusting every thing to hope and heaven,
and bidding defiance at once. With others, it was a growing conviction
that the scheme of the British court was to create, ferment and drive on a
quarrel, for the sake of confiscated plunder: and men of this class
ripened into independence in proportion as the evidence increased. While a
third class conceived it was the true interest of America, internally and
externally, to be her own master, and gave their support to independence,
step by step, as they saw her abilities to maintain it enlarge. With many,
it was a compound of all these reasons; while those who were too callous
to be reached by either, remained, and still remain Tories.</p>
<p>The legal necessity of being independent, with several collateral reasons,
is pointed out in an elegant masterly manner, in a charge to the grand
jury for the district of Charleston, by the Hon. William Henry Drayton,
chief justice of South Carolina, [April 23, 1776]. This performance, and
the address of the convention of New York, are pieces, in my humble
opinion, of the first rank in America.</p>
<p>The principal causes why independence has not been so universally
supported as it ought, are fear and indolence, and the causes why it has
been opposed, are, avarice, down-right villany, and lust of personal
power. There is not such a being in America as a Tory from conscience;
some secret defect or other is interwoven in the character of all those,
be they men or women, who can look with patience on the brutality, luxury
and debauchery of the British court, and the violations of their army
here. A woman's virtue must sit very lightly on her who can even hint a
favorable sentiment in their behalf. It is remarkable that the whole race
of prostitutes in New York were tories; and the schemes for supporting the
Tory cause in this city, for which several are now in jail, and one
hanged, were concerted and carried on in common bawdy-houses, assisted by
those who kept them.</p>
<p>The connection between vice and meanness is a fit subject for satire, but
when the satire is a fact, it cuts with the irresistible power of a
diamond. If a Quaker, in defence of his just rights, his property, and the
chastity of his house, takes up a musket, he is expelled the meeting; but
the present king of England, who seduced and took into keeping a sister of
their society, is reverenced and supported by repeated Testimonies, while,
the friendly noodle from whom she was taken (and who is now in this city)
continues a drudge in the service of his rival, as if proud of being
cuckolded by a creature called a king.</p>
<p>Our support and success depend on such a variety of men and circumstances,
that every one who does but wish well, is of some use: there are men who
have a strange aversion to arms, yet have hearts to risk every shilling in
the cause, or in support of those who have better talents for defending
it. Nature, in the arrangement of mankind, has fitted some for every
service in life: were all soldiers, all would starve and go naked, and
were none soldiers, all would be slaves. As disaffection to independence
is the badge of a Tory, so affection to it is the mark of a Whig; and the
different services of the Whigs, down from those who nobly contribute
every thing, to those who have nothing to render but their wishes, tend
all to the same center, though with different degrees of merit and
ability. The larger we make the circle, the more we shall harmonize, and
the stronger we shall be. All we want to shut out is disaffection, and,
that excluded, we must accept from each other such duties as we are best
fitted to bestow. A narrow system of politics, like a narrow system of
religion, is calculated only to sour the temper, and be at variance with
mankind.</p>
<p>All we want to know in America is simply this, who is for independence,
and who is not? Those who are for it, will support it, and the remainder
will undoubtedly see the reasonableness of paying the charges; while those
who oppose or seek to betray it, must expect the more rigid fate of the
jail and the gibbet. There is a bastard kind of generosity, which being
extended to all men, is as fatal to society, on one hand, as the want of
true generosity is on the other. A lax manner of administering justice,
falsely termed moderation, has a tendency both to dispirit public virtue,
and promote the growth of public evils. Had the late committee of safety
taken cognizance of the last Testimony of the Quakers and proceeded
against such delinquents as were concerned therein, they had, probably,
prevented the treasonable plans which have been concerted since. When one
villain is suffered to escape, it encourages another to proceed, either
from a hope of escaping likewise, or an apprehension that we dare not
punish. It has been a matter of general surprise, that no notice was taken
of the incendiary publication of the Quakers, of the 20th of November
last; a publication evidently intended to promote sedition and treason,
and encourage the enemy, who were then within a day's march of this city,
to proceed on and possess it. I here present the reader with a memorial
which was laid before the board of safety a few days after the Testimony
appeared. Not a member of that board, that I conversed with, but expressed
the highest detestation of the perverted principles and conduct of the
Quaker junto, and a wish that the board would take the matter up;
notwithstanding which, it was suffered to pass away unnoticed, to the
encouragement of new acts of treason, the general danger of the cause, and
the disgrace of the state.</p>
<p>To the honorable the Council of Safety of the State of<br/>
Pennsylvania.<br/></p>
<p>At a meeting of a reputable number of the inhabitants of the city of
Philadelphia, impressed with a proper sense of the justice of the cause
which this continent is engaged in, and animated with a generous fervor
for supporting the same, it was resolved, that the following be laid
before the board of safety:</p>
<p>"We profess liberality of sentiment to all men; with this distinction
only, that those who do not deserve it would become wise and seek to
deserve it. We hold the pure doctrines of universal liberty of conscience,
and conceive it our duty to endeavor to secure that sacred right to
others, as well as to defend it for ourselves; for we undertake not to
judge of the religious rectitude of tenets, but leave the whole matter to
Him who made us.</p>
<p>"We persecute no man, neither will we abet in the persecution of any man
for religion's sake; our common relation to others being that of
fellow-citizens and fellow-subjects of one single community; and in this
line of connection we hold out the right hand of fellowship to all men.
But we should conceive ourselves to be unworthy members of the free and
independent States of America, were we unconcernedly to see or to suffer
any treasonable wound, public or private, directly or indirectly, to be
given against the peace and safety of the same. We inquire not into the
rank of the offenders, nor into their religious persuasion; we have no
business with either, our part being only to find them out and exhibit
them to justice.</p>
<p>"A printed paper, dated the 20th of November, and signed 'John Pemberton,'
whom we suppose to be an inhabitant of this city, has lately been
dispersed abroad, a copy of which accompanies this. Had the framers and
publishers of that paper conceived it their duty to exhort the youth and
others of their society, to a patient submission under the present trying
visitations, and humbly to wait the event of heaven towards them, they had
therein shown a Christian temper, and we had been silent; but the anger
and political virulence with which their instructions are given, and the
abuse with which they stigmatize all ranks of men not thinking like
themselves, leave no doubt on our minds from what spirit their publication
proceeded: and it is disgraceful to the pure cause of truth, that men can
dally with words of the most sacred import, and play them off as
mechanically as if religion consisted only in contrivance. We know of no
instance in which the Quakers have been compelled to bear arms, or to do
any thing which might strain their conscience; wherefore their advice, 'to
withstand and refuse to submit to the arbitrary instructions and
ordinances of men,' appear to us a false alarm, and could only be
treasonably calculated to gain favor with our enemies, when they are
seemingly on the brink of invading this State, or, what is still worse, to
weaken the hands of our defence, that their entrance into this city might
be made practicable and easy.</p>
<p>"We disclaim all tumult and disorder in the punishment of offenders; and
wish to be governed, not by temper but by reason, in the manner of
treating them. We are sensible that our cause has suffered by the two
following errors: first, by ill-judged lenity to traitorous persons in
some cases; and, secondly, by only a passionate treatment of them in
others. For the future we disown both, and wish to be steady in our
proceedings, and serious in our punishments.</p>
<p>"Every State in America has, by the repeated voice of its inhabitants,
directed and authorized the Continental Congress to publish a formal
Declaration of Independence of, and separation from, the oppressive king
and Parliament of Great Britain; and we look on every man as an enemy, who
does not in some line or other, give his assistance towards supporting the
same; at the same time we consider the offence to be heightened to a
degree of unpardonable guilt, when such persons, under the show of
religion, endeavor, either by writing, speaking, or otherwise, to subvert,
overturn, or bring reproach upon the independence of this continent as
declared by Congress.</p>
<p>"The publishers of the paper signed 'John Pemberton,' have called in a
loud manner to their friends and connections, 'to withstand or refuse'
obedience to whatever 'instructions or ordinances' may be published, not
warranted by (what they call) 'that happy Constitution under which they
and others long enjoyed tranquillity and peace.' If this be not treason,
we know not what may properly be called by that name.</p>
<p>"To us it is a matter of surprise and astonishment, that men with the word
'peace, peace,' continually on their lips, should be so fond of living
under and supporting a government, and at the same time calling it
'happy,' which is never better pleased than when a war—that has
filled India with carnage and famine, Africa with slavery, and tampered
with Indians and negroes to cut the throats of the freemen of America. We
conceive it a disgrace to this State, to harbor or wink at such palpable
hypocrisy. But as we seek not to hurt the hair of any man's head, when we
can make ourselves safe without, we wish such persons to restore peace to
themselves and us, by removing themselves to some part of the king of
Great Britain's dominions, as by that means they may live unmolested by us
and we by them; for our fixed opinion is, that those who do not deserve a
place among us, ought not to have one.</p>
<p>"We conclude with requesting the Council of Safety to take into
consideration the paper signed 'John Pemberton,' and if it shall appear to
them to be of a dangerous tendency, or of a treasonable nature, that they
would commit the signer, together with such other persons as they can
discover were concerned therein, into custody, until such time as some
mode of trial shall ascertain the full degree of their guilt and
punishment; in the doing of which, we wish their judges, whoever they may
be, to disregard the man, his connections, interest, riches, poverty, or
principles of religion, and to attend to the nature of his offence only."</p>
<p>The most cavilling sectarian cannot accuse the foregoing with containing
the least ingredient of persecution. The free spirit on which the American
cause is founded, disdains to mix with such an impurity, and leaves it as
rubbish fit only for narrow and suspicious minds to grovel in. Suspicion
and persecution are weeds of the same dunghill, and flourish together. Had
the Quakers minded their religion and their business, they might have
lived through this dispute in enviable ease, and none would have molested
them. The common phrase with these people is, 'Our principles are peace.'
To which may be replied, and your practices are the reverse; for never did
the conduct of men oppose their own doctrine more notoriously than the
present race of the Quakers. They have artfully changed themselves into a
different sort of people to what they used to be, and yet have the address
to persuade each other that they are not altered; like antiquated virgins,
they see not the havoc deformity has made upon them, but pleasantly
mistaking wrinkles for dimples, conceive themselves yet lovely and wonder
at the stupid world for not admiring them.</p>
<p>Did no injury arise to the public by this apostacy of the Quakers from
themselves, the public would have nothing to do with it; but as both the
design and consequences are pointed against a cause in which the whole
community are interested, it is therefore no longer a subject confined to
the cognizance of the meeting only, but comes, as a matter of criminality,
before the authority either of the particular State in which it is acted,
or of the continent against which it operates. Every attempt, now, to
support the authority of the king and Parliament of Great Britain over
America, is treason against every State; therefore it is impossible that
any one can pardon or screen from punishment an offender against all.</p>
<p>But to proceed: while the infatuated Tories of this and other States were
last spring talking of commissioners, accommodation, making the matter up,
and the Lord knows what stuff and nonsense, their good king and ministry
were glutting themselves with the revenge of reducing America to
unconditional submission, and solacing each other with the certainty of
conquering it in one campaign. The following quotations are from the
parliamentary register of the debate's of the House of Lords, March 5th,
1776:</p>
<p>"The Americans," says Lord Talbot,* "have been obstinate, undutiful, and
ungovernable from the very beginning, from their first early and infant
settlements; and I am every day more and more convinced that this people
never will be brought back to their duty, and the subordinate relation
they stand in to this country, till reduced to unconditional, effectual
submission; no concession on our part, no lenity, no endurance, will have
any other effect but that of increasing their insolence."</p>
<p>* Steward of the king's household.<br/></p>
<p>"The struggle," says Lord Townsend,* "is now a struggle for power; the die
is cast, and the only point which now remains to be determined is, in what
manner the war can be most effectually prosecuted and speedily finished,
in order to procure that unconditional submission, which has been so ably
stated by the noble Earl with the white staff" (meaning Lord Talbot;) "and
I have no reason to doubt that the measures now pursuing will put an end
to the war in the course of a single campaign. Should it linger longer, we
shall then have reason to expect that some foreign power will interfere,
and take advantage of our domestic troubles and civil distractions."</p>
<p>* Formerly General Townsend, at Quebec, and late lord-lieutenant of<br/>
Ireland.<br/></p>
<p>Lord Littleton. "My sentiments are pretty well known. I shall only observe
now that lenient measures have had no other effect than to produce insult
after insult; that the more we conceded, the higher America rose in her
demands, and the more insolent she has grown. It is for this reason that I
am now for the most effective and decisive measures; and am of opinion
that no alternative is left us, but to relinquish America for ever, or
finally determine to compel her to acknowledge the legislative authority
of this country; and it is the principle of an unconditional submission I
would be for maintaining."</p>
<p>Can words be more expressive than these? Surely the Tories will believe
the Tory lords! The truth is, they do believe them and know as fully as
any Whig on the continent knows, that the king and ministry never had the
least design of an accommodation with America, but an absolute,
unconditional conquest. And the part which the Tories were to act, was, by
downright lying, to endeavor to put the continent off its guard, and to
divide and sow discontent in the minds of such Whigs as they might gain an
influence over. In short, to keep up a distraction here, that the force
sent from England might be able to conquer in "one campaign." They and the
ministry were, by a different game, playing into each other's hands. The
cry of the Tories in England was, "No reconciliation, no accommodation,"
in order to obtain the greater military force; while those in America were
crying nothing but "reconciliation and accommodation," that the force sent
might conquer with the less resistance.</p>
<p>But this "single campaign" is over, and America not conquered. The whole
work is yet to do, and the force much less to do it with. Their condition
is both despicable and deplorable: out of cash—out of heart, and out
of hope. A country furnished with arms and ammunition as America now is,
with three millions of inhabitants, and three thousand miles distant from
the nearest enemy that can approach her, is able to look and laugh them in
the face.</p>
<p>Howe appears to have two objects in view, either to go up the North River,
or come to Philadelphia.</p>
<p>By going up the North River, he secures a retreat for his army through
Canada, but the ships must return if they return at all, the same way they
went; as our army would be in the rear, the safety of their passage down
is a doubtful matter. By such a motion he shuts himself from all supplies
from Europe, but through Canada, and exposes his army and navy to the
danger of perishing. The idea of his cutting off the communication between
the eastern and southern states, by means of the North River, is merely
visionary. He cannot do it by his shipping; because no ship can lay long
at anchor in any river within reach of the shore; a single gun would drive
a first rate from such a station. This was fully proved last October at
Forts Washington and Lee, where one gun only, on each side of the river,
obliged two frigates to cut and be towed off in an hour's time. Neither
can he cut it off by his army; because the several posts they must occupy
would divide them almost to nothing, and expose them to be picked up by
ours like pebbles on a river's bank; but admitting that he could, where is
the injury? Because, while his whole force is cantoned out, as sentries
over the water, they will be very innocently employed, and the moment they
march into the country the communication opens.</p>
<p>The most probable object is Philadelphia, and the reasons are many. Howe's
business is to conquer it, and in proportion as he finds himself unable to
the task, he will employ his strength to distress women and weak minds, in
order to accomplish through their fears what he cannot accomplish by his
own force. His coming or attempting to come to Philadelphia is a
circumstance that proves his weakness: for no general that felt himself
able to take the field and attack his antagonist would think of bringing
his army into a city in the summer time; and this mere shifting the scene
from place to place, without effecting any thing, has feebleness and
cowardice on the face of it, and holds him up in a contemptible light to
all who can reason justly and firmly. By several informations from New
York, it appears that their army in general, both officers and men, have
given up the expectation of conquering America; their eye now is fixed
upon the spoil. They suppose Philadelphia to be rich with stores, and as
they think to get more by robbing a town than by attacking an army, their
movement towards this city is probable. We are not now contending against
an army of soldiers, but against a band of thieves, who had rather plunder
than fight, and have no other hope of conquest than by cruelty.</p>
<p>They expect to get a mighty booty, and strike another general panic, by
making a sudden movement and getting possession of this city; but unless
they can march out as well as in, or get the entire command of the river,
to remove off their plunder, they may probably be stopped with the stolen
goods upon them. They have never yet succeeded wherever they have been
opposed, but at Fort Washington. At Charleston their defeat was effectual.
At Ticonderoga they ran away. In every skirmish at Kingsbridge and the
White Plains they were obliged to retreat, and the instant that our arms
were turned upon them in the Jerseys, they turned likewise, and those that
turned not were taken.</p>
<p>The necessity of always fitting our internal police to the circumstances
of the times we live in, is something so strikingly obvious, that no
sufficient objection can be made against it. The safety of all societies
depends upon it; and where this point is not attended to, the consequences
will either be a general languor or a tumult. The encouragement and
protection of the good subjects of any state, and the suppression and
punishment of bad ones, are the principal objects for which all authority
is instituted, and the line in which it ought to operate. We have in this
city a strange variety of men and characters, and the circumstances of the
times require that they should be publicly known; it is not the number of
Tories that hurt us, so much as the not finding out who they are; men must
now take one side or the other, and abide by the consequences: the
Quakers, trusting to their short-sighted sagacity, have, most unluckily
for them, made their declaration in their last Testimony, and we ought now
to take them at their word. They have involuntarily read themselves out of
the continental meeting, and cannot hope to be restored to it again but by
payment and penitence. Men whose political principles are founded on
avarice, are beyond the reach of reason, and the only cure of Toryism of
this cast is to tax it. A substantial good drawn from a real evil, is of
the same benefit to society, as if drawn from a virtue; and where men have
not public spirit to render themselves serviceable, it ought to be the
study of government to draw the best use possible from their vices. When
the governing passion of any man, or set of men, is once known, the method
of managing them is easy; for even misers, whom no public virtue can
impress, would become generous, could a heavy tax be laid upon
covetousness.</p>
<p>The Tories have endeavored to insure their property with the enemy, by
forfeiting their reputation with us; from which may be justly inferred,
that their governing passion is avarice. Make them as much afraid of
losing on one side as on the other, and you stagger their Toryism; make
them more so, and you reclaim them; for their principle is to worship the
power which they are most afraid of.</p>
<p>This method of considering men and things together, opens into a large
field for speculation, and affords me an opportunity of offering some
observations on the state of our currency, so as to make the support of it
go hand in hand with the suppression of disaffection and the encouragement
of public spirit.</p>
<p>The thing which first presents itself in inspecting the state of the
currency, is, that we have too much of it, and that there is a necessity
of reducing the quantity, in order to increase the value. Men are daily
growing poor by the very means that they take to get rich; for in the same
proportion that the prices of all goods on hand are raised, the value of
all money laid by is reduced. A simple case will make this clear; let a
man have 100 L. in cash, and as many goods on hand as will to-day sell for
20 L.; but not content with the present market price, he raises them to 40
L. and by so doing obliges others, in their own defence, to raise cent.
per cent. likewise; in this case it is evident that his hundred pounds
laid by, is reduced fifty pounds in value; whereas, had the market lowered
cent. per cent., his goods would have sold but for ten, but his hundred
pounds would have risen in value to two hundred; because it would then
purchase as many goods again, or support his family as long again as
before. And, strange as it may seem, he is one hundred and fifty pounds
the poorer for raising his goods, to what he would have been had he
lowered them; because the forty pounds which his goods sold for, is, by
the general raise of the market cent. per cent., rendered of no more value
than the ten pounds would be had the market fallen in the same proportion;
and, consequently, the whole difference of gain or loss is on the
difference in value of the hundred pounds laid by, viz. from fifty to two
hundred. This rage for raising goods is for several reasons much more the
fault of the Tories than the Whigs; and yet the Tories (to their shame and
confusion ought they to be told of it) are by far the most noisy and
discontented. The greatest part of the Whigs, by being now either in the
army or employed in some public service, are buyers only and not sellers,
and as this evil has its origin in trade, it cannot be charged on those
who are out of it.</p>
<p>But the grievance has now become too general to be remedied by partial
methods, and the only effectual cure is to reduce the quantity of money:
with half the quantity we should be richer than we are now, because the
value of it would be doubled, and consequently our attachment to it
increased; for it is not the number of dollars that a man has, but how far
they will go, that makes him either rich or poor. These two points being
admitted, viz. that the quantity of money is too great, and that the
prices of goods can only be effectually reduced by, reducing the quantity
of the money, the next point to be considered is, the method how to reduce
it.</p>
<p>The circumstances of the times, as before observed, require that the
public characters of all men should now be fully understood, and the only
general method of ascertaining it is by an oath or affirmation, renouncing
all allegiance to the king of Great Britain, and to support the
independence of the United States, as declared by Congress. Let, at the
same time, a tax of ten, fifteen, or twenty per cent. per annum, to be
collected quarterly, be levied on all property. These alternatives, by
being perfectly voluntary, will take in all sorts of people. Here is the
test; here is the tax. He who takes the former, conscientiously proves his
affection to the cause, and binds himself to pay his quota by the best
services in his power, and is thereby justly exempt from the latter; and
those who choose the latter, pay their quota in money, to be excused from
the former, or rather, it is the price paid to us for their supposed,
though mistaken, insurance with the enemy.</p>
<p>But this is only a part of the advantage which would arise by knowing the
different characters of men. The Whigs stake everything on the issue of
their arms, while the Tories, by their disaffection, are sapping and
undermining their strength; and, of consequence, the property of the Whigs
is the more exposed thereby; and whatever injury their estates may sustain
by the movements of the enemy, must either be borne by themselves, who
have done everything which has yet been done, or by the Tories, who have
not only done nothing, but have, by their disaffection, invited the enemy
on.</p>
<p>In the present crisis we ought to know, square by square and house by
house, who are in real allegiance with the United Independent States, and
who are not. Let but the line be made clear and distinct, and all men will
then know what they are to trust to. It would not only be good policy but
strict justice, to raise fifty or one hundred thousand pounds, or more, if
it is necessary, out of the estates and property of the king of England's
votaries, resident in Philadelphia, to be distributed, as a reward to
those inhabitants of the city and State, who should turn out and repulse
the enemy, should they attempt to march this way; and likewise, to bind
the property of all such persons to make good the damages which that of
the Whigs might sustain. In the undistinguishable mode of conducting a
war, we frequently make reprisals at sea, on the vessels of persons in
England, who are friends to our cause compared with the resident Tories
among us.</p>
<p>In every former publication of mine, from Common Sense down to the last
Crisis, I have generally gone on the charitable supposition, that the
Tories were rather a mistaken than a criminal people, and have applied
argument after argument, with all the candor and temper which I was
capable of, in order to set every part of the case clearly and fairly
before them, and if possible to reclaim them from ruin to reason. I have
done my duty by them and have now done with that doctrine, taking it for
granted, that those who yet hold their disaffection are either a set of
avaricious miscreants, who would sacrifice the continent to save
themselves, or a banditti of hungry traitors, who are hoping for a
division of the spoil. To which may be added, a list of crown or
proprietary dependants, who, rather than go without a portion of power,
would be content to share it with the devil. Of such men there is no hope;
and their obedience will only be according to the danger set before them,
and the power that is exercised over them.</p>
<p>A time will shortly arrive, in which, by ascertaining the characters of
persons now, we shall be guarded against their mischiefs then; for in
proportion as the enemy despair of conquest, they will be trying the arts
of seduction and the force of fear by all the mischiefs which they can
inflict. But in war we may be certain of these two things, viz. that
cruelty in an enemy, and motions made with more than usual parade, are
always signs of weakness. He that can conquer, finds his mind too free and
pleasant to be brutish; and he that intends to conquer, never makes too
much show of his strength.</p>
<p>We now know the enemy we have to do with. While drunk with the certainty
of victory, they disdained to be civil; and in proportion as
disappointment makes them sober, and their apprehensions of an European
war alarm them, they will become cringing and artful; honest they cannot
be. But our answer to them, in either condition they may be in, is short
and full—"As free and independent States we are willing to make
peace with you to-morrow, but we neither can hear nor reply in any other
character."</p>
<p>If Britain cannot conquer us, it proves that she is neither able to govern
nor protect us, and our particular situation now is such, that any
connection with her would be unwisely exchanging a half-defeated enemy for
two powerful ones. Europe, by every appearance, is now on the eve, nay, on
the morning twilight of a war, and any alliance with George the Third
brings France and Spain upon our backs; a separation from him attaches
them to our side; therefore, the only road to peace, honor and commerce is
Independence.</p>
<p>Written this fourth year of the UNION, which God preserve.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.<br/>
<br/>
PHILADELPHIA, April 19, 1777.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CRISIS IV. (THOSE WHO EXPECT TO REAP THE BLESSINGS OF FREEDOM) </h2>
<p>THOSE who expect to reap the blessings of freedom, must, like men, undergo
the fatigues of supporting it. The event of yesterday was one of those
kind of alarms which is just sufficient to rouse us to duty, without being
of consequence enough to depress our fortitude. It is not a field of a few
acres of ground, but a cause, that we are defending, and whether we defeat
the enemy in one battle, or by degrees, the consequences will be the same.</p>
<p>Look back at the events of last winter and the present year, there you
will find that the enemy's successes always contributed to reduce them.
What they have gained in ground, they paid so dearly for in numbers, that
their victories have in the end amounted to defeats. We have always been
masters at the last push, and always shall be while we do our duty. Howe
has been once on the banks of the Delaware, and from thence driven back
with loss and disgrace: and why not be again driven from the Schuylkill?
His condition and ours are very different. He has everybody to fight, we
have only his one army to cope with, and which wastes away at every
engagement: we can not only reinforce, but can redouble our numbers; he is
cut off from all supplies, and must sooner or later inevitably fall into
our hands.</p>
<p>Shall a band of ten or twelve thousand robbers, who are this day fifteen
hundred or two thousand men less in strength than they were yesterday,
conquer America, or subdue even a single state? The thing cannot be,
unless we sit down and suffer them to do it. Another such a brush,
notwithstanding we lost the ground, would, by still reducing the enemy,
put them in a condition to be afterwards totally defeated. Could our whole
army have come up to the attack at one time, the consequences had probably
been otherwise; but our having different parts of the Brandywine creek to
guard, and the uncertainty which road to Philadelphia the enemy would
attempt to take, naturally afforded them an opportunity of passing with
their main body at a place where only a part of ours could be posted; for
it must strike every thinking man with conviction, that it requires a much
greater force to oppose an enemy in several places, than is sufficient to
defeat him in any one place.</p>
<p>Men who are sincere in defending their freedom, will always feel concern
at every circumstance which seems to make against them; it is the natural
and honest consequence of all affectionate attachments, and the want of it
is a vice. But the dejection lasts only for a moment; they soon rise out
of it with additional vigor; the glow of hope, courage and fortitude,
will, in a little time, supply the place of every inferior passion, and
kindle the whole heart into heroism.</p>
<p>There is a mystery in the countenance of some causes, which we have not
always present judgment enough to explain. It is distressing to see an
enemy advancing into a country, but it is the only place in which we can
beat them, and in which we have always beaten them, whenever they made the
attempt. The nearer any disease approaches to a crisis, the nearer it is
to a cure. Danger and deliverance make their advances together, and it is
only the last push, in which one or the other takes the lead.</p>
<p>There are many men who will do their duty when it is not wanted; but a
genuine public spirit always appears most when there is most occasion for
it. Thank God! our army, though fatigued, is yet entire. The attack made
by us yesterday, was under many disadvantages, naturally arising from the
uncertainty of knowing which route the enemy would take; and, from that
circumstance, the whole of our force could not be brought up together time
enough to engage all at once. Our strength is yet reserved; and it is
evident that Howe does not think himself a gainer by the affair, otherwise
he would this morning have moved down and attacked General Washington.</p>
<p>Gentlemen of the city and country, it is in your power, by a spirited
improvement of the present circumstance, to turn it to a real advantage.
Howe is now weaker than before, and every shot will contribute to reduce
him. You are more immediately interested than any other part of the
continent: your all is at stake; it is not so with the general cause; you
are devoted by the enemy to plunder and destruction: it is the
encouragement which Howe, the chief of plunderers, has promised his army.
Thus circumstanced, you may save yourselves by a manly resistance, but you
can have no hope in any other conduct. I never yet knew our brave general,
or any part of the army, officers or men, out of heart, and I have seen
them in circumstances a thousand times more trying than the present. It is
only those that are not in action, that feel languor and heaviness, and
the best way to rub it off is to turn out, and make sure work of it.</p>
<p>Our army must undoubtedly feel fatigue, and want a reinforcement of rest
though not of valor. Our own interest and happiness call upon us to give
them every support in our power, and make the burden of the day, on which
the safety of this city depends, as light as possible. Remember,
gentlemen, that we have forces both to the northward and southward of
Philadelphia, and if the enemy be but stopped till those can arrive, this
city will be saved, and the enemy finally routed. You have too much at
stake to hesitate. You ought not to think an hour upon the matter, but to
spring to action at once. Other states have been invaded, have likewise
driven off the invaders. Now our time and turn is come, and perhaps the
finishing stroke is reserved for us. When we look back on the dangers we
have been saved from, and reflect on the success we have been blessed
with, it would be sinful either to be idle or to despair.</p>
<p>I close this paper with a short address to General Howe. You, sir, are
only lingering out the period that shall bring with it your defeat. You
have yet scarce began upon the war, and the further you enter, the faster
will your troubles thicken. What you now enjoy is only a respite from
ruin; an invitation to destruction; something that will lead on to our
deliverance at your expense. We know the cause which we are engaged in,
and though a passionate fondness for it may make us grieve at every injury
which threatens it, yet, when the moment of concern is over, the
determination to duty returns. We are not moved by the gloomy smile of a
worthless king, but by the ardent glow of generous patriotism. We fight
not to enslave, but to set a country free, and to make room upon the earth
for honest men to live in. In such a case we are sure that we are right;
and we leave to you the despairing reflection of being the tool of a
miserable tyrant.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.<br/>
<br/>
PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 12, 1777.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CRISIS. V. TO GEN. SIR WILLIAM HOWE. </h2>
<p>TO argue with a man who has renounced the use and authority of reason, and
whose philosophy consists in holding humanity in contempt, is like
administering medicine to the dead, or endeavoring to convert an atheist
by scripture. Enjoy, sir, your insensibility of feeling and reflecting. It
is the prerogative of animals. And no man will envy you these honors, in
which a savage only can be your rival and a bear your master.</p>
<p>As the generosity of this country rewarded your brother's services in the
last war, with an elegant monument in Westminster Abbey, it is consistent
that she should bestow some mark of distinction upon you. You certainly
deserve her notice, and a conspicuous place in the catalogue of
extraordinary persons. Yet it would be a pity to pass you from the world
in state, and consign you to magnificent oblivion among the tombs, without
telling the future beholder why. Judas is as much known as John, yet
history ascribes their fame to very different actions.</p>
<p>Sir William has undoubtedly merited a monument; but of what kind, or with
what inscription, where placed or how embellished, is a question that
would puzzle all the heralds of St. James's in the profoundest mood of
historical deliberation. We are at no loss, sir, to ascertain your real
character, but somewhat perplexed how to perpetuate its identity, and
preserve it uninjured from the transformations of time or mistake. A
statuary may give a false expression to your bust, or decorate it with
some equivocal emblems, by which you may happen to steal into reputation
and impose upon the hereafter traditionary world. Ill nature or ridicule
may conspire, or a variety of accidents combine to lessen, enlarge, or
change Sir William's fame; and no doubt but he who has taken so much pains
to be singular in his conduct, would choose to be just as singular in his
exit, his monument and his epitaph.</p>
<p>The usual honors of the dead, to be sure, are not sufficiently sublime to
escort a character like you to the republic of dust and ashes; for however
men may differ in their ideas of grandeur or of government here, the grave
is nevertheless a perfect republic. Death is not the monarch of the dead,
but of the dying. The moment he obtains a conquest he loses a subject,
and, like the foolish king you serve, will, in the end, war himself out of
all his dominions.</p>
<p>As a proper preliminary towards the arrangement of your funeral honors, we
readily admit of your new rank of knighthood. The title is perfectly in
character, and is your own, more by merit than creation. There are knights
of various orders, from the knight of the windmill to the knight of the
post. The former is your patron for exploits, and the latter will assist
you in settling your accounts. No honorary title could be more happily
applied! The ingenuity is sublime! And your royal master has discovered
more genius in fitting you therewith, than in generating the most finished
figure for a button, or descanting on the properties of a button mould.</p>
<p>But how, sir, shall we dispose of you? The invention of a statuary is
exhausted, and Sir William is yet unprovided with a monument. America is
anxious to bestow her funeral favors upon you, and wishes to do it in a
manner that shall distinguish you from all the deceased heroes of the last
war. The Egyptian method of embalming is not known to the present age, and
hieroglyphical pageantry hath outlived the science of deciphering it. Some
other method, therefore, must be thought of to immortalize the new knight
of the windmill and post. Sir William, thanks to his stars, is not
oppressed with very delicate ideas. He has no ambition of being wrapped up
and handed about in myrrh, aloes and cassia. Less expensive odors will
suffice; and it fortunately happens that the simple genius of America has
discovered the art of preserving bodies, and embellishing them too, with
much greater frugality than the ancients. In balmage, sir, of humble tar,
you will be as secure as Pharaoh, and in a hieroglyphic of feathers, rival
in finery all the mummies of Egypt.</p>
<p>As you have already made your exit from the moral world, and by numberless
acts both of passionate and deliberate injustice engraved an "here lieth"
on your deceased honor, it must be mere affectation in you to pretend
concern at the humors or opinions of mankind respecting you. What remains
of you may expire at any time. The sooner the better. For he who survives
his reputation, lives out of despite of himself, like a man listening to
his own reproach.</p>
<p>Thus entombed and ornamented, I leave you to the inspection of the
curious, and return to the history of your yet surviving actions. The
character of Sir William has undergone some extraordinary revolutions.
since his arrival in America. It is now fixed and known; and we have
nothing to hope from your candor or to fear from your capacity. Indolence
and inability have too large a share in your composition, ever to suffer
you to be anything more than the hero of little villainies and unfinished
adventures. That, which to some persons appeared moderation in you at
first, was not produced by any real virtue of your own, but by a contrast
of passions, dividing and holding you in perpetual irresolution. One vice
will frequently expel another, without the least merit in the man; as
powers in contrary directions reduce each other to rest.</p>
<p>It became you to have supported a dignified solemnity of character; to
have shown a superior liberality of soul; to have won respect by an
obstinate perseverance in maintaining order, and to have exhibited on all
occasions such an unchangeable graciousness of conduct, that while we
beheld in you the resolution of an enemy, we might admire in you the
sincerity of a man. You came to America under the high sounding titles of
commander and commissioner; not only to suppress what you call rebellion,
by arms, but to shame it out of countenance by the excellence of your
example. Instead of which, you have been the patron of low and vulgar
frauds, the encourager of Indian cruelties; and have imported a cargo of
vices blacker than those which you pretend to suppress.</p>
<p>Mankind are not universally agreed in their determination of right and
wrong; but there are certain actions which the consent of all nations and
individuals has branded with the unchangeable name of meanness. In the
list of human vices we find some of such a refined constitution, they
cannot be carried into practice without seducing some virtue to their
assistance; but meanness has neither alliance nor apology. It is generated
in the dust and sweepings of other vices, and is of such a hateful figure
that all the rest conspire to disown it. Sir William, the commissioner of
George the Third, has at last vouchsafed to give it rank and pedigree. He
has placed the fugitive at the council board, and dubbed it companion of
the order of knighthood.</p>
<p>The particular act of meanness which I allude to in this description, is
forgery. You, sir, have abetted and patronized the forging and uttering
counterfeit continental bills. In the same New York newspapers in which
your own proclamation under your master's authority was published,
offering, or pretending to offer, pardon and protection to these states,
there were repeated advertisements of counterfeit money for sale, and
persons who have come officially from you, and under the sanction of your
flag, have been taken up in attempting to put them off.</p>
<p>A conduct so basely mean in a public character is without precedent or
pretence. Every nation on earth, whether friends or enemies, will unite in
despising you. 'Tis an incendiary war upon society, which nothing can
excuse or palliate,—an improvement upon beggarly villany—and
shows an inbred wretchedness of heart made up between the venomous
malignity of a serpent and the spiteful imbecility of an inferior reptile.</p>
<p>The laws of any civilized country would condemn you to the gibbet without
regard to your rank or titles, because it is an action foreign to the
usage and custom of war; and should you fall into our hands, which pray
God you may, it will be a doubtful matter whether we are to consider you
as a military prisoner or a prisoner for felony.</p>
<p>Besides, it is exceedingly unwise and impolitic in you, or any other
persons in the English service, to promote or even encourage, or wink at
the crime of forgery, in any case whatever. Because, as the riches of
England, as a nation, are chiefly in paper, and the far greater part of
trade among individuals is carried on by the same medium, that is, by
notes and drafts on one another, they, therefore, of all people in the
world, ought to endeavor to keep forgery out of sight, and, if possible,
not to revive the idea of it. It is dangerous to make men familiar with a
crime which they may afterwards practise to much greater advantage against
those who first taught them. Several officers in the English army have
made their exit at the gallows for forgery on their agents; for we all
know, who know any thing of England, that there is not a more necessitous
body of men, taking them generally, than what the English officers are.
They contrive to make a show at the expense of the tailors, and appear
clean at the charge of the washer-women.</p>
<p>England, has at this time, nearly two hundred million pounds sterling of
public money in paper, for which she has no real property: besides a large
circulation of bank notes, bank post bills, and promissory notes and
drafts of private bankers, merchants and tradesmen. She has the greatest
quantity of paper currency and the least quantity of gold and silver of
any nation in Europe; the real specie, which is about sixteen millions
sterling, serves only as change in large sums, which are always made in
paper, or for payment in small ones. Thus circumstanced, the nation is put
to its wit's end, and obliged to be severe almost to criminality, to
prevent the practice and growth of forgery. Scarcely a session passes at
the Old Bailey, or an execution at Tyburn, but witnesses this truth, yet
you, sir, regardless of the policy which her necessity obliges her to
adopt, have made your whole army intimate with the crime. And as all
armies at the conclusion of a war, are too apt to carry into practice the
vices of the campaign, it will probably happen, that England will
hereafter abound in forgeries, to which art the practitioners were first
initiated under your authority in America. You, sir, have the honor of
adding a new vice to the military catalogue; and the reason, perhaps, why
the invention was reserved for you, is, because no general before was mean
enough even to think of it.</p>
<p>That a man whose soul is absorbed in the low traffic of vulgar vice, is
incapable of moving in any superior region, is clearly shown in you by the
event of every campaign. Your military exploits have been without plan,
object or decision. Can it be possible that you or your employers suppose
that the possession of Philadelphia will be any ways equal to the expense
or expectation of the nation which supports you? What advantages does
England derive from any achievements of yours? To her it is perfectly
indifferent what place you are in, so long as the business of conquest is
unperformed and the charge of maintaining you remains the same.</p>
<p>If the principal events of the three campaigns be attended to, the balance
will appear against you at the close of each; but the last, in point of
importance to us, has exceeded the former two. It is pleasant to look back
on dangers past, and equally as pleasant to meditate on present ones when
the way out begins to appear. That period is now arrived, and the long
doubtful winter of war is changing to the sweeter prospects of victory and
joy. At the close of the campaign, in 1775, you were obliged to retreat
from Boston. In the summer of 1776, you appeared with a numerous fleet and
army in the harbor of New York. By what miracle the continent was
preserved in that season of danger is a subject of admiration! If instead
of wasting your time against Long Island you had run up the North River,
and landed any where above New York, the consequence must have been, that
either you would have compelled General Washington to fight you with very
unequal numbers, or he must have suddenly evacuated the city with the loss
of nearly all the stores of his army, or have surrendered for want of
provisions; the situation of the place naturally producing one or the
other of these events.</p>
<p>The preparations made to defend New York were, nevertheless, wise and
military; because your forces were then at sea, their numbers uncertain;
storms, sickness, or a variety of accidents might have disabled their
coming, or so diminished them on their passage, that those which survived
would have been incapable of opening the campaign with any prospect of
success; in which case the defence would have been sufficient and the
place preserved; for cities that have been raised from nothing with an
infinitude of labor and expense, are not to be thrown away on the bare
probability of their being taken. On these grounds the preparations made
to maintain New York were as judicious as the retreat afterwards. While
you, in the interim, let slip the very opportunity which seemed to put
conquest in your power.</p>
<p>Through the whole of that campaign you had nearly double the forces which
General Washington immediately commanded. The principal plan at that time,
on our part, was to wear away the season with as little loss as possible,
and to raise the army for the next year. Long Island, New York, Forts
Washington and Lee were not defended after your superior force was known
under any expectation of their being finally maintained, but as a range of
outworks, in the attacking of which your time might be wasted, your
numbers reduced, and your vanity amused by possessing them on our retreat.
It was intended to have withdrawn the garrison from Fort Washington after
it had answered the former of those purposes, but the fate of that day put
a prize into your hands without much honor to yourselves.</p>
<p>Your progress through the Jerseys was accidental; you had it not even in
contemplation, or you would not have sent a principal part of your forces
to Rhode Island beforehand. The utmost hope of America in the year 1776,
reached no higher than that she might not then be conquered. She had no
expectation of defeating you in that campaign. Even the most cowardly Tory
allowed, that, could she withstand the shock of that summer, her
independence would be past a doubt. You had then greatly the advantage of
her. You were formidable. Your military knowledge was supposed to be
complete. Your fleets and forces arrived without an accident. You had
neither experience nor reinforcements to wait for. You had nothing to do
but to begin, and your chance lay in the first vigorous onset.</p>
<p>America was young and unskilled. She was obliged to trust her defence to
time and practice; and has, by mere dint of perseverance, maintained her
cause, and brought the enemy to a condition, in which she is now capable
of meeting him on any grounds.</p>
<p>It is remarkable that in the campaign of 1776 you gained no more,
notwithstanding your great force, than what was given you by consent of
evacuation, except Fort Washington; while every advantage obtained by us
was by fair and hard fighting. The defeat of Sir Peter Parker was
complete. The conquest of the Hessians at Trenton, by the remains of a
retreating army, which but a few days before you affected to despise, is
an instance of their heroic perseverance very seldom to be met with. And
the victory over the British troops at Princeton, by a harassed and
wearied party, who had been engaged the day before and marched all night
without refreshment, is attended with such a scene of circumstances and
superiority of generalship, as will ever give it a place in the first rank
in the history of great actions.</p>
<p>When I look back on the gloomy days of last winter, and see America
suspended by a thread, I feel a triumph of joy at the recollection of her
delivery, and a reverence for the characters which snatched her from
destruction. To doubt now would be a species of infidelity, and to forget
the instruments which saved us then would be ingratitude.</p>
<p>The close of that campaign left us with the spirit of conquerors. The
northern districts were relieved by the retreat of General Carleton over
the lakes. The army under your command were hunted back and had their
bounds prescribed. The continent began to feel its military importance,
and the winter passed pleasantly away in preparations for the next
campaign.</p>
<p>However confident you might be on your first arrival, the result of the
year 1776 gave you some idea of the difficulty, if not impossibility of
conquest. To this reason I ascribe your delay in opening the campaign of
1777. The face of matters, on the close of the former year, gave you no
encouragement to pursue a discretionary war as soon as the spring admitted
the taking the field; for though conquest, in that case, would have given
you a double portion of fame, yet the experiment was too hazardous. The
ministry, had you failed, would have shifted the whole blame upon you,
charged you with having acted without orders, and condemned at once both
your plan and execution.</p>
<p>To avoid the misfortunes, which might have involved you and your money
accounts in perplexity and suspicion, you prudently waited the arrival of
a plan of operations from England, which was that you should proceed for
Philadelphia by way of the Chesapeake, and that Burgoyne, after reducing
Ticonderoga, should take his route by Albany, and, if necessary, join you.</p>
<p>The splendid laurels of the last campaign have flourished in the north. In
that quarter America has surprised the world, and laid the foundation of
this year's glory. The conquest of Ticonderoga, (if it may be called a
conquest) has, like all your other victories, led on to ruin. Even the
provisions taken in that fortress (which by General Burgoyne's return was
sufficient in bread and flour for nearly 5000 men for ten weeks, and in
beef and pork for the same number of men for one month) served only to
hasten his overthrow, by enabling him to proceed to Saratoga, the place of
his destruction. A short review of the operations of the last campaign
will show the condition of affairs on both sides.</p>
<p>You have taken Ticonderoga and marched into Philadelphia. These are all
the events which the year has produced on your part. A trifling campaign
indeed, compared with the expenses of England and the conquest of the
continent. On the other side, a considerable part of your northern force
has been routed by the New York militia under General Herkemer. Fort
Stanwix has bravely survived a compound attack of soldiers and savages,
and the besiegers have fled. The Battle of Bennington has put a thousand
prisoners into our hands, with all their arms, stores, artillery and
baggage. General Burgoyne, in two engagements, has been defeated; himself,
his army, and all that were his and theirs are now ours. Ticonderoga and
Independence [forts] are retaken, and not the shadow of an enemy remains
in all the northern districts. At this instant we have upwards of eleven
thousand prisoners, between sixty and seventy [captured] pieces of brass
ordnance, besides small arms, tents, stores, etc.</p>
<p>In order to know the real value of those advantages, we must reverse the
scene, and suppose General Gates and the force he commanded to be at your
mercy as prisoners, and General Burgoyne, with his army of soldiers and
savages, to be already joined to you in Pennsylvania. So dismal a picture
can scarcely be looked at. It has all the tracings and colorings of horror
and despair; and excites the most swelling emotions of gratitude by
exhibiting the miseries we are so graciously preserved from.</p>
<p>I admire the distribution of laurels around the continent. It is the
earnest of future union. South Carolina has had her day of sufferings and
of fame; and the other southern States have exerted themselves in
proportion to the force that invaded or insulted them. Towards the close
of the campaign, in 1776, these middle States were called upon and did
their duty nobly. They were witnesses to the almost expiring flame of
human freedom. It was the close struggle of life and death, the line of
invisible division; and on which the unabated fortitude of a Washington
prevailed, and saved the spark that has since blazed in the north with
unrivalled lustre.</p>
<p>Let me ask, sir, what great exploits have you performed? Through all the
variety of changes and opportunities which the war has produced, I know no
one action of yours that can be styled masterly. You have moved in and
out, backward and forward, round and round, as if valor consisted in a
military jig. The history and figure of your movements would be truly
ridiculous could they be justly delineated. They resemble the labors of a
puppy pursuing his tail; the end is still at the same distance, and all
the turnings round must be done over again.</p>
<p>The first appearance of affairs at Ticonderoga wore such an unpromising
aspect, that it was necessary, in July, to detach a part of the forces to
the support of that quarter, which were otherwise destined or intended to
act against you; and this, perhaps, has been the means of postponing your
downfall to another campaign. The destruction of one army at a time is
work enough. We know, sir, what we are about, what we have to do, and how
to do it.</p>
<p>Your progress from the Chesapeake, was marked by no capital stroke of
policy or heroism. Your principal aim was to get General Washington
between the Delaware and Schuylkill, and between Philadelphia and your
army. In that situation, with a river on each of his flanks, which united
about five miles below the city, and your army above him, you could have
intercepted his reinforcements and supplies, cut off all his communication
with the country, and, if necessary, have despatched assistance to open a
passage for General Burgoyne. This scheme was too visible to succeed: for
had General Washington suffered you to command the open country above him,
I think it a very reasonable conjecture that the conquest of Burgoyne
would not have taken place, because you could, in that case, have relieved
him. It was therefore necessary, while that important victory was in
suspense, to trepan you into a situation in which you could only be on the
defensive, without the power of affording him assistance. The manoeuvre
had its effect, and Burgoyne was conquered.</p>
<p>There has been something unmilitary and passive in you from the time of
your passing the Schuylkill and getting possession of Philadelphia, to the
close of the campaign. You mistook a trap for a conquest, the probability
of which had been made known to Europe, and the edge of your triumph taken
off by our own information long before.</p>
<p>Having got you into this situation, a scheme for a general attack upon you
at Germantown was carried into execution on the 4th of October, and though
the success was not equal to the excellence of the plan, yet the
attempting it proved the genius of America to be on the rise, and her
power approaching to superiority. The obscurity of the morning was your
best friend, for a fog is always favorable to a hunted enemy. Some weeks
after this you likewise planned an attack on General Washington while at
Whitemarsh. You marched out with infinite parade, but on finding him
preparing to attack you next morning, you prudently turned about, and
retreated to Philadelphia with all the precipitation of a man conquered in
imagination.</p>
<p>Immediately after the battle of Germantown, the probability of Burgoyne's
defeat gave a new policy to affairs in Pennsylvania, and it was judged
most consistent with the general safety of America, to wait the issue of
the northern campaign. Slow and sure is sound work. The news of that
victory arrived in our camp on the 18th of October, and no sooner did that
shout of joy, and the report of the thirteen cannon reach your ears, than
you resolved upon a retreat, and the next day, that is, on the 19th, you
withdrew your drooping army into Philadelphia. This movement was evidently
dictated by fear; and carried with it a positive confession that you
dreaded a second attack. It was hiding yourself among women and children,
and sleeping away the choicest part of the campaign in expensive
inactivity. An army in a city can never be a conquering army. The
situation admits only of defence. It is mere shelter: and every military
power in Europe will conclude you to be eventually defeated.</p>
<p>The time when you made this retreat was the very time you ought to have
fought a battle, in order to put yourself in condition of recovering in
Pennsylvania what you had lost in Saratoga. And the reason why you did
not, must be either prudence or cowardice; the former supposes your
inability, and the latter needs no explanation. I draw no conclusions,
sir, but such as are naturally deduced from known and visible facts, and
such as will always have a being while the facts which produced them
remain unaltered.</p>
<p>After this retreat a new difficulty arose which exhibited the power of
Britain in a very contemptible light; which was the attack and defence of
Mud Island. For several weeks did that little unfinished fortress stand
out against all the attempts of Admiral and General Howe. It was the fable
of Bender realized on the Delaware. Scheme after scheme, and force upon
force were tried and defeated. The garrison, with scarce anything to cover
them but their bravery, survived in the midst of mud, shot and shells, and
were at last obliged to give it up more to the powers of time and
gunpowder than to military superiority of the besiegers.</p>
<p>It is my sincere opinion that matters are in much worse condition with you
than what is generally known. Your master's speech at the opening of
Parliament, is like a soliloquy on ill luck. It shows him to be coming a
little to his reason, for sense of pain is the first symptom of recovery,
in profound stupefaction. His condition is deplorable. He is obliged to
submit to all the insults of France and Spain, without daring to know or
resent them; and thankful for the most trivial evasions to the most humble
remonstrances. The time was when he could not deign an answer to a
petition from America, and the time now is when he dare not give an answer
to an affront from France. The capture of Burgoyne's army will sink his
consequence as much in Europe as in America. In his speech he expresses
his suspicions at the warlike preparations of France and Spain, and as he
has only the one army which you command to support his character in the
world with, it remains very uncertain when, or in what quarter it will be
most wanted, or can be best employed; and this will partly account for the
great care you take to keep it from action and attacks, for should
Burgoyne's fate be yours, which it probably will, England may take her
endless farewell not only of all America but of all the West Indies.</p>
<p>Never did a nation invite destruction upon itself with the eagerness and
the ignorance with which Britain has done. Bent upon the ruin of a young
and unoffending country, she has drawn the sword that has wounded herself
to the heart, and in the agony of her resentment has applied a poison for
a cure. Her conduct towards America is a compound of rage and lunacy; she
aims at the government of it, yet preserves neither dignity nor character
in her methods to obtain it. Were government a mere manufacture or article
of commerce, immaterial by whom it should be made or sold, we might as
well employ her as another, but when we consider it as the fountain from
whence the general manners and morality of a country take their rise, that
the persons entrusted with the execution thereof are by their serious
example an authority to support these principles, how abominably absurd is
the idea of being hereafter governed by a set of men who have been guilty
of forgery, perjury, treachery, theft and every species of villany which
the lowest wretches on earth could practise or invent. What greater public
curse can befall any country than to be under such authority, and what
greater blessing than to be delivered therefrom. The soul of any man of
sentiment would rise in brave rebellion against them, and spurn them from
the earth.</p>
<p>The malignant and venomous tempered General Vaughan has amused his savage
fancy in burning the whole town of Kingston, in York government, and the
late governor of that state, Mr. Tryon, in his letter to General Parsons,
has endeavored to justify it and declared his wish to burn the houses of
every committeeman in the country. Such a confession from one who was once
intrusted with the powers of civil government, is a reproach to the
character. But it is the wish and the declaration of a man whom anguish
and disappointment have driven to despair, and who is daily decaying into
the grave with constitutional rottenness.</p>
<p>There is not in the compass of language a sufficiency of words to express
the baseness of your king, his ministry and his army. They have refined
upon villany till it wants a name. To the fiercer vices of former ages
they have added the dregs and scummings of the most finished rascality,
and are so completely sunk in serpentine deceit, that there is not left
among them one generous enemy.</p>
<p>From such men and such masters, may the gracious hand of Heaven preserve
America! And though the sufferings she now endures are heavy, and severe,
they are like straws in the wind compared to the weight of evils she would
feel under the government of your king, and his pensioned Parliament.</p>
<p>There is something in meanness which excites a species of resentment that
never subsides, and something in cruelty which stirs up the heart to the
highest agony of human hatred; Britain has filled up both these characters
till no addition can be made, and has not reputation left with us to
obtain credit for the slightest promise. The will of God has parted us,
and the deed is registered for eternity. When she shall be a spot scarcely
visible among the nations, America shall flourish the favorite of heaven,
and the friend of mankind.</p>
<p>For the domestic happiness of Britain and the peace of the world, I wish
she had not a foot of land but what is circumscribed within her own
island. Extent of dominion has been her ruin, and instead of civilizing
others has brutalized herself. Her late reduction of India, under Clive
and his successors, was not so properly a conquest as an extermination of
mankind. She is the only power who could practise the prodigal barbarity
of tying men to mouths of loaded cannon and blowing them away. It happens
that General Burgoyne, who made the report of that horrid transaction, in
the House of Commons, is now a prisoner with us, and though an enemy, I
can appeal to him for the truth of it, being confident that he neither can
nor will deny it. Yet Clive received the approbation of the last
Parliament.</p>
<p>When we take a survey of mankind, we cannot help cursing the wretch, who,
to the unavoidable misfortunes of nature, shall wilfully add the
calamities of war. One would think there were evils enough in the world
without studying to increase them, and that life is sufficiently short
without shaking the sand that measures it. The histories of Alexander, and
Charles of Sweden, are the histories of human devils; a good man cannot
think of their actions without abhorrence, nor of their deaths without
rejoicing. To see the bounties of heaven destroyed, the beautiful face of
nature laid waste, and the choicest works of creation and art tumbled into
ruin, would fetch a curse from the soul of piety itself. But in this
country the aggravation is heightened by a new combination of affecting
circumstances. America was young, and, compared with other countries, was
virtuous. None but a Herod of uncommon malice would have made war upon
infancy and innocence: and none but a people of the most finished
fortitude, dared under those circumstances, have resisted the tyranny. The
natives, or their ancestors, had fled from the former oppressions of
England, and with the industry of bees had changed a wilderness into a
habitable world. To Britain they were indebted for nothing. The country
was the gift of heaven, and God alone is their Lord and Sovereign.</p>
<p>The time, sir, will come when you, in a melancholy hour, shall reckon up
your miseries by your murders in America. Life, with you, begins to wear a
clouded aspect. The vision of pleasurable delusion is wearing away, and
changing to the barren wild of age and sorrow. The poor reflection of
having served your king will yield you no consolation in your parting
moments. He will crumble to the same undistinguished ashes with yourself,
and have sins enough of his own to answer for. It is not the farcical
benedictions of a bishop, nor the cringing hypocrisy of a court of
chaplains, nor the formality of an act of Parliament, that can change
guilt into innocence, or make the punishment one pang the less. You may,
perhaps, be unwilling to be serious, but this destruction of the goods of
Providence, this havoc of the human race, and this sowing the world with
mischief, must be accounted for to him who made and governs it. To us they
are only present sufferings, but to him they are deep rebellions.</p>
<p>If there is a sin superior to every other, it is that of wilful and
offensive war. Most other sins are circumscribed within narrow limits,
that is, the power of one man cannot give them a very general extension,
and many kinds of sins have only a mental existence from which no
infection arises; but he who is the author of a war, lets loose the whole
contagion of hell, and opens a vein that bleeds a nation to death. We
leave it to England and Indians to boast of these honors; we feel no
thirst for such savage glory; a nobler flame, a purer spirit animates
America. She has taken up the sword of virtuous defence; she has bravely
put herself between Tyranny and Freedom, between a curse and a blessing,
determined to expel the one and protect the other.</p>
<p>It is the object only of war that makes it honorable. And if there was
ever a just war since the world began, it is this in which America is now
engaged. She invaded no land of yours. She hired no mercenaries to burn
your towns, nor Indians to massacre their inhabitants. She wanted nothing
from you, and was indebted for nothing to you: and thus circumstanced, her
defence is honorable and her prosperity is certain.</p>
<p>Yet it is not on the justice only, but likewise on the importance of this
cause that I ground my seeming enthusiastical confidence of our success.
The vast extension of America makes her of too much value in the scale of
Providence, to be cast like a pearl before swine, at the feet of an
European island; and of much less consequence would it be that Britain
were sunk in the sea than that America should miscarry. There has been
such a chain of extraordinary events in the discovery of this country at
first, in the peopling and planting it afterwards, in the rearing and
nursing it to its present state, and in the protection of it through the
present war, that no man can doubt, but Providence has some nobler end to
accomplish than the gratification of the petty elector of Hanover, or the
ignorant and insignificant king of Britain.</p>
<p>As the blood of the martyrs has been the seed of the Christian church, so
the political persecutions of England will and have already enriched
America with industry, experience, union, and importance. Before the
present era she was a mere chaos of uncemented colonies, individually
exposed to the ravages of the Indians and the invasion of any power that
Britain should be at war with. She had nothing that she could call her
own. Her felicity depended upon accident. The convulsions of Europe might
have thrown her from one conqueror to another, till she had been the slave
of all, and ruined by every one; for until she had spirit enough to become
her own master, there was no knowing to which master she should belong.
That period, thank God, is past, and she is no longer the dependent,
disunited colonies of Britain, but the independent and United States of
America, knowing no master but heaven and herself. You, or your king, may
call this "delusion," "rebellion," or what name you please. To us it is
perfectly indifferent. The issue will determine the character, and time
will give it a name as lasting as his own.</p>
<p>You have now, sir, tried the fate of three campaigns, and can fully
declare to England, that nothing is to be got on your part, but blows and
broken bones, and nothing on hers but waste of trade and credit, and an
increase of poverty and taxes. You are now only where you might have been
two years ago, without the loss of a single ship, and yet not a step more
forward towards the conquest of the continent; because, as I have already
hinted, "an army in a city can never be a conquering army." The full
amount of your losses, since the beginning of the war, exceeds twenty
thousand men, besides millions of treasure, for which you have nothing in
exchange. Our expenses, though great, are circulated within ourselves.
Yours is a direct sinking of money, and that from both ends at once;
first, in hiring troops out of the nation, and in paying them afterwards,
because the money in neither case can return to Britain. We are already in
possession of the prize, you only in pursuit of it. To us it is a real
treasure, to you it would be only an empty triumph. Our expenses will
repay themselves with tenfold interest, while yours entail upon you
everlasting poverty.</p>
<p>Take a review, sir, of the ground which you have gone over, and let it
teach you policy, if it cannot honesty. You stand but on a very tottering
foundation. A change of the ministry in England may probably bring your
measures into question, and your head to the block. Clive, with all his
successes, had some difficulty in escaping, and yours being all a war of
losses, will afford you less pretensions, and your enemies more grounds
for impeachment.</p>
<p>Go home, sir, and endeavor to save the remains of your ruined country, by
a just representation of the madness of her measures. A few moments, well
applied, may yet preserve her from political destruction. I am not one of
those who wish to see Europe in a flame, because I am persuaded that such
an event will not shorten the war. The rupture, at present, is confined
between the two powers of America and England. England finds that she
cannot conquer America, and America has no wish to conquer England. You
are fighting for what you can never obtain, and we defending what we never
mean to part with. A few words, therefore, settle the bargain. Let England
mind her own business and we will mind ours. Govern yourselves, and we
will govern ourselves. You may then trade where you please unmolested by
us, and we will trade where we please unmolested by you; and such articles
as we can purchase of each other better than elsewhere may be mutually
done. If it were possible that you could carry on the war for twenty years
you must still come to this point at last, or worse, and the sooner you
think of it the better it will be for you.</p>
<p>My official situation enables me to know the repeated insults which
Britain is obliged to put up with from foreign powers, and the wretched
shifts that she is driven to, to gloss them over. Her reduced strength and
exhausted coffers in a three years' war with America, has given a powerful
superiority to France and Spain. She is not now a match for them. But if
neither councils can prevail on her to think, nor sufferings awaken her to
reason, she must e'en go on, till the honor of England becomes a proverb
of contempt, and Europe dub her the Land of Fools.</p>
<p>I am, Sir, with every wish for an honorable peace,</p>
<p>Your friend, enemy, and countryman,<br/>
<br/>
COMMON SENSE.<br/></p>
<p>TO THE INHABITANTS OF AMERICA.<br/></p>
<p>WITH all the pleasure with which a man exchanges bad company for good, I
take my leave of Sir William and return to you. It is now nearly three
years since the tyranny of Britain received its first repulse by the arms
of America. A period which has given birth to a new world, and erected a
monument to the folly of the old.</p>
<p>I cannot help being sometimes surprised at the complimentary references
which I have seen and heard made to ancient histories and transactions.
The wisdom, civil governments, and sense of honor of the states of Greece
and Rome, are frequently held up as objects of excellence and imitation.
Mankind have lived to very little purpose, if, at this period of the
world, they must go two or three thousand years back for lessons and
examples. We do great injustice to ourselves by placing them in such a
superior line. We have no just authority for it, neither can we tell why
it is that we should suppose ourselves inferior.</p>
<p>Could the mist of antiquity be cleared away, and men and things be viewed
as they really were, it is more than probable that they would admire us,
rather than we them. America has surmounted a greater variety and
combination of difficulties, than, I believe, ever fell to the share of
any one people, in the same space of time, and has replenished the world
with more useful knowledge and sounder maxims of civil government than
were ever produced in any age before. Had it not been for America, there
had been no such thing as freedom left throughout the whole universe.
England has lost hers in a long chain of right reasoning from wrong
principles, and it is from this country, now, that she must learn the
resolution to redress herself, and the wisdom how to accomplish it.</p>
<p>The Grecians and Romans were strongly possessed of the spirit of liberty
but not the principle, for at the time that they were determined not to be
slaves themselves, they employed their power to enslave the rest of
mankind. But this distinguished era is blotted by no one misanthropical
vice. In short, if the principle on which the cause is founded, the
universal blessings that are to arise from it, the difficulties that
accompanied it, the wisdom with which it has been debated, the fortitude
by which it has been supported, the strength of the power which we had to
oppose, and the condition in which we undertook it, be all taken in one
view, we may justly style it the most virtuous and illustrious revolution
that ever graced the history of mankind.</p>
<p>A good opinion of ourselves is exceedingly necessary in private life, but
absolutely necessary in public life, and of the utmost importance in
supporting national character. I have no notion of yielding the palm of
the United States to any Grecians or Romans that were ever born. We have
equalled the bravest in times of danger, and excelled the wisest in
construction of civil governments.</p>
<p>From this agreeable eminence let us take a review of present affairs. The
spirit of corruption is so inseparably interwoven with British politics,
that their ministry suppose all mankind are governed by the same motives.
They have no idea of a people submitting even to temporary inconvenience
from an attachment to rights and privileges. Their plans of business are
calculated by the hour and for the hour, and are uniform in nothing but
the corruption which gives them birth. They never had, neither have they
at this time, any regular plan for the conquest of America by arms. They
know not how to go about it, neither have they power to effect it if they
did know. The thing is not within the compass of human practicability, for
America is too extensive either to be fully conquered or passively
defended. But she may be actively defended by defeating or making
prisoners of the army that invades her. And this is the only system of
defence that can be effectual in a large country.</p>
<p>There is something in a war carried on by invasion which makes it differ
in circumstances from any other mode of war, because he who conducts it
cannot tell whether the ground he gains be for him, or against him, when
he first obtains it. In the winter of 1776, General Howe marched with an
air of victory through the Jerseys, the consequence of which was his
defeat; and General Burgoyne at Saratoga experienced the same fate from
the same cause. The Spaniards, about two years ago, were defeated by the
Algerines in the same manner, that is, their first triumphs became a trap
in which they were totally routed. And whoever will attend to the
circumstances and events of a war carried on by invasion, will find, that
any invader, in order to be finally conquered must first begin to conquer.</p>
<p>I confess myself one of those who believe the loss of Philadelphia to be
attended with more advantages than injuries. The case stood thus: The
enemy imagined Philadelphia to be of more importance to us than it really
was; for we all know that it had long ceased to be a port: not a cargo of
goods had been brought into it for near a twelvemonth, nor any fixed
manufactories, nor even ship-building, carried on in it; yet as the enemy
believed the conquest of it to be practicable, and to that belief added
the absurd idea that the soul of all America was centred there, and would
be conquered there, it naturally follows that their possession of it, by
not answering the end proposed, must break up the plans they had so
foolishly gone upon, and either oblige them to form a new one, for which
their present strength is not sufficient, or to give over the attempt.</p>
<p>We never had so small an army to fight against, nor so fair an opportunity
of final success as now. The death wound is already given. The day is ours
if we follow it up. The enemy, by his situation, is within our reach, and
by his reduced strength is within our power. The ministers of Britain may
rage as they please, but our part is to conquer their armies. Let them
wrangle and welcome, but let, it not draw our attention from the one thing
needful. Here, in this spot is our own business to be accomplished, our
felicity secured. What we have now to do is as clear as light, and the way
to do it is as straight as a line. It needs not to be commented upon, yet,
in order to be perfectly understood I will put a case that cannot admit of
a mistake.</p>
<p>Had the armies under Generals Howe and Burgoyne been united, and taken
post at Germantown, and had the northern army under General Gates been
joined to that under General Washington, at Whitemarsh, the consequence
would have been a general action; and if in that action we had killed and
taken the same number of officers and men, that is, between nine and ten
thousand, with the same quantity of artillery, arms, stores, etc., as have
been taken at the northward, and obliged General Howe with the remains of
his army, that is, with the same number he now commands, to take shelter
in Philadelphia, we should certainly have thought ourselves the greatest
heroes in the world; and should, as soon as the season permitted, have
collected together all the force of the continent and laid siege to the
city, for it requires a much greater force to besiege an enemy in a town
than to defeat him in the field. The case now is just the same as if it
had been produced by the means I have here supposed. Between nine and ten
thousand have been killed and taken, all their stores are in our
possession, and General Howe, in consequence of that victory, has thrown
himself for shelter into Philadelphia. He, or his trifling friend
Galloway, may form what pretences they please, yet no just reason can be
given for their going into winter quarters so early as the 19th of
October, but their apprehensions of a defeat if they continued out, or
their conscious inability of keeping the field with safety. I see no
advantage which can arise to America by hunting the enemy from state to
state. It is a triumph without a prize, and wholly unworthy the attention
of a people determined to conquer. Neither can any state promise itself
security while the enemy remains in a condition to transport themselves
from one part of the continent to another. Howe, likewise, cannot conquer
where we have no army to oppose, therefore any such removals in him are
mean and cowardly, and reduces Britain to a common pilferer. If he
retreats from Philadelphia, he will be despised; if he stays, he may be
shut up and starved out, and the country, if he advances into it, may
become his Saratoga. He has his choice of evils and we of opportunities.
If he moves early, it is not only a sign but a proof that he expects no
reinforcement, and his delay will prove that he either waits for the
arrival of a plan to go upon, or force to execute it, or both; in which
case our strength will increase more than his, therefore in any case we
cannot be wrong if we do but proceed.</p>
<p>The particular condition of Pennsylvania deserves the attention of all the
other States. Her military strength must not be estimated by the number of
inhabitants. Here are men of all nations, characters, professions and
interests. Here are the firmest Whigs, surviving, like sparks in the
ocean, unquenched and uncooled in the midst of discouragement and
disaffection. Here are men losing their all with cheerfulness, and
collecting fire and fortitude from the flames of their own estates. Here
are others skulking in secret, many making a market of the times, and
numbers who are changing to Whig or Tory with the circumstances of every
day.</p>
<p>It is by a mere dint of fortitude and perseverance that the Whigs of this
State have been able to maintain so good a countenance, and do even what
they have done. We want help, and the sooner it can arrive the more
effectual it will be. The invaded State, be it which it may, will always
feel an additional burden upon its back, and be hard set to support its
civil power with sufficient authority; and this difficulty will rise or
fall, in proportion as the other states throw in their assistance to the
common cause.</p>
<p>The enemy will most probably make many manoeuvres at the opening of this
campaign, to amuse and draw off the attention of the several States from
the one thing needful. We may expect to hear of alarms and pretended
expeditions to this place and that place, to the southward, the eastward,
and the northward, all intended to prevent our forming into one formidable
body. The less the enemy's strength is, the more subtleties of this kind
will they make use of. Their existence depends upon it, because the force
of America, when collected, is sufficient to swallow their present army
up. It is therefore our business to make short work of it, by bending our
whole attention to this one principal point, for the instant that the main
body under General Howe is defeated, all the inferior alarms throughout
the continent, like so many shadows, will follow his downfall.</p>
<p>The only way to finish a war with the least possible bloodshed, or perhaps
without any, is to collect an army, against the power of which the enemy
shall have no chance. By not doing this, we prolong the war, and double
both the calamities and expenses of it. What a rich and happy country
would America be, were she, by a vigorous exertion, to reduce Howe as she
has reduced Burgoyne. Her currency would rise to millions beyond its
present value. Every man would be rich, and every man would have it in his
power to be happy. And why not do these things? What is there to hinder?
America is her own mistress and can do what she pleases.</p>
<p>If we had not at this time a man in the field, we could, nevertheless,
raise an army in a few weeks sufficient to overwhelm all the force which
General Howe at present commands. Vigor and determination will do anything
and everything. We began the war with this kind of spirit, why not end it
with the same? Here, gentlemen, is the enemy. Here is the army. The
interest, the happiness of all America, is centred in this half ruined
spot. Come and help us. Here are laurels, come and share them. Here are
Tories, come and help us to expel them. Here are Whigs that will make you
welcome, and enemies that dread your coming.</p>
<p>The worst of all policies is that of doing things by halves. Penny-wise
and pound-foolish, has been the ruin of thousands. The present spring, if
rightly improved, will free us from our troubles, and save us the expense
of millions. We have now only one army to cope with. No opportunity can be
fairer; no prospect more promising. I shall conclude this paper with a few
outlines of a plan, either for filling up the battalions with expedition,
or for raising an additional force, for any limited time, on any sudden
emergency.</p>
<p>That in which every man is interested, is every man's duty to support. And
any burden which falls equally on all men, and from which every man is to
receive an equal benefit, is consistent with the most perfect ideas of
liberty. I would wish to revive something of that virtuous ambition which
first called America into the field. Then every man was eager to do his
part, and perhaps the principal reason why we have in any degree fallen
therefrom, is because we did not set a right value by it at first, but
left it to blaze out of itself, instead of regulating and preserving it by
just proportions of rest and service.</p>
<p>Suppose any State whose number of effective inhabitants was 80,000, should
be required to furnish 3,200 men towards the defence of the continent on
any sudden emergency.</p>
<p>1st, Let the whole number of effective inhabitants be divided into
hundreds; then if each of those hundreds turn out four men, the whole
number of 3,200 will be had.</p>
<p>2d, Let the name of each hundred men be entered in a book, and let four
dollars be collected from each man, with as much more as any of the
gentlemen, whose abilities can afford it, shall please to throw in, which
gifts likewise shall be entered against the names of the donors.</p>
<p>3d, Let the sums so collected be offered as a present, over and above the
bounty of twenty dollars, to any four who may be inclined to propose
themselves as volunteers: if more than four offer, the majority of the
subscribers present shall determine which; if none offer, then four out of
the hundred shall be taken by lot, who shall be entitled to the said sums,
and shall either go, or provide others that will, in the space of six
days.</p>
<p>4th, As it will always happen that in the space of ground on which a
hundred men shall live, there will be always a number of persons who, by
age and infirmity, are incapable of doing personal service, and as such
persons are generally possessed of the greatest part of property in any
country, their portion of service, therefore, will be to furnish each man
with a blanket, which will make a regimental coat, jacket, and breeches,
or clothes in lieu thereof, and another for a watch cloak, and two pair of
shoes; for however choice people may be of these things matters not in
cases of this kind; those who live always in houses can find many ways to
keep themselves warm, but it is a shame and a sin to suffer a soldier in
the field to want a blanket while there is one in the country.</p>
<p>Should the clothing not be wanted, the superannuated or infirm persons
possessing property, may, in lieu thereof, throw in their money
subscriptions towards increasing the bounty; for though age will naturally
exempt a person from personal service, it cannot exempt him from his share
of the charge, because the men are raised for the defence of property and
liberty jointly.</p>
<p>There never was a scheme against which objections might not be raised. But
this alone is not a sufficient reason for rejection. The only line to
judge truly upon is to draw out and admit all the objections which can
fairly be made, and place against them all the contrary qualities,
conveniences and advantages, then by striking a balance you come at the
true character of any scheme, principle or position.</p>
<p>The most material advantages of the plan here proposed are, ease,
expedition, and cheapness; yet the men so raised get a much larger bounty
than is any where at present given; because all the expenses,
extravagance, and consequent idleness of recruiting are saved or
prevented. The country incurs no new debt nor interest thereon; the whole
matter being all settled at once and entirely done with. It is a
subscription answering all the purposes of a tax, without either the
charge or trouble of collecting. The men are ready for the field with the
greatest possible expedition, because it becomes the duty of the
inhabitants themselves, in every part of the country, to find their
proportion of men instead of leaving it to a recruiting sergeant, who, be
he ever so industrious, cannot know always where to apply.</p>
<p>I do not propose this as a regular digested plan, neither will the limits
of this paper admit of any further remarks upon it. I believe it to be a
hint capable of much improvement, and as such submit it to the public.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.<br/></p>
<p>LANCASTER, March 21, 1778.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CRISIS VI. (TO THE EARL OF CARLISLE AND GENERAL CLINTON) </h2>
<p>TO THE EARL OF CARLISLE, GENERAL CLINTON, AND<br/>
WILLIAM EDEN, ESQ., BRITISH COMMISSIONERS<br/>
AT NEW YORK.<br/></p>
<p>THERE is a dignity in the warm passions of a Whig, which is never to be
found in the cold malice of a Tory. In the one nature is only heated—in
the other she is poisoned. The instant the former has it in his power to
punish, he feels a disposition to forgive; but the canine venom of the
latter knows no relief but revenge. This general distinction will, I
believe, apply in all cases, and suits as well the meridian of England as
America.</p>
<p>As I presume your last proclamation will undergo the strictures of other
pens, I shall confine my remarks to only a few parts thereof. All that you
have said might have been comprised in half the compass. It is tedious and
unmeaning, and only a repetition of your former follies, with here and
there an offensive aggravation. Your cargo of pardons will have no market.
It is unfashionable to look at them—even speculation is at an end.
They have become a perfect drug, and no way calculated for the climate.</p>
<p>In the course of your proclamation you say, "The policy as well as the
benevolence of Great Britain have thus far checked the extremes of war,
when they tended to distress a people still considered as their fellow
subjects, and to desolate a country shortly to become again a source of
mutual advantage." What you mean by "the benevolence of Great Britain" is
to me inconceivable. To put a plain question; do you consider yourselves
men or devils? For until this point is settled, no determinate sense can
be put upon the expression. You have already equalled and in many cases
excelled, the savages of either Indies; and if you have yet a cruelty in
store you must have imported it, unmixed with every human material, from
the original warehouse of hell.</p>
<p>To the interposition of Providence, and her blessings on our endeavors,
and not to British benevolence are we indebted for the short chain that
limits your ravages. Remember you do not, at this time, command a foot of
land on the continent of America. Staten Island, York Island, a small part
of Long Island, and Rhode Island, circumscribe your power; and even those
you hold at the expense of the West Indies. To avoid a defeat, or prevent
a desertion of your troops, you have taken up your quarters in holes and
corners of inaccessible security; and in order to conceal what every one
can perceive, you now endeavor to impose your weakness upon us for an act
of mercy. If you think to succeed by such shadowy devices, you are but
infants in the political world; you have the A, B, C, of stratagem yet to
learn, and are wholly ignorant of the people you have to contend with.
Like men in a state of intoxication, you forget that the rest of the world
have eyes, and that the same stupidity which conceals you from yourselves
exposes you to their satire and contempt.</p>
<p>The paragraph which I have quoted, stands as an introduction to the
following: "But when that country [America] professes the unnatural
design, not only of estranging herself from us, but of mortgaging herself
and her resources to our enemies, the whole contest is changed: and the
question is how far Great Britain may, by every means in her power,
destroy or render useless, a connection contrived for her ruin, and the
aggrandizement of France. Under such circumstances, the laws of
self-preservation must direct the conduct of Britain, and, if the British
colonies are to become an accession to France, will direct her to render
that accession of as little avail as possible to her enemy."</p>
<p>I consider you in this declaration, like madmen biting in the hour of
death. It contains likewise a fraudulent meanness; for, in order to
justify a barbarous conclusion, you have advanced a false position. The
treaty we have formed with France is open, noble, and generous. It is true
policy, founded on sound philosophy, and neither a surrender or mortgage,
as you would scandalously insinuate. I have seen every article, and speak
from positive knowledge. In France, we have found an affectionate friend
and faithful ally; in Britain, we have found nothing but tyranny, cruelty,
and infidelity.</p>
<p>But the happiness is, that the mischief you threaten, is not in your power
to execute; and if it were, the punishment would return upon you in a
ten-fold degree. The humanity of America has hitherto restrained her from
acts of retaliation, and the affection she retains for many individuals in
England, who have fed, clothed and comforted her prisoners, has, to the
present day, warded off her resentment, and operated as a screen to the
whole. But even these considerations must cease, when national objects
interfere and oppose them. Repeated aggravations will provoke a retort,
and policy justify the measure. We mean now to take you seriously up upon
your own ground and principle, and as you do, so shall you be done by.</p>
<p>You ought to know, gentlemen, that England and Scotland, are far more
exposed to incendiary desolation than America, in her present state, can
possibly be. We occupy a country, with but few towns, and whose riches
consist in land and annual produce. The two last can suffer but little,
and that only within a very limited compass. In Britain it is otherwise.
Her wealth lies chiefly in cities and large towns, the depositories of
manufactures and fleets of merchantmen. There is not a nobleman's country
seat but may be laid in ashes by a single person. Your own may probably
contribute to the proof: in short, there is no evil which cannot be
returned when you come to incendiary mischief. The ships in the Thames,
may certainly be as easily set on fire, as the temporary bridge was a few
years ago; yet of that affair no discovery was ever made; and the loss you
would sustain by such an event, executed at a proper season, is infinitely
greater than any you can inflict. The East India House and the Bank,
neither are nor can be secure from this sort of destruction, and, as Dr.
Price justly observes, a fire at the latter would bankrupt the nation. It
has never been the custom of France and England when at war, to make those
havocs on each other, because the ease with which they could retaliate
rendered it as impolitic as if each had destroyed his own.</p>
<p>But think not, gentlemen, that our distance secures you, or our invention
fails us. We can much easier accomplish such a point than any nation in
Europe. We talk the same language, dress in the same habit, and appear
with the same manners as yourselves. We can pass from one part of England
to another unsuspected; many of us are as well acquainted with the country
as you are, and should you impolitically provoke us, you will most
assuredly lament the effects of it. Mischiefs of this kind require no army
to execute them. The means are obvious, and the opportunities unguardable.
I hold up a warning to our senses, if you have any left, and "to the
unhappy people likewise, whose affairs are committed to you."* I call not
with the rancor of an enemy, but the earnestness of a friend, on the
deluded people of England, lest, between your blunders and theirs, they
sink beneath the evils contrived for us.</p>
<p>* General [Sir H.] Clinton's letter to Congress.<br/></p>
<p>"He who lives in a glass house," says a Spanish proverb, "should never
begin throwing stones." This, gentlemen, is exactly your case, and you
must be the most ignorant of mankind, or suppose us so, not to see on
which side the balance of accounts will fall. There are many other modes
of retaliation, which, for several reasons, I choose not to mention. But
be assured of this, that the instant you put your threat into execution, a
counter-blow will follow it. If you openly profess yourselves savages, it
is high time we should treat you as such, and if nothing but distress can
recover you to reason, to punish will become an office of charity.</p>
<p>While your fleet lay last winter in the Delaware, I offered my service to
the Pennsylvania Navy Board then at Trenton, as one who would make a party
with them, or any four or five gentlemen, on an expedition down the river
to set fire to it, and though it was not then accepted, nor the thing
personally attempted, it is more than probable that your own folly will
provoke a much more ruinous act. Say not when mischief is done, that you
had not warning, and remember that we do not begin it, but mean to repay
it. Thus much for your savage and impolitic threat.</p>
<p>In another part of your proclamation you say, "But if the honors of a
military life are become the object of the Americans, let them seek those
honors under the banners of their rightful sovereign, and in fighting the
battles of the united British Empire, against our late mutual and natural
enemies." Surely! the union of absurdity with madness was never marked in
more distinguishable lines than these. Your rightful sovereign, as you
call him, may do well enough for you, who dare not inquire into the humble
capacities of the man; but we, who estimate persons and things by their
real worth, cannot suffer our judgments to be so imposed upon; and unless
it is your wish to see him exposed, it ought to be your endeavor to keep
him out of sight. The less you have to say about him the better. We have
done with him, and that ought to be answer enough. You have been often
told so. Strange! that the answer must be so often repeated. You go
a-begging with your king as with a brat, or with some unsaleable commodity
you were tired of; and though every body tells you no, no, still you keep
hawking him about. But there is one that will have him in a little time,
and as we have no inclination to disappoint you of a customer, we bid
nothing for him.</p>
<p>The impertinent folly of the paragraph that I have just quoted, deserves
no other notice than to be laughed at and thrown by, but the principle on
which it is founded is detestable. We are invited to submit to a man who
has attempted by every cruelty to destroy us, and to join him in making
war against France, who is already at war against him for our support.</p>
<p>Can Bedlam, in concert with Lucifer, form a more mad and devilish request?
Were it possible a people could sink into such apostacy they would deserve
to be swept from the earth like the inhabitants of Sodom and Gomorrah. The
proposition is an universal affront to the rank which man holds in the
creation, and an indignity to him who placed him there. It supposes him
made up without a spark of honor, and under no obligation to God or man.</p>
<p>What sort of men or Christians must you suppose the Americans to be, who,
after seeing their most humble petitions insultingly rejected; the most
grievous laws passed to distress them in every quarter; an undeclared war
let loose upon them, and Indians and negroes invited to the slaughter;
who, after seeing their kinsmen murdered, their fellow citizens starved to
death in prisons, and their houses and property destroyed and burned; who,
after the most serious appeals to heaven, the most solemn abjuration by
oath of all government connected with you, and the most heart-felt pledges
and protestations of faith to each other; and who, after soliciting the
friendship, and entering into alliances with other nations, should at last
break through all these obligations, civil and divine, by complying with
your horrid and infernal proposal. Ought we ever after to be considered as
a part of the human race? Or ought we not rather to be blotted from the
society of mankind, and become a spectacle of misery to the world? But
there is something in corruption, which, like a jaundiced eye, transfers
the color of itself to the object it looks upon, and sees every thing
stained and impure; for unless you were capable of such conduct
yourselves, you would never have supposed such a character in us. The
offer fixes your infamy. It exhibits you as a nation without faith; with
whom oaths and treaties are considered as trifles, and the breaking them
as the breaking of a bubble. Regard to decency, or to rank, might have
taught you better; or pride inspired you, though virtue could not. There
is not left a step in the degradation of character to which you can now
descend; you have put your foot on the ground floor, and the key of the
dungeon is turned upon you.</p>
<p>That the invitation may want nothing of being a complete monster, you have
thought proper to finish it with an assertion which has no foundation,
either in fact or philosophy; and as Mr. Ferguson, your secretary, is a
man of letters, and has made civil society his study, and published a
treatise on that subject, I address this part to him.</p>
<p>In the close of the paragraph which I last quoted, France is styled the
"natural enemy" of England, and by way of lugging us into some strange
idea, she is styled "the late mutual and natural enemy" of both countries.
I deny that she ever was the natural enemy of either; and that there does
not exist in nature such a principle. The expression is an unmeaning
barbarism, and wholly unphilosophical, when applied to beings of the same
species, let their station in the creation be what it may. We have a
perfect idea of a natural enemy when we think of the devil, because the
enmity is perpetual, unalterable and unabateable. It admits, neither of
peace, truce, or treaty; consequently the warfare is eternal, and
therefore it is natural. But man with man cannot arrange in the same
opposition. Their quarrels are accidental and equivocally created. They
become friends or enemies as the change of temper, or the cast of interest
inclines them. The Creator of man did not constitute them the natural
enemy of each other. He has not made any one order of beings so. Even
wolves may quarrel, still they herd together. If any two nations are so,
then must all nations be so, otherwise it is not nature but custom, and
the offence frequently originates with the accuser. England is as truly
the natural enemy of France, as France is of England, and perhaps more so.
Separated from the rest of Europe, she has contracted an unsocial habit of
manners, and imagines in others the jealousy she creates in herself. Never
long satisfied with peace, she supposes the discontent universal, and
buoyed up with her own importance, conceives herself the only object
pointed at. The expression has been often used, and always with a
fraudulent design; for when the idea of a natural enemy is conceived, it
prevents all other inquiries, and the real cause of the quarrel is hidden
in the universality of the conceit. Men start at the notion of a natural
enemy, and ask no other question. The cry obtains credit like the alarm of
a mad dog, and is one of those kind of tricks, which, by operating on the
common passions, secures their interest through their folly.</p>
<p>But we, sir, are not to be thus imposed upon. We live in a large world,
and have extended our ideas beyond the limits and prejudices of an island.
We hold out the right hand of friendship to all the universe, and we
conceive that there is a sociality in the manners of France, which is much
better disposed to peace and negotiation than that of England, and until
the latter becomes more civilized, she cannot expect to live long at peace
with any power. Her common language is vulgar and offensive, and children
suck in with their milk the rudiments of insult—"The arm of Britain!
The mighty arm of Britain! Britain that shakes the earth to its center and
its poles! The scourge of France! The terror of the world! That governs
with a nod, and pours down vengeance like a God." This language neither
makes a nation great or little; but it shows a savageness of manners, and
has a tendency to keep national animosity alive. The entertainments of the
stage are calculated to the same end, and almost every public exhibition
is tinctured with insult. Yet England is always in dread of France,—terrified
at the apprehension of an invasion, suspicious of being outwitted in a
treaty, and privately cringing though she is publicly offending. Let her,
therefore, reform her manners and do justice, and she will find the idea
of a natural enemy to be only a phantom of her own imagination.</p>
<p>Little did I think, at this period of the war, to see a proclamation which
could promise you no one useful purpose whatever, and tend only to expose
you. One would think that you were just awakened from a four years' dream,
and knew nothing of what had passed in the interval. Is this a time to be
offering pardons, or renewing the long forgotten subjects of charters and
taxation? Is it worth your while, after every force has failed you, to
retreat under the shelter of argument and persuasion? Or can you think
that we, with nearly half your army prisoners, and in alliance with
France, are to be begged or threatened into submission by a piece of
paper? But as commissioners at a hundred pounds sterling a week each, you
conceive yourselves bound to do something, and the genius of ill-fortune
told you, that you must write.</p>
<p>For my own part, I have not put pen to paper these several months.
Convinced of our superiority by the issue of every campaign, I was
inclined to hope, that that which all the rest of the world now see, would
become visible to you, and therefore felt unwilling to ruffle your temper
by fretting you with repetitions and discoveries. There have been
intervals of hesitation in your conduct, from which it seemed a pity to
disturb you, and a charity to leave you to yourselves. You have often
stopped, as if you intended to think, but your thoughts have ever been too
early or too late.</p>
<p>There was a time when Britain disdained to answer, or even hear a petition
from America. That time is past and she in her turn is petitioning our
acceptance. We now stand on higher ground, and offer her peace; and the
time will come when she, perhaps in vain, will ask it from us. The latter
case is as probable as the former ever was. She cannot refuse to
acknowledge our independence with greater obstinacy than she before
refused to repeal her laws; and if America alone could bring her to the
one, united with France she will reduce her to the other. There is
something in obstinacy which differs from every other passion; whenever it
fails it never recovers, but either breaks like iron, or crumbles sulkily
away like a fractured arch. Most other passions have their periods of
fatigue and rest; their suffering and their cure; but obstinacy has no
resource, and the first wound is mortal. You have already begun to give it
up, and you will, from the natural construction of the vice, find
yourselves both obliged and inclined to do so.</p>
<p>If you look back you see nothing but loss and disgrace. If you look
forward the same scene continues, and the close is an impenetrable gloom.
You may plan and execute little mischiefs, but are they worth the expense
they cost you, or will such partial evils have any effect on the general
cause? Your expedition to Egg Harbor, will be felt at a distance like an
attack upon a hen-roost, and expose you in Europe, with a sort of childish
frenzy. Is it worth while to keep an army to protect you in writing
proclamations, or to get once a year into winter quarters? Possessing
yourselves of towns is not conquest, but convenience, and in which you
will one day or other be trepanned. Your retreat from Philadelphia, was
only a timely escape, and your next expedition may be less fortunate.</p>
<p>It would puzzle all the politicians in the universe to conceive what you
stay for, or why you should have stayed so long. You are prosecuting a war
in which you confess you have neither object nor hope, and that conquest,
could it be effected, would not repay the charges: in the mean while the
rest of your affairs are running to ruin, and a European war kindling
against you. In such a situation, there is neither doubt nor difficulty;
the first rudiments of reason will determine the choice, for if peace can
be procured with more advantages than even a conquest can be obtained, he
must be an idiot indeed that hesitates.</p>
<p>But you are probably buoyed up by a set of wretched mortals, who, having
deceived themselves, are cringing, with the duplicity of a spaniel, for a
little temporary bread. Those men will tell you just what you please. It
is their interest to amuse, in order to lengthen out their protection.
They study to keep you amongst them for that very purpose; and in
proportion as you disregard their advice, and grow callous to their
complaints, they will stretch into improbability, and season their
flattery the higher. Characters like these are to be found in every
country, and every country will despise them.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.<br/></p>
<p>PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 20, 1778.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CRISIS VII. TO THE PEOPLE OF ENGLAND. </h2>
<p>THERE are stages in the business of serious life in which to amuse is
cruel, but to deceive is to destroy; and it is of little consequence, in
the conclusion, whether men deceive themselves, or submit, by a kind of
mutual consent, to the impositions of each other. That England has long
been under the influence of delusion or mistake, needs no other proof than
the unexpected and wretched situation that she is now involved in: and so
powerful has been the influence, that no provision was ever made or
thought of against the misfortune, because the possibility of its
happening was never conceived.</p>
<p>The general and successful resistance of America, the conquest of
Burgoyne, and a war in France, were treated in parliament as the dreams of
a discontented opposition, or a distempered imagination. They were beheld
as objects unworthy of a serious thought, and the bare intimation of them
afforded the ministry a triumph of laughter. Short triumph indeed! For
everything which has been predicted has happened, and all that was
promised has failed. A long series of politics so remarkably distinguished
by a succession of misfortunes, without one alleviating turn, must
certainly have something in it systematically wrong. It is sufficient to
awaken the most credulous into suspicion, and the most obstinate into
thought. Either the means in your power are insufficient, or the measures
ill planned; either the execution has been bad, or the thing attempted
impracticable; or, to speak more emphatically, either you are not able or
heaven is not willing. For, why is it that you have not conquered us? Who,
or what has prevented you? You have had every opportunity that you could
desire, and succeeded to your utmost wish in every preparatory means. Your
fleets and armies have arrived in America without an accident. No uncommon
fortune has intervened. No foreign nation has interfered until the time
which you had allotted for victory was passed. The opposition, either in
or out of parliament, neither disconcerted your measures, retarded or
diminished your force. They only foretold your fate. Every ministerial
scheme was carried with as high a hand as if the whole nation had been
unanimous. Every thing wanted was asked for, and every thing asked for was
granted.</p>
<p>A greater force was not within the compass of your abilities to send, and
the time you sent it was of all others the most favorable. You were then
at rest with the whole world beside. You had the range of every court in
Europe uncontradicted by us. You amused us with a tale of commissioners of
peace, and under that disguise collected a numerous army and came almost
unexpectedly upon us. The force was much greater than we looked for; and
that which we had to oppose it with, was unequal in numbers, badly armed,
and poorly disciplined; beside which, it was embodied only for a short
time, and expired within a few months after your arrival. We had
governments to form; measures to concert; an army to train, and every
necessary article to import or to create. Our non-importation scheme had
exhausted our stores, and your command by sea intercepted our supplies. We
were a people unknown, and unconnected with the political world, and
strangers to the disposition of foreign powers. Could you possibly wish
for a more favorable conjunction of circumstances? Yet all these have
happened and passed away, and, as it were, left you with a laugh. There
are likewise, events of such an original nativity as can never happen
again, unless a new world should arise from the ocean.</p>
<p>If any thing can be a lesson to presumption, surely the circumstances of
this war will have their effect. Had Britain been defeated by any European
power, her pride would have drawn consolation from the importance of her
conquerors; but in the present case, she is excelled by those that she
affected to despise, and her own opinions retorting upon herself, become
an aggravation of her disgrace. Misfortune and experience are lost upon
mankind, when they produce neither reflection nor reformation. Evils, like
poisons, have their uses, and there are diseases which no other remedy can
reach. It has been the crime and folly of England to suppose herself
invincible, and that, without acknowledging or perceiving that a full
third of her strength was drawn from the country she is now at war with.
The arm of Britain has been spoken of as the arm of the Almighty, and she
has lived of late as if she thought the whole world created for her
diversion. Her politics, instead of civilizing, has tended to brutalize
mankind, and under the vain, unmeaning title of "Defender of the Faith,"
she has made war like an Indian against the religion of humanity. Her
cruelties in the East Indies will never be forgotten, and it is somewhat
remarkable that the produce of that ruined country, transported to
America, should there kindle up a war to punish the destroyer. The chain
is continued, though with a mysterious kind of uniformity both in the
crime and the punishment. The latter runs parallel with the former, and
time and fate will give it a perfect illustration.</p>
<p>When information is withheld, ignorance becomes a reasonable excuse; and
one would charitably hope that the people of England do not encourage
cruelty from choice but from mistake. Their recluse situation, surrounded
by the sea, preserves them from the calamities of war, and keeps them in
the dark as to the conduct of their own armies. They see not, therefore
they feel not. They tell the tale that is told them and believe it, and
accustomed to no other news than their own, they receive it, stripped of
its horrors and prepared for the palate of the nation, through the channel
of the London Gazette. They are made to believe that their generals and
armies differ from those of other nations, and have nothing of rudeness or
barbarity in them. They suppose them what they wish them to be. They feel
a disgrace in thinking otherwise, and naturally encourage the belief from
a partiality to themselves. There was a time when I felt the same
prejudices, and reasoned from the same errors; but experience, sad and
painful experience, has taught me better. What the conduct of former
armies was, I know not, but what the conduct of the present is, I well
know. It is low, cruel, indolent and profligate; and had the people of
America no other cause for separation than what the army has occasioned,
that alone is cause sufficient.</p>
<p>The field of politics in England is far more extensive than that of news.
Men have a right to reason for themselves, and though they cannot
contradict the intelligence in the London Gazette, they may frame upon it
what sentiments they please. But the misfortune is, that a general
ignorance has prevailed over the whole nation respecting America. The
ministry and the minority have both been wrong. The former was always so,
the latter only lately so. Politics, to be executively right, must have a
unity of means and time, and a defect in either overthrows the whole. The
ministry rejected the plans of the minority while they were practicable,
and joined in them when they became impracticable. From wrong measures
they got into wrong time, and have now completed the circle of absurdity
by closing it upon themselves.</p>
<p>I happened to come to America a few months before the breaking out of
hostilities. I found the disposition of the people such, that they might
have been led by a thread and governed by a reed. Their suspicion was
quick and penetrating, but their attachment to Britain was obstinate, and
it was at that time a kind of treason to speak against it. They disliked
the ministry, but they esteemed the nation. Their idea of grievance
operated without resentment, and their single object was reconciliation.
Bad as I believed the ministry to be, I never conceived them capable of a
measure so rash and wicked as the commencing of hostilities; much less did
I imagine the nation would encourage it. I viewed the dispute as a kind of
law-suit, in which I supposed the parties would find a way either to
decide or settle it. I had no thoughts of independence or of arms. The
world could not then have persuaded me that I should be either a soldier
or an author. If I had any talents for either, they were buried in me, and
might ever have continued so, had not the necessity of the times dragged
and driven them into action. I had formed my plan of life, and conceiving
myself happy, wished every body else so. But when the country, into which
I had just set my foot, was set on fire about my ears, it was time to
stir. It was time for every man to stir. Those who had been long settled
had something to defend; those who had just come had something to pursue;
and the call and the concern was equal and universal. For in a country
where all men were once adventurers, the difference of a few years in
their arrival could make none in their right.</p>
<p>The breaking out of hostilities opened a new suspicion in the politics of
America, which, though at that time very rare, has since been proved to be
very right. What I allude to is, "a secret and fixed determination in the
British Cabinet to annex America to the crown of England as a conquered
country." If this be taken as the object, then the whole line of conduct
pursued by the ministry, though rash in its origin and ruinous in its
consequences, is nevertheless uniform and consistent in its parts. It
applies to every case and resolves every difficulty. But if taxation, or
any thing else, be taken in its room, there is no proportion between the
object and the charge. Nothing but the whole soil and property of the
country can be placed as a possible equivalent against the millions which
the ministry expended. No taxes raised in America could possibly repay it.
A revenue of two millions sterling a year would not discharge the sum and
interest accumulated thereon, in twenty years.</p>
<p>Reconciliation never appears to have been the wish or the object of the
administration; they looked on conquest as certain and infallible, and,
under that persuasion, sought to drive the Americans into what they might
style a general rebellion, and then, crushing them with arms in their
hands, reap the rich harvest of a general confiscation, and silence them
for ever. The dependents at court were too numerous to be provided for in
England. The market for plunder in the East Indies was over; and the
profligacy of government required that a new mine should be opened, and
that mine could be no other than America, conquered and forfeited. They
had no where else to go. Every other channel was drained; and
extravagance, with the thirst of a drunkard, was gaping for supplies.</p>
<p>If the ministry deny this to have been their plan, it becomes them to
explain what was their plan. For either they have abused us in coveting
property they never labored for, or they have abused you in expending an
amazing sum upon an incompetent object. Taxation, as I mentioned before,
could never be worth the charge of obtaining it by arms; and any kind of
formal obedience which America could have made, would have weighed with
the lightness of a laugh against such a load of expense. It is therefore
most probable that the ministry will at last justify their policy by their
dishonesty, and openly declare, that their original design was conquest:
and, in this case, it well becomes the people of England to consider how
far the nation would have been benefited by the success.</p>
<p>In a general view, there are few conquests that repay the charge of making
them, and mankind are pretty well convinced that it can never be worth
their while to go to war for profit's sake. If they are made war upon,
their country invaded, or their existence at stake, it is their duty to
defend and preserve themselves, but in every other light, and from every
other cause, is war inglorious and detestable. But to return to the case
in question—</p>
<p>When conquests are made of foreign countries, it is supposed that the
commerce and dominion of the country which made them are extended. But
this could neither be the object nor the consequence of the present war.
You enjoyed the whole commerce before. It could receive no possible
addition by a conquest, but on the contrary, must diminish as the
inhabitants were reduced in numbers and wealth. You had the same dominion
over the country which you used to have, and had no complaint to make
against her for breach of any part of the contract between you or her, or
contending against any established custom, commercial, political or
territorial. The country and commerce were both your own when you began to
conquer, in the same manner and form as they had been your own a hundred
years before. Nations have sometimes been induced to make conquests for
the sake of reducing the power of their enemies, or bringing it to a
balance with their own. But this could be no part of your plan. No foreign
authority was claimed here, neither was any such authority suspected by
you, or acknowledged or imagined by us. What then, in the name of heaven,
could you go to war for? Or what chance could you possibly have in the
event, but either to hold the same country which you held before, and that
in a much worse condition, or to lose, with an amazing expense, what you
might have retained without a farthing of charges?</p>
<p>War never can be the interest of a trading nation, any more than
quarrelling can be profitable to a man in business. But to make war with
those who trade with us, is like setting a bull-dog upon a customer at the
shop-door. The least degree of common sense shows the madness of the
latter, and it will apply with the same force of conviction to the former.
Piratical nations, having neither commerce or commodities of their own to
lose, may make war upon all the world, and lucratively find their account
in it; but it is quite otherwise with Britain: for, besides the stoppage
of trade in time of war, she exposes more of her own property to be lost,
than she has the chance of taking from others. Some ministerial gentlemen
in parliament have mentioned the greatness of her trade as an apology for
the greatness of her loss. This is miserable politics indeed! Because it
ought to have been given as a reason for her not engaging in a war at
first. The coast of America commands the West India trade almost as
effectually as the coast of Africa does that of the Straits; and England
can no more carry on the former without the consent of America, than she
can the latter without a Mediterranean pass.</p>
<p>In whatever light the war with America is considered upon commercial
principles, it is evidently the interest of the people of England not to
support it; and why it has been supported so long, against the clearest
demonstrations of truth and national advantage, is, to me, and must be to
all the reasonable world, a matter of astonishment. Perhaps it may be said
that I live in America, and write this from interest. To this I reply,
that my principle is universal. My attachment is to all the world, and not
to any particular part, and if what I advance is right, no matter where or
who it comes from. We have given the proclamation of your commissioners a
currency in our newspapers, and I have no doubt you will give this a place
in yours. To oblige and be obliged is fair.</p>
<p>Before I dismiss this part of my address, I shall mention one more
circumstance in which I think the people of England have been equally
mistaken: and then proceed to other matters.</p>
<p>There is such an idea existing in the world, as that of national honor,
and this, falsely understood, is oftentimes the cause of war. In a
Christian and philosophical sense, mankind seem to have stood still at
individual civilization, and to retain as nations all the original
rudeness of nature. Peace by treaty is only a cessation of violence for a
reformation of sentiment. It is a substitute for a principle that is
wanting and ever will be wanting till the idea of national honor be
rightly understood. As individuals we profess ourselves Christians, but as
nations we are heathens, Romans, and what not. I remember the late Admiral
Saunders declaring in the House of Commons, and that in the time of peace,
"That the city of Madrid laid in ashes was not a sufficient atonement for
the Spaniards taking off the rudder of an English sloop of war." I do not
ask whether this is Christianity or morality, I ask whether it is decency?
whether it is proper language for a nation to use? In private life we call
it by the plain name of bullying, and the elevation of rank cannot alter
its character. It is, I think, exceedingly easy to define what ought to be
understood by national honor; for that which is the best character for an
individual is the best character for a nation; and wherever the latter
exceeds or falls beneath the former, there is a departure from the line of
true greatness.</p>
<p>I have thrown out this observation with a design of applying it to Great
Britain. Her ideas of national honor seem devoid of that benevolence of
heart, that universal expansion of philanthropy, and that triumph over the
rage of vulgar prejudice, without which man is inferior to himself, and a
companion of common animals. To know who she shall regard or dislike, she
asks what country they are of, what religion they profess, and what
property they enjoy. Her idea of national honor seems to consist in
national insult, and that to be a great people, is to be neither a
Christian, a philosopher, or a gentleman, but to threaten with the
rudeness of a bear, and to devour with the ferocity of a lion. This
perhaps may sound harsh and uncourtly, but it is too true, and the more is
the pity.</p>
<p>I mention this only as her general character. But towards America she has
observed no character at all; and destroyed by her conduct what she
assumed in her title. She set out with the title of parent, or mother
country. The association of ideas which naturally accompany this
expression, are filled with everything that is fond, tender and
forbearing. They have an energy peculiar to themselves, and, overlooking
the accidental attachment of common affections, apply with infinite
softness to the first feelings of the heart. It is a political term which
every mother can feel the force of, and every child can judge of. It needs
no painting of mine to set it off, for nature only can do it justice.</p>
<p>But has any part of your conduct to America corresponded with the title
you set up? If in your general national character you are unpolished and
severe, in this you are inconsistent and unnatural, and you must have
exceeding false notions of national honor to suppose that the world can
admire a want of humanity or that national honor depends on the violence
of resentment, the inflexibility of temper, or the vengeance of execution.</p>
<p>I would willingly convince you, and that with as much temper as the times
will suffer me to do, that as you opposed your own interest by quarrelling
with us, so likewise your national honor, rightly conceived and
understood, was no ways called upon to enter into a war with America; had
you studied true greatness of heart, the first and fairest ornament of
mankind, you would have acted directly contrary to all that you have done,
and the world would have ascribed it to a generous cause. Besides which,
you had (though with the assistance of this country) secured a powerful
name by the last war. You were known and dreaded abroad; and it would have
been wise in you to have suffered the world to have slept undisturbed
under that idea. It was to you a force existing without expense. It
produced to you all the advantages of real power; and you were stronger
through the universality of that charm, than any future fleets and armies
may probably make you. Your greatness was so secured and interwoven with
your silence that you ought never to have awakened mankind, and had
nothing to do but to be quiet. Had you been true politicians you would
have seen all this, and continued to draw from the magic of a name, the
force and authority of a nation.</p>
<p>Unwise as you were in breaking the charm, you were still more unwise in
the manner of doing it. Samson only told the secret, but you have
performed the operation; you have shaven your own head, and wantonly
thrown away the locks. America was the hair from which the charm was drawn
that infatuated the world. You ought to have quarrelled with no power; but
with her upon no account. You had nothing to fear from any condescension
you might make. You might have humored her, even if there had been no
justice in her claims, without any risk to your reputation; for Europe,
fascinated by your fame, would have ascribed it to your benevolence, and
America, intoxicated by the grant, would have slumbered in her fetters.</p>
<p>But this method of studying the progress of the passions, in order to
ascertain the probable conduct of mankind, is a philosophy in politics
which those who preside at St. James's have no conception of. They know no
other influence than corruption and reckon all their probabilities from
precedent. A new case is to them a new world, and while they are seeking
for a parallel they get lost. The talents of Lord Mansfield can be
estimated at best no higher than those of a sophist. He understands the
subtleties but not the elegance of nature; and by continually viewing
mankind through the cold medium of the law, never thinks of penetrating
into the warmer region of the mind. As for Lord North, it is his happiness
to have in him more philosophy than sentiment, for he bears flogging like
a top, and sleeps the better for it. His punishment becomes his support,
for while he suffers the lash for his sins, he keeps himself up by
twirling about. In politics, he is a good arithmetician, and in every
thing else nothing at all.</p>
<p>There is one circumstance which comes so much within Lord North's province
as a financier, that I am surprised it should escape him, which is, the
different abilities of the two countries in supporting the expense; for,
strange as it may seem, England is not a match for America in this
particular. By a curious kind of revolution in accounts, the people of
England seem to mistake their poverty for their riches; that is, they
reckon their national debt as a part of their national wealth. They make
the same kind of error which a man would do, who after mortgaging his
estate, should add the money borrowed, to the full value of the estate, in
order to count up his worth, and in this case he would conceive that he
got rich by running into debt. Just thus it is with England. The
government owed at the beginning of this war one hundred and thirty-five
millions sterling, and though the individuals to whom it was due had a
right to reckon their shares as so much private property, yet to the
nation collectively it was so much poverty. There are as effectual limits
to public debts as to private ones, for when once the money borrowed is so
great as to require the whole yearly revenue to discharge the interest
thereon, there is an end to further borrowing; in the same manner as when
the interest of a man's debts amounts to the yearly income of his estate,
there is an end to his credit. This is nearly the case with England, the
interest of her present debt being at least equal to one half of her
yearly revenue, so that out of ten millions annually collected by taxes,
she has but five that she can call her own.</p>
<p>The very reverse of this was the case with America; she began the war
without any debt upon her, and in order to carry it on, she neither raised
money by taxes, nor borrowed it upon interest, but created it; and her
situation at this time continues so much the reverse of yours that taxing
would make her rich, whereas it would make you poor. When we shall have
sunk the sum which we have created, we shall then be out of debt, be just
as rich as when we began, and all the while we are doing it shall feel no
difference, because the value will rise as the quantity decreases.</p>
<p>There was not a country in the world so capable of bearing the expense of
a war as America; not only because she was not in debt when she began, but
because the country is young and capable of infinite improvement, and has
an almost boundless tract of new lands in store; whereas England has got
to her extent of age and growth, and has not unoccupied land or property
in reserve. The one is like a young heir coming to a large improvable
estate; the other like an old man whose chances are over, and his estate
mortgaged for half its worth.</p>
<p>In the second number of the Crisis, which I find has been republished in
England, I endeavored to set forth the impracticability of conquering
America. I stated every case, that I conceived could possibly happen, and
ventured to predict its consequences. As my conclusions were drawn not
artfully, but naturally, they have all proved to be true. I was upon the
spot; knew the politics of America, her strength and resources, and by a
train of services, the best in my power to render, was honored with the
friendship of the congress, the army and the people. I considered the
cause a just one. I know and feel it a just one, and under that confidence
never made my own profit or loss an object. My endeavor was to have the
matter well understood on both sides, and I conceived myself tendering a
general service, by setting forth to the one the impossibility of being
conquered, and to the other the impossibility of conquering. Most of the
arguments made use of by the ministry for supporting the war, are the very
arguments that ought to have been used against supporting it; and the
plans, by which they thought to conquer, are the very plans in which they
were sure to be defeated. They have taken every thing up at the wrong end.
Their ignorance is astonishing, and were you in my situation you would see
it. They may, perhaps, have your confidence, but I am persuaded that they
would make very indifferent members of Congress. I know what England is,
and what America is, and from the compound of knowledge, am better enabled
to judge of the issue than what the king or any of his ministers can be.</p>
<p>In this number I have endeavored to show the ill policy and disadvantages
of the war. I believe many of my remarks are new. Those which are not so,
I have studied to improve and place in a manner that may be clear and
striking. Your failure is, I am persuaded, as certain as fate. America is
above your reach. She is at least your equal in the world, and her
independence neither rests upon your consent, nor can it be prevented by
your arms. In short, you spend your substance in vain, and impoverish
yourselves without a hope.</p>
<p>But suppose you had conquered America, what advantages, collectively or
individually, as merchants, manufacturers, or conquerors, could you have
looked for? This is an object you seemed never to have attended to.
Listening for the sound of victory, and led away by the frenzy of arms,
you neglected to reckon either the cost or the consequences. You must all
pay towards the expense; the poorest among you must bear his share, and it
is both your right and your duty to weigh seriously the matter. Had
America been conquered, she might have been parcelled out in grants to the
favorites at court, but no share of it would have fallen to you. Your
taxes would not have been lessened, because she would have been in no
condition to have paid any towards your relief. We are rich by contrivance
of our own, which would have ceased as soon as you became masters. Our
paper money will be of no use in England, and silver and gold we have
none. In the last war you made many conquests, but were any of your taxes
lessened thereby? On the contrary, were you not taxed to pay for the
charge of making them, and has not the same been the case in every war?</p>
<p>To the Parliament I wish to address myself in a more particular manner.
They appear to have supposed themselves partners in the chase, and to have
hunted with the lion from an expectation of a right in the booty; but in
this it is most probable they would, as legislators, have been
disappointed. The case is quite a new one, and many unforeseen
difficulties would have arisen thereon. The Parliament claimed a
legislative right over America, and the war originated from that pretence.
But the army is supposed to belong to the crown, and if America had been
conquered through their means, the claim of the legislature would have
been suffocated in the conquest. Ceded, or conquered, countries are
supposed to be out of the authority of Parliament. Taxation is exercised
over them by prerogative and not by law. It was attempted to be done in
the Grenadas a few years ago, and the only reason why it was not done was
because the crown had made a prior relinquishment of its claim. Therefore,
Parliament have been all this while supporting measures for the
establishment of their authority, in the issue of which, they would have
been triumphed over by the prerogative. This might have opened a new and
interesting opposition between the Parliament and the crown. The crown
would have said that it conquered for itself, and that to conquer for
Parliament was an unknown case. The Parliament might have replied, that
America not being a foreign country, but a country in rebellion, could not
be said to be conquered, but reduced; and thus continued their claim by
disowning the term. The crown might have rejoined, that however America
might be considered at first, she became foreign at last by a declaration
of independence, and a treaty with France; and that her case being, by
that treaty, put within the law of nations, was out of the law of
Parliament, who might have maintained, that as their claim over America
had never been surrendered, so neither could it be taken away. The crown
might have insisted, that though the claim of Parliament could not be
taken away, yet, being an inferior, it might be superseded; and that,
whether the claim was withdrawn from the object, or the object taken from
the claim, the same separation ensued; and that America being subdued
after a treaty with France, was to all intents and purposes a regal
conquest, and of course the sole property of the king. The Parliament, as
the legal delegates of the people, might have contended against the term
"inferior," and rested the case upon the antiquity of power, and this
would have brought on a set of very interesting and rational questions.</p>
<p>1st, What is the original fountain of power and honor in any country?<br/>
2d, Whether the prerogative does not belong to the people?<br/>
3d, Whether there is any such thing as the English constitution?<br/>
4th, Of what use is the crown to the people?<br/>
5th, Whether he who invented a crown was not an enemy to mankind?<br/>
6th, Whether it is not a shame for a man to spend a million a year<br/>
and do no good for it, and whether the money might not be better<br/>
applied? 7th, Whether such a man is not better dead than alive?<br/>
8th, Whether a Congress, constituted like that of America, is not the<br/>
most happy and consistent form of government in the world?—With a<br/>
number of others of the same import.<br/></p>
<p>In short, the contention about the dividend might have distracted the
nation; for nothing is more common than to agree in the conquest and
quarrel for the prize; therefore it is, perhaps, a happy circumstance,
that our successes have prevented the dispute.</p>
<p>If the Parliament had been thrown out in their claim, which it is most
probable they would, the nation likewise would have been thrown out in
their expectation; for as the taxes would have been laid on by the crown
without the Parliament, the revenue arising therefrom, if any could have
arisen, would not have gone into the exchequer, but into the privy purse,
and so far from lessening the taxes, would not even have been added to
them, but served only as pocket money to the crown. The more I reflect on
this matter, the more I am satisfied at the blindness and ill policy of my
countrymen, whose wisdom seems to operate without discernment, and their
strength without an object.</p>
<p>To the great bulwark of the nation, I mean the mercantile and
manufacturing part thereof, I likewise present my address. It is your
interest to see America an independent, and not a conquered country. If
conquered, she is ruined; and if ruined, poor; consequently the trade will
be a trifle, and her credit doubtful. If independent, she flourishes, and
from her flourishing must your profits arise. It matters nothing to you
who governs America, if your manufactures find a consumption there. Some
articles will consequently be obtained from other places, and it is right
that they should; but the demand for others will increase, by the great
influx of inhabitants which a state of independence and peace will
occasion, and in the final event you may be enriched. The commerce of
America is perfectly free, and ever will be so. She will consign away no
part of it to any nation. She has not to her friends, and certainly will
not to her enemies; though it is probable that your narrow-minded
politicians, thinking to please you thereby, may some time or other
unnecessarily make such a proposal. Trade flourishes best when it is free,
and it is weak policy to attempt to fetter it. Her treaty with France is
on the most liberal and generous principles, and the French, in their
conduct towards her, have proved themselves to be philosophers,
politicians, and gentlemen.</p>
<p>To the ministry I likewise address myself. You, gentlemen, have studied
the ruin of your country, from which it is not within your abilities to
rescue her. Your attempts to recover her are as ridiculous as your plans
which involved her are detestable. The commissioners, being about to
depart, will probably bring you this, and with it my sixth number,
addressed to them; and in so doing they carry back more Common Sense than
they brought, and you likewise will have more than when you sent them.</p>
<p>Having thus addressed you severally, I conclude by addressing you
collectively. It is a long lane that has no turning. A period of sixteen
years of misconduct and misfortune, is certainly long enough for any one
nation to suffer under; and upon a supposition that war is not declared
between France and you, I beg to place a line of conduct before you that
will easily lead you out of all your troubles. It has been hinted before,
and cannot be too much attended to.</p>
<p>Suppose America had remained unknown to Europe till the present year, and
that Mr. Banks and Dr. Solander, in another voyage round the world, had
made the first discovery of her, in the same condition that she is now in,
of arts, arms, numbers, and civilization. What, I ask, in that case, would
have been your conduct towards her? For that will point out what it ought
to be now. The problems and their solutions are equal, and the right line
of the one is the parallel of the other. The question takes in every
circumstance that can possibly arise. It reduces politics to a simple
thought, and is moreover a mode of investigation, in which, while you are
studying your interest the simplicity of the case will cheat you into good
temper. You have nothing to do but to suppose that you have found America,
and she appears found to your hand, and while in the joy of your heart you
stand still to admire her, the path of politics rises straight before you.</p>
<p>Were I disposed to paint a contrast, I could easily set off what you have
done in the present case, against what you would have done in that case,
and by justly opposing them, conclude a picture that would make you blush.
But, as, when any of the prouder passions are hurt, it is much better
philosophy to let a man slip into a good temper than to attack him in a
bad one, for that reason, therefore, I only state the case, and leave you
to reflect upon it.</p>
<p>To go a little back into politics, it will be found that the true interest
of Britain lay in proposing and promoting the independence of America
immediately after the last peace; for the expense which Britain had then
incurred by defending America as her own dominions, ought to have shown
her the policy and necessity of changing the style of the country, as the
best probable method of preventing future wars and expense, and the only
method by which she could hold the commerce without the charge of
sovereignty. Besides which, the title which she assumed, of parent
country, led to, and pointed out the propriety, wisdom and advantage of a
separation; for, as in private life, children grow into men, and by
setting up for themselves, extend and secure the interest of the whole
family, so in the settlement of colonies large enough to admit of
maturity, the same policy should be pursued, and the same consequences
would follow. Nothing hurts the affections both of parents and children so
much, as living too closely connected, and keeping up the distinction too
long. Domineering will not do over those, who, by a progress in life, have
become equal in rank to their parents, that is, when they have families of
their own; and though they may conceive themselves the subjects of their
advice, will not suppose them the objects of their government. I do not,
by drawing this parallel, mean to admit the title of parent country,
because, if it is due any where, it is due to Europe collectively, and the
first settlers from England were driven here by persecution. I mean only
to introduce the term for the sake of policy and to show from your title
the line of your interest.</p>
<p>When you saw the state of strength and opulence, and that by her own
industry, which America arrived at, you ought to have advised her to set
up for herself, and proposed an alliance of interest with her, and in so
doing you would have drawn, and that at her own expense, more real
advantage, and more military supplies and assistance, both of ships and
men, than from any weak and wrangling government that you could exercise
over her. In short, had you studied only the domestic politics of a
family, you would have learned how to govern the state; but, instead of
this easy and natural line, you flew out into every thing which was wild
and outrageous, till, by following the passion and stupidity of the pilot,
you wrecked the vessel within sight of the shore.</p>
<p>Having shown what you ought to have done, I now proceed to show why it was
not done. The caterpillar circle of the court had an interest to pursue,
distinct from, and opposed to yours; for though by the independence of
America and an alliance therewith, the trade would have continued, if not
increased, as in many articles neither country can go to a better market,
and though by defending and protecting herself, she would have been no
expense to you, and consequently your national charges would have
decreased, and your taxes might have been proportionably lessened thereby;
yet the striking off so many places from the court calendar was put in
opposition to the interest of the nation. The loss of thirteen government
ships, with their appendages, here and in England, is a shocking sound in
the ear of a hungry courtier. Your present king and ministry will be the
ruin of you; and you had better risk a revolution and call a Congress,
than be thus led on from madness to despair, and from despair to ruin.
America has set you the example, and you may follow it and be free.</p>
<p>I now come to the last part, a war with France. This is what no man in his
senses will advise you to, and all good men would wish to prevent. Whether
France will declare war against you, is not for me in this place to
mention, or to hint, even if I knew it; but it must be madness in you to
do it first. The matter is come now to a full crisis, and peace is easy if
willingly set about. Whatever you may think, France has behaved handsomely
to you. She would have been unjust to herself to have acted otherwise than
she did; and having accepted our offer of alliance she gave you genteel
notice of it. There was nothing in her conduct reserved or indelicate, and
while she announced her determination to support her treaty, she left you
to give the first offence. America, on her part, has exhibited a character
of firmness to the world. Unprepared and unarmed, without form or
government, she, singly opposed a nation that domineered over half the
globe. The greatness of the deed demands respect; and though you may feel
resentment, you are compelled both to wonder and admire.</p>
<p>Here I rest my arguments and finish my address. Such as it is, it is a
gift, and you are welcome. It was always my design to dedicate a Crisis to
you, when the time should come that would properly make it a Crisis; and
when, likewise, I should catch myself in a temper to write it, and suppose
you in a condition to read it. That time has now arrived, and with it the
opportunity for conveyance. For the commissioners—poor
commissioners! having proclaimed, that "yet forty days and Nineveh shall
be overthrown," have waited out the date, and, discontented with their
God, are returning to their gourd. And all the harm I wish them is, that
it may not wither about their ears, and that they may not make their exit
in the belly of a whale.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.</p>
<p>PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 21, 1778.</p>
<p>P.S.—Though in the tranquillity of my mind I have concluded with a
laugh, yet I have something to mention to the commissioners, which, to
them, is serious and worthy their attention. Their authority is derived
from an Act of Parliament, which likewise describes and limits their
official powers. Their commission, therefore, is only a recital, and
personal investiture, of those powers, or a nomination and description of
the persons who are to execute them. Had it contained any thing contrary
to, or gone beyond the line of, the written law from which it is derived,
and by which it is bound, it would, by the English constitution, have been
treason in the crown, and the king been subject to an impeachment. He
dared not, therefore, put in his commission what you have put in your
proclamation, that is, he dared not have authorised you in that commission
to burn and destroy any thing in America. You are both in the act and in
the commission styled commissioners for restoring peace, and the methods
for doing it are there pointed out. Your last proclamation is signed by
you as commissioners under that act. You make Parliament the patron of its
contents. Yet, in the body of it, you insert matters contrary both to the
spirit and letter of the act, and what likewise your king dared not have
put in his commission to you. The state of things in England, gentlemen,
is too ticklish for you to run hazards. You are accountable to Parliament
for the execution of that act according to the letter of it. Your heads
may pay for breaking it, for you certainly have broke it by exceeding it.
And as a friend, who would wish you to escape the paw of the lion, as well
as the belly of the whale, I civilly hint to you, to keep within compass.</p>
<p>Sir Harry Clinton, strictly speaking, is as accountable as the rest; for
though a general, he is likewise a commissioner, acting under a superior
authority. His first obedience is due to the act; and his plea of being a
general, will not and cannot clear him as a commissioner, for that would
suppose the crown, in its single capacity, to have a power of dispensing
with an Act of Parliament. Your situation, gentlemen, is nice and
critical, and the more so because England is unsettled. Take heed!
Remember the times of Charles the First! For Laud and Stafford fell by
trusting to a hope like yours.</p>
<p>Having thus shown you the danger of your proclamation, I now show you the
folly of it. The means contradict your design: you threaten to lay waste,
in order to render America a useless acquisition of alliance to France. I
reply, that the more destruction you commit (if you could do it) the more
valuable to France you make that alliance. You can destroy only houses and
goods; and by so doing you increase our demand upon her for materials and
merchandise; for the wants of one nation, provided it has freedom and
credit, naturally produce riches to the other; and, as you can neither
ruin the land nor prevent the vegetation, you would increase the
exportation of our produce in payment, which would be to her a new fund of
wealth. In short, had you cast about for a plan on purpose to enrich your
enemies, you could not have hit upon a better.</p>
<p>C. S.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CRISIS VIII. ADDRESS TO THE PEOPLE OF ENGLAND. </h2>
<p>"TRUSTING (says the king of England in his speech of November last,) in
the divine providence, and in the justice of my cause, I am firmly
resolved to prosecute the war with vigor, and to make every exertion in
order to compel our enemies to equitable terms of peace and
accommodation." To this declaration the United States of America, and the
confederated powers of Europe will reply, if Britain will have war, she
shall have enough of it.</p>
<p>Five years have nearly elapsed since the commencement of hostilities, and
every campaign, by a gradual decay, has lessened your ability to conquer,
without producing a serious thought on your condition or your fate. Like a
prodigal lingering in an habitual consumption, you feel the relics of
life, and mistake them for recovery. New schemes, like new medicines, have
administered fresh hopes, and prolonged the disease instead of curing it.
A change of generals, like a change of physicians, served only to keep the
flattery alive, and furnish new pretences for new extravagance.</p>
<p>"Can Britain fail?"* has been proudly asked at the undertaking of every
enterprise; and that "whatever she wills is fate,"*(2) has been given with
the solemnity of prophetic confidence; and though the question has been
constantly replied to by disappointment, and the prediction falsified by
misfortune, yet still the insult continued, and your catalogue of national
evils increased therewith. Eager to persuade the world of her power, she
considered destruction as the minister of greatness, and conceived that
the glory of a nation like that of an [American] Indian, lay in the number
of its scalps and the miseries which it inflicts.</p>
<p>* Whitehead's New Year's ode for 1776.<br/>
*(2) Ode at the installation of Lord North, for Chancellor of the<br/>
University of Oxford.<br/></p>
<p>Fire, sword and want, as far as the arms of Britain could extend them,
have been spread with wanton cruelty along the coast of America; and while
you, remote from the scene of suffering, had nothing to lose and as little
to dread, the information reached you like a tale of antiquity, in which
the distance of time defaces the conception, and changes the severest
sorrows into conversable amusement.</p>
<p>This makes the second paper, addressed perhaps in vain, to the people of
England. That advice should be taken wherever example has failed, or
precept be regarded where warning is ridiculed, is like a picture of hope
resting on despair: but when time shall stamp with universal currency the
facts you have long encountered with a laugh, and the irresistible
evidence of accumulated losses, like the handwriting on the wall, shall
add terror to distress, you will then, in a conflict of suffering, learn
to sympathize with others by feeling for yourselves.</p>
<p>The triumphant appearance of the combined fleets in the channel and at
your harbor's mouth, and the expedition of Captain Paul Jones, on the
western and eastern coasts of England and Scotland, will, by placing you
in the condition of an endangered country, read to you a stronger lecture
on the calamities of invasion, and bring to your minds a truer picture of
promiscuous distress, than the most finished rhetoric can describe or the
keenest imagination conceive.</p>
<p>Hitherto you have experienced the expenses, but nothing of the miseries of
war. Your disappointments have been accompanied with no immediate
suffering, and your losses came to you only by intelligence. Like fire at
a distance you heard not even the cry; you felt not the danger, you saw
not the confusion. To you every thing has been foreign but the taxes to
support it. You knew not what it was to be alarmed at midnight with an
armed enemy in the streets. You were strangers to the distressing scene of
a family in flight, and to the thousand restless cares and tender sorrows
that incessantly arose. To see women and children wandering in the
severity of winter, with the broken remains of a well furnished house, and
seeking shelter in every crib and hut, were matters that you had no
conception of. You knew not what it was to stand by and see your goods
chopped for fuel, and your beds ripped to pieces to make packages for
plunder. The misery of others, like a tempestuous night, added to the
pleasures of your own security. You even enjoyed the storm, by
contemplating the difference of conditions, and that which carried sorrow
into the breasts of thousands served but to heighten in you a species of
tranquil pride. Yet these are but the fainter sufferings of war, when
compared with carnage and slaughter, the miseries of a military hospital,
or a town in flames.</p>
<p>The people of America, by anticipating distress, had fortified their minds
against every species you could inflict. They had resolved to abandon
their homes, to resign them to destruction, and to seek new settlements
rather than submit. Thus familiarized to misfortune, before it arrived,
they bore their portion with the less regret: the justness of their cause
was a continual source of consolation, and the hope of final victory,
which never left them, served to lighten the load and sweeten the cup
allotted them to drink.</p>
<p>But when their troubles shall become yours, and invasion be transferred
upon the invaders, you will have neither their extended wilderness to fly
to, their cause to comfort you, nor their hope to rest upon. Distress with
them was sharpened by no self-reflection. They had not brought it on
themselves. On the contrary, they had by every proceeding endeavored to
avoid it, and had descended even below the mark of congressional
character, to prevent a war. The national honor or the advantages of
independence were matters which, at the commencement of the dispute, they
had never studied, and it was only at the last moment that the measure was
resolved on. Thus circumstanced, they naturally and conscientiously felt a
dependence upon providence. They had a clear pretension to it, and had
they failed therein, infidelity had gained a triumph.</p>
<p>But your condition is the reverse of theirs. Every thing you suffer you
have sought: nay, had you created mischiefs on purpose to inherit them,
you could not have secured your title by a firmer deed. The world awakens
with no pity it your complaints. You felt none for others; you deserve
none for yourselves. Nature does not interest herself in cases like yours,
but, on the contrary, turns from them with dislike, and abandons them to
punishment. You may now present memorials to what court you please, but so
far as America is the object, none will listen. The policy of Europe, and
the propensity there in every mind to curb insulting ambition, and bring
cruelty to judgment, are unitedly against you; and where nature and
interest reinforce with each other, the compact is too intimate to be
dissolved.</p>
<p>Make but the case of others your own, and your own theirs, and you will
then have a clear idea of the whole. Had France acted towards her colonies
as you have done, you would have branded her with every epithet of
abhorrence; and had you, like her, stepped in to succor a struggling
people, all Europe must have echoed with your own applauses. But entangled
in the passion of dispute you see it not as you ought, and form opinions
thereon which suit with no interest but your own. You wonder that America
does not rise in union with you to impose on herself a portion of your
taxes and reduce herself to unconditional submission. You are amazed that
the southern powers of Europe do not assist you in conquering a country
which is afterwards to be turned against themselves; and that the northern
ones do not contribute to reinstate you in America who already enjoy the
market for naval stores by the separation. You seem surprised that Holland
does not pour in her succors to maintain you mistress of the seas, when
her own commerce is suffering by your act of navigation; or that any
country should study her own interest while yours is on the carpet.</p>
<p>Such excesses of passionate folly, and unjust as well as unwise
resentment, have driven you on, like Pharaoh, to unpitied miseries, and
while the importance of the quarrel shall perpetuate your disgrace, the
flag of America will carry it round the world. The natural feelings of
every rational being will be against you, and wherever the story shall be
told, you will have neither excuse nor consolation left. With an unsparing
hand, and an insatiable mind, you have desolated the world, to gain
dominion and to lose it; and while, in a frenzy of avarice and ambition,
the east and the west are doomed to tributary bondage, you rapidly earned
destruction as the wages of a nation.</p>
<p>At the thoughts of a war at home, every man amongst you ought to tremble.
The prospect is far more dreadful there than in America. Here the party
that was against the measures of the continent were in general composed of
a kind of neutrals, who added strength to neither army. There does not
exist a being so devoid of sense and sentiment as to covet "unconditional
submission," and therefore no man in America could be with you in
principle. Several might from a cowardice of mind, prefer it to the
hardships and dangers of opposing it; but the same disposition that gave
them such a choice, unfitted them to act either for or against us. But
England is rent into parties, with equal shares of resolution. The
principle which produced the war divides the nation. Their animosities are
in the highest state of fermentation, and both sides, by a call of the
militia, are in arms. No human foresight can discern, no conclusion can be
formed, what turn a war might take, if once set on foot by an invasion.
She is not now in a fit disposition to make a common cause of her own
affairs, and having no conquests to hope for abroad, and nothing but
expenses arising at home, her everything is staked upon a defensive
combat, and the further she goes the worse she is off.</p>
<p>There are situations that a nation may be in, in which peace or war,
abstracted from every other consideration, may be politically right or
wrong. When nothing can be lost by a war, but what must be lost without
it, war is then the policy of that country; and such was the situation of
America at the commencement of hostilities: but when no security can be
gained by a war, but what may be accomplished by a peace, the case becomes
reversed, and such now is the situation of England.</p>
<p>That America is beyond the reach of conquest, is a fact which experience
has shown and time confirmed, and this admitted, what, I ask, is now the
object of contention? If there be any honor in pursuing self-destruction
with inflexible passion—if national suicide be the perfection of
national glory, you may, with all the pride of criminal happiness, expire
unenvied and unrivalled. But when the tumult of war shall cease, and the
tempest of present passions be succeeded by calm reflection, or when
those, who, surviving its fury, shall inherit from you a legacy of debts
and misfortunes, when the yearly revenue scarcely be able to discharge the
interest of the one, and no possible remedy be left for the other, ideas
far different from the present will arise, and embitter the remembrance of
former follies. A mind disarmed of its rage feels no pleasure in
contemplating a frantic quarrel. Sickness of thought, the sure consequence
of conduct like yours, leaves no ability for enjoyment, no relish for
resentment; and though, like a man in a fit, you feel not the injury of
the struggle, nor distinguish between strength and disease, the weakness
will nevertheless be proportioned to the violence, and the sense of pain
increase with the recovery.</p>
<p>To what persons or to whose system of politics you owe your present state
of wretchedness, is a matter of total indifference to America. They have
contributed, however unwillingly, to set her above themselves, and she, in
the tranquillity of conquest, resigns the inquiry. The case now is not so
properly who began the war, as who continues it. That there are men in all
countries to whom a state of war is a mine of wealth, is a fact never to
be doubted. Characters like these naturally breed in the putrefaction of
distempered times, and after fattening on the disease, they perish with
it, or, impregnated with the stench, retreat into obscurity.</p>
<p>But there are several erroneous notions to which you likewise owe a share
of your misfortunes, and which, if continued, will only increase your
trouble and your losses. An opinion hangs about the gentlemen of the
minority, that America would relish measures under their administration,
which she would not from the present cabinet. On this rock Lord Chatham
would have split had he gained the helm, and several of his survivors are
steering the same course. Such distinctions in the infancy of the argument
had some degree of foundation, but they now serve no other purpose than to
lengthen out a war, in which the limits of a dispute, being fixed by the
fate of arms, and guaranteed by treaties, are not to be changed or altered
by trivial circumstances.</p>
<p>The ministry, and many of the minority, sacrifice their time in disputing
on a question with which they have nothing to do, namely, whether America
shall be independent or not. Whereas the only question that can come under
their determination is, whether they will accede to it or not. They
confound a military question with a political one, and undertake to supply
by a vote what they lost by a battle. Say she shall not be independent,
and it will signify as much as if they voted against a decree of fate, or
say that she shall, and she will be no more independent than before.
Questions which, when determined, cannot be executed, serve only to show
the folly of dispute and the weakness of disputants.</p>
<p>From a long habit of calling America your own, you suppose her governed by
the same prejudices and conceits which govern yourselves. Because you have
set up a particular denomination of religion to the exclusion of all
others, you imagine she must do the same, and because you, with an
unsociable narrowness of mind, have cherished enmity against France and
Spain, you suppose her alliance must be defective in friendship. Copying
her notions of the world from you, she formerly thought as you instructed,
but now feeling herself free, and the prejudice removed, she thinks and
acts upon a different system. It frequently happens that in proportion as
we are taught to dislike persons and countries, not knowing why, we feel
an ardor of esteem upon the removal of the mistake: it seems as if
something was to be made amends for, and we eagerly give in to every
office of friendship, to atone for the injury of the error. But, perhaps,
there is something in the extent of countries, which, among the generality
of people, insensibly communicates extension of the mind. The soul of an
islander, in its native state, seems bounded by the foggy confines of the
water's edge, and all beyond affords to him matters only for profit or
curiosity, not for friendship. His island is to him his world, and fixed
to that, his every thing centers in it; while those who are inhabitants of
a continent, by casting their eye over a larger field, take in likewise a
larger intellectual circuit, and thus approaching nearer to an
acquaintance with the universe, their atmosphere of thought is extended,
and their liberality fills a wider space. In short, our minds seem to be
measured by countries when we are men, as they are by places when we are
children, and until something happens to disentangle us from the
prejudice, we serve under it without perceiving it.</p>
<p>In addition to this, it may be remarked, that men who study any universal
science, the principles of which are universally known, or admitted, and
applied without distinction to the common benefit of all countries, obtain
thereby a larger share of philanthropy than those who only study national
arts and improvements. Natural philosophy, mathematics and astronomy,
carry the mind from the country to the creation, and give it a fitness
suited to the extent. It was not Newton's honor, neither could it be his
pride, that he was an Englishman, but that he was a philosopher, the
heavens had liberated him from the prejudices of an island, and science
had expanded his soul as boundless as his studies.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.<br/></p>
<p>PHILADELPHIA, March, 1780.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CRISIS IX. (HAD AMERICA PURSUED HER ADVANTAGES) </h2>
<p>HAD America pursued her advantages with half the spirit that she resisted
her misfortunes, she would, before now, have been a conquering and a
peaceful people; but lulled in the lap of soft tranquillity, she rested on
her hopes, and adversity only has convulsed her into action. Whether
subtlety or sincerity at the close of the last year induced the enemy to
an appearance for peace, is a point not material to know; it is sufficient
that we see the effects it has had on our politics, and that we sternly
rise to resent the delusion.</p>
<p>The war, on the part of America, has been a war of natural feelings. Brave
in distress; serene in conquest; drowsy while at rest; and in every
situation generously disposed to peace; a dangerous calm, and a most
heightened zeal have, as circumstances varied, succeeded each other. Every
passion but that of despair has been called to a tour of duty; and so
mistaken has been the enemy, of our abilities and disposition, that when
she supposed us conquered, we rose the conquerors. The extensiveness of
the United States, and the variety of their resources; the universality of
their cause, the quick operation of their feelings, and the similarity of
their sentiments, have, in every trying situation, produced a something,
which, favored by providence, and pursued with ardor, has accomplished in
an instant the business of a campaign. We have never deliberately sought
victory, but snatched it; and bravely undone in an hour the blotted
operations of a season.</p>
<p>The reported fate of Charleston, like the misfortunes of 1776, has at last
called forth a spirit, and kindled up a flame, which perhaps no other
event could have produced. If the enemy has circulated a falsehood, they
have unwisely aggravated us into life, and if they have told us the truth,
they have unintentionally done us a service. We were returning with folded
arms from the fatigues of war, and thinking and sitting leisurely down to
enjoy repose. The dependence that has been put upon Charleston threw a
drowsiness over America. We looked on the business done—the conflict
over—the matter settled—or that all which remained unfinished
would follow of itself. In this state of dangerous relaxation, exposed to
the poisonous infusions of the enemy, and having no common danger to
attract our attention, we were extinguishing, by stages, the ardor we
began with, and surrendering by piece-meal the virtue that defended us.</p>
<p>Afflicting as the loss of Charleston may be, yet if it universally rouse
us from the slumber of twelve months past, and renew in us the spirit of
former days, it will produce an advantage more important than its loss.
America ever is what she thinks herself to be. Governed by sentiment, and
acting her own mind, she becomes, as she pleases, the victor or the
victim.</p>
<p>It is not the conquest of towns, nor the accidental capture of garrisons,
that can reduce a country so extensive as this. The sufferings of one part
can never be relieved by the exertions of another, and there is no
situation the enemy can be placed in that does not afford to us the same
advantages which he seeks himself. By dividing his force, he leaves every
post attackable. It is a mode of war that carries with it a confession of
weakness, and goes on the principle of distress rather than conquest.</p>
<p>The decline of the enemy is visible, not only in their operations, but in
their plans; Charleston originally made but a secondary object in the
system of attack, and it is now become their principal one, because they
have not been able to succeed elsewhere. It would have carried a cowardly
appearance in Europe had they formed their grand expedition, in 1776,
against a part of the continent where there was no army, or not a
sufficient one to oppose them; but failing year after year in their
impressions here, and to the eastward and northward, they deserted their
capital design, and prudently contenting themselves with what they can
get, give a flourish of honor to conceal disgrace.</p>
<p>But this piece-meal work is not conquering the continent. It is a
discredit in them to attempt it, and in us to suffer it. It is now full
time to put an end to a war of aggravations, which, on one side, has no
possible object, and on the other has every inducement which honor,
interest, safety and happiness can inspire. If we suffer them much longer
to remain among us, we shall become as bad as themselves. An association
of vice will reduce us more than the sword. A nation hardened in the
practice of iniquity knows better how to profit by it, than a young
country newly corrupted. We are not a match for them in the line of
advantageous guilt, nor they for us on the principles which we bravely set
out with. Our first days were our days of honor. They have marked the
character of America wherever the story of her wars are told; and
convinced of this, we have nothing to do but wisely and unitedly to tread
the well known track. The progress of a war is often as ruinous to
individuals, as the issue of it is to a nation; and it is not only
necessary that our forces be such that we be conquerors in the end, but
that by timely exertions we be secure in the interim. The present campaign
will afford an opportunity which has never presented itself before, and
the preparations for it are equally necessary, whether Charleston stand or
fall. Suppose the first, it is in that case only a failure of the enemy,
not a defeat. All the conquest that a besieged town can hope for, is, not
to be conquered; and compelling an enemy to raise the siege, is to the
besieged a victory. But there must be a probability amounting almost to a
certainty, that would justify a garrison marching out to attack a retreat.
Therefore should Charleston not be taken, and the enemy abandon the siege,
every other part of the continent should prepare to meet them; and, on the
contrary, should it be taken, the same preparations are necessary to
balance the loss, and put ourselves in a position to co-operate with our
allies, immediately on their arrival.</p>
<p>We are not now fighting our battles alone, as we were in 1776; England,
from a malicious disposition to America, has not only not declared war
against France and Spain, but, the better to prosecute her passions here,
has afforded those powers no military object, and avoids them, to distress
us. She will suffer her West India islands to be overrun by France, and
her southern settlements to be taken by Spain, rather than quit the object
that gratifies her revenge. This conduct, on the part of Britain, has
pointed out the propriety of France sending a naval and land force to
co-operate with America on the spot. Their arrival cannot be very distant,
nor the ravages of the enemy long. The recruiting the army, and procuring
the supplies, are the two things most necessary to be accomplished, and a
capture of either of the enemy's divisions will restore to America peace
and plenty.</p>
<p>At a crisis, big, like the present, with expectation and events, the whole
country is called to unanimity and exertion. Not an ability ought now to
sleep, that can produce but a mite to the general good, nor even a whisper
to pass that militates against it. The necessity of the case, and the
importance of the consequences, admit no delay from a friend, no apology
from an enemy. To spare now, would be the height of extravagance, and to
consult present ease, would be to sacrifice it perhaps forever.</p>
<p>America, rich in patriotism and produce, can want neither men nor
supplies, when a serious necessity calls them forth. The slow operation of
taxes, owing to the extensiveness of collection, and their depreciated
value before they arrived in the treasury, have, in many instances, thrown
a burden upon government, which has been artfully interpreted by the enemy
into a general decline throughout the country. Yet this, inconvenient as
it may at first appear, is not only remediable, but may be turned to an
immediate advantage; for it makes no real difference, whether a certain
number of men, or company of militia (and in this country every man is a
militia-man), are directed by law to send a recruit at their own expense,
or whether a tax is laid on them for that purpose, and the man hired by
government afterwards. The first, if there is any difference, is both
cheapest and best, because it saves the expense which would attend
collecting it as a tax, and brings the man sooner into the field than the
modes of recruiting formerly used; and, on this principle, a law has been
passed in this state, for recruiting two men from each company of militia,
which will add upwards of a thousand to the force of the country.</p>
<p>But the flame which has broken forth in this city since the report from
New York, of the loss of Charleston, not only does honor to the place,
but, like the blaze of 1776, will kindle into action the scattered sparks
throughout America. The valor of a country may be learned by the bravery
of its soldiery, and the general cast of its inhabitants, but confidence
of success is best discovered by the active measures pursued by men of
property; and when the spirit of enterprise becomes so universal as to act
at once on all ranks of men, a war may then, and not till then, be styled
truly popular.</p>
<p>In 1776, the ardor of the enterprising part was considerably checked by
the real revolt of some, and the coolness of others. But in the present
case, there is a firmness in the substance and property of the country to
the public cause. An association has been entered into by the merchants,
tradesmen, and principal inhabitants of the city [Philadelphia], to
receive and support the new state money at the value of gold and silver; a
measure which, while it does them honor, will likewise contribute to their
interest, by rendering the operations of the campaign convenient and
effectual.</p>
<p>Nor has the spirit of exertion stopped here. A voluntary subscription is
likewise begun, to raise a fund of hard money, to be given as bounties, to
fill up the full quota of the Pennsylvania line. It has been the remark of
the enemy, that every thing in America has been done by the force of
government; but when she sees individuals throwing in their voluntary aid,
and facilitating the public measures in concert with the established
powers of the country, it will convince her that the cause of America
stands not on the will of a few but on the broad foundation of property
and popularity.</p>
<p>Thus aided and thus supported, disaffection will decline, and the withered
head of tyranny expire in America. The ravages of the enemy will be short
and limited, and like all their former ones, will produce a victory over
themselves.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.<br/></p>
<p>PHILADELPHIA, June 9, 1780.</p>
<p>P. S. At the time of writing this number of the Crisis, the loss of
Charleston, though believed by some, was more confidently disbelieved by
others. But there ought to be no longer a doubt upon the matter.
Charleston is gone, and I believe for the want of a sufficient supply of
provisions. The man that does not now feel for the honor of the best and
noblest cause that ever a country engaged in, and exert himself
accordingly, is no longer worthy of a peaceable residence among a people
determined to be free.</p>
<p>C. S.<br/>
<br/>
THE CRISIS EXTRAORDINARY<br/>
<br/>
ON THE SUBJECT OF TAXATION.<br/></p>
<p>IT IS impossible to sit down and think seriously on the affairs of
America, but the original principles upon which she resisted, and the glow
and ardor which they inspired, will occur like the undefaced remembrance
of a lovely scene. To trace over in imagination the purity of the cause,
the voluntary sacrifices that were made to support it, and all the various
turnings of the war in its defence, is at once both paying and receiving
respect. The principles deserve to be remembered, and to remember them
rightly is repossessing them. In this indulgence of generous recollection,
we become gainers by what we seem to give, and the more we bestow the
richer we become.</p>
<p>So extensively right was the ground on which America proceeded, that it
not only took in every just and liberal sentiment which could impress the
heart, but made it the direct interest of every class and order of men to
defend the country. The war, on the part of Britain, was originally a war
of covetousness. The sordid and not the splendid passions gave it being.
The fertile fields and prosperous infancy of America appeared to her as
mines for tributary wealth. She viewed the hive, and disregarding the
industry that had enriched it, thirsted for the honey. But in the present
stage of her affairs, the violence of temper is added to the rage of
avarice; and therefore, that which at the first setting out proceeded from
purity of principle and public interest, is now heightened by all the
obligations of necessity; for it requires but little knowledge of human
nature to discern what would be the consequence, were America again
reduced to the subjection of Britain. Uncontrolled power, in the hands of
an incensed, imperious, and rapacious conqueror, is an engine of dreadful
execution, and woe be to that country over which it can be exercised. The
names of Whig and Tory would then be sunk in the general term of rebel,
and the oppression, whatever it might be, would, with very few instances
of exception, light equally on all.</p>
<p>Britain did not go to war with America for the sake of dominion, because
she was then in possession; neither was it for the extension of trade and
commerce, because she had monopolized the whole, and the country had
yielded to it; neither was it to extinguish what she might call rebellion,
because before she began no resistance existed. It could then be from no
other motive than avarice, or a design of establishing, in the first
instance, the same taxes in America as are paid in England (which, as I
shall presently show, are above eleven times heavier than the taxes we now
pay for the present year, 1780) or, in the second instance, to confiscate
the whole property of America, in case of resistance and conquest of the
latter, of which she had then no doubt.</p>
<p>I shall now proceed to show what the taxes in England are, and what the
yearly expense of the present war is to her—what the taxes of this
country amount to, and what the annual expense of defending it effectually
will be to us; and shall endeavor concisely to point out the cause of our
difficulties, and the advantages on one side, and the consequences on the
other, in case we do, or do not, put ourselves in an effectual state of
defence. I mean to be open, candid, and sincere. I see a universal wish to
expel the enemy from the country, a murmuring because the war is not
carried on with more vigor, and my intention is to show, as shortly as
possible, both the reason and the remedy.</p>
<p>The number of souls in England (exclusive of Scotland and Ireland) is
seven millions,* and the number of souls in America is three millions.</p>
<p>* This is taking the highest number that the people of England have<br/>
been, or can be rated at.<br/></p>
<p>The amount of taxes in England (exclusive of Scotland and Ireland) was,
before the present war commenced, eleven millions six hundred and
forty-two thousand six hundred and fifty-three pounds sterling; which, on
an average, is no less a sum than one pound thirteen shillings and
three-pence sterling per head per annum, men, women, and children; besides
county taxes, taxes for the support of the poor, and a tenth of all the
produce of the earth for the support of the bishops and clergy.* Nearly
five millions of this sum went annually to pay the interest of the
national debt, contracted by former wars, and the remaining sum of six
millions six hundred and forty-two thousand six hundred pounds was applied
to defray the yearly expense of government, the peace establishment of the
army and navy, placemen, pensioners, etc.; consequently the whole of the
enormous taxes being thus appropriated, she had nothing to spare out of
them towards defraying the expenses of the present war or any other. Yet
had she not been in debt at the beginning of the war, as we were not, and,
like us, had only a land and not a naval war to carry on, her then revenue
of eleven millions and a half pounds sterling would have defrayed all her
annual expenses of war and government within each year. * The following is
taken from Dr. Price's state of the taxes of England.</p>
<p>An account of the money drawn from the public by taxes, annually, being
the medium of three years before the year 1776.</p>
<p>Amount of customs in England 2,528,275 L.<br/>
Amount of the excise in England 4,649,892<br/>
Land tax at 3s. 1,300,000<br/>
Land tax at 1s. in the pound 450,000<br/>
Salt duties 218,739<br/>
Duties on stamps, cards, dice, advertisements,<br/>
bonds, leases, indentures, newspapers,<br/>
almanacks, etc. 280,788<br/>
Duties on houses and windows 385,369<br/>
Post office, seizures, wine licences, hackney<br/>
coaches, etc. 250,000<br/>
Annual profits from lotteries 150,000<br/>
Expense of collecting the excise in England 297,887<br/>
Expense of collecting the customs in England 468,703<br/>
Interest of loans on the land tax at 4s. expenses<br/>
of collection, militia, etc. 250,000<br/>
Perquisites, etc. to custom-house officers, &c.<br/>
supposed 250,000<br/>
Expense of collecting the salt duties in England<br/>
10 1/2 per cent. 27,000<br/>
Bounties on fish exported 18,000<br/>
Expense of collecting the duties on stamps, cards,<br/>
advertisements, etc. at 5 and 1/4 per cent. 18,000<br/>
<br/>
Total 11,642,653 L.<br/></p>
<p>But this not being the case with her, she is obliged to borrow about ten
millions pounds sterling, yearly, to prosecute the war that she is now
engaged in, (this year she borrowed twelve) and lay on new taxes to
discharge the interest; allowing that the present war has cost her only
fifty millions sterling, the interest thereon, at five per cent., will be
two millions and an half; therefore the amount of her taxes now must be
fourteen millions, which on an average is no less than forty shillings
sterling, per head, men, women and children, throughout the nation. Now as
this expense of fifty millions was borrowed on the hopes of conquering
America, and as it was avarice which first induced her to commence the
war, how truly wretched and deplorable would the condition of this country
be, were she, by her own remissness, to suffer an enemy of such a
disposition, and so circumstanced, to reduce her to subjection.</p>
<p>I now proceed to the revenues of America.</p>
<p>I have already stated the number of souls in America to be three millions,
and by a calculation that I have made, which I have every reason to
believe is sufficiently correct, the whole expense of the war, and the
support of the several governments, may be defrayed for two million pounds
sterling annually; which, on an average, is thirteen shillings and four
pence per head, men, women, and children, and the peace establishment at
the end of the war will be but three quarters of a million, or five
shillings sterling per head. Now, throwing out of the question everything
of honor, principle, happiness, freedom, and reputation in the world, and
taking it up on the simple ground of interest, I put the following case:</p>
<p>Suppose Britain was to conquer America, and, as a conqueror, was to lay
her under no other conditions than to pay the same proportion towards her
annual revenue which the people of England pay: our share, in that case,
would be six million pounds sterling yearly. Can it then be a question,
whether it is best to raise two millions to defend the country, and govern
it ourselves, and only three quarters of a million afterwards, or pay six
millions to have it conquered, and let the enemy govern it?</p>
<p>Can it be supposed that conquerors would choose to put themselves in a
worse condition than what they granted to the conquered? In England, the
tax on rum is five shillings and one penny sterling per gallon, which is
one silver dollar and fourteen coppers. Now would it not be laughable to
imagine, that after the expense they have been at, they would let either
Whig or Tory drink it cheaper than themselves? Coffee, which is so
inconsiderable an article of consumption and support here, is there loaded
with a duty which makes the price between five and six shillings per
pound, and a penalty of fifty pounds sterling on any person detected in
roasting it in his own house. There is scarcely a necessary of life that
you can eat, drink, wear, or enjoy, that is not there loaded with a tax;
even the light from heaven is only permitted to shine into their dwellings
by paying eighteen pence sterling per window annually; and the humblest
drink of life, small beer, cannot there be purchased without a tax of
nearly two coppers per gallon, besides a heavy tax upon the malt, and
another on the hops before it is brewed, exclusive of a land-tax on the
earth which produces them. In short, the condition of that country, in
point of taxation, is so oppressive, the number of her poor so great, and
the extravagance and rapaciousness of the court so enormous, that, were
they to effect a conquest of America, it is then only that the distresses
of America would begin. Neither would it signify anything to a man whether
he be Whig or Tory. The people of England, and the ministry of that
country, know us by no such distinctions. What they want is clear, solid
revenue, and the modes which they would take to procure it, would operate
alike on all. Their manner of reasoning would be short, because they would
naturally infer, that if we were able to carry on a war of five or six
years against them, we were able to pay the same taxes which they do.</p>
<p>I have already stated that the expense of conducting the present war, and
the government of the several states, may be done for two millions
sterling, and the establishment in the time of peace, for three quarters
of a million.*</p>
<p>* I have made the calculations in sterling, because it is a rate<br/>
generally known in all the states, and because, likewise, it admits of<br/>
an easy comparison between our expenses to support the war, and those<br/>
of the enemy. Four silver dollars and a half is one pound sterling, and<br/>
three pence over.<br/></p>
<p>As to navy matters, they flourish so well, and are so well attended to by
individuals, that I think it consistent on every principle of real use and
economy, to turn the navy into hard money (keeping only three or four
packets) and apply it to the service of the army. We shall not have a ship
the less; the use of them, and the benefit from them, will be greatly
increased, and their expense saved. We are now allied with a formidable
naval power, from whom we derive the assistance of a navy. And the line in
which we can prosecute the war, so as to reduce the common enemy and
benefit the alliance most effectually, will be by attending closely to the
land service.</p>
<p>I estimate the charge of keeping up and maintaining an army, officering
them, and all expenses included, sufficient for the defence of the
country, to be equal to the expense of forty thousand men at thirty pounds
sterling per head, which is one million two hundred thousand pounds.</p>
<p>I likewise allow four hundred thousand pounds for continental expenses at
home and abroad.</p>
<p>And four hundred thousand pounds for the support of the several state
governments—the amount will then be:</p>
<p>For the army 1,200,000 L.<br/>
Continental expenses at home and abroad 400,000<br/>
Government of the several states 400,000<br/>
<br/>
Total 2,000,000 L.<br/></p>
<p>I take the proportion of this state, Pennsylvania, to be an eighth part of
the thirteen United States; the quota then for us to raise will be two
hundred and fifty thousand pounds sterling; two hundred thousand of which
will be our share for the support and pay of the army, and continental
expenses at home and abroad, and fifty thousand pounds for the support of
the state government.</p>
<p>In order to gain an idea of the proportion in which the raising such a sum
will fall, I make the following calculation:</p>
<p>Pennsylvania contains three hundred and seventy-five thousand inhabitants,
men, women and children; which is likewise an eighth of the number of
inhabitants of the whole United States: therefore, two hundred and fifty
thousand pounds sterling to be raised among three hundred and seventy-five
thousand persons, is, on an average, thirteen shillings and four pence per
head, per annum, or something more than one shilling sterling per month.
And our proportion of three quarters of a million for the government of
the country, in time of peace, will be ninety-three thousand seven hundred
and fifty pounds sterling; fifty thousand of which will be for the
government expenses of the state, and forty-three thousand seven hundred
and fifty pounds for continental expenses at home and abroad.</p>
<p>The peace establishment then will, on an average, be five shillings
sterling per head. Whereas, was England now to stop, and the war cease,
her peace establishment would continue the same as it is now, viz. forty
shillings per head; therefore was our taxes necessary for carrying on the
war, as much per head as hers now is, and the difference to be only
whether we should, at the end of the war, pay at the rate of five
shillings per head, or forty shillings per head, the case needs no
thinking of. But as we can securely defend and keep the country for one
third less than what our burden would be if it was conquered, and support
the governments afterwards for one eighth of what Britain would levy on
us, and could I find a miser whose heart never felt the emotion of a spark
of principle, even that man, uninfluenced by every love but the love of
money, and capable of no attachment but to his interest, would and must,
from the frugality which governs him, contribute to the defence of the
country, or he ceases to be a miser and becomes an idiot. But when we take
in with it every thing that can ornament mankind; when the line of our
interest becomes the line of our happiness; when all that can cheer and
animate the heart, when a sense of honor, fame, character, at home and
abroad, are interwoven not only with the security but the increase of
property, there exists not a man in America, unless he be an hired
emissary, who does not see that his good is connected with keeping up a
sufficient defence.</p>
<p>I do not imagine that an instance can be produced in the world, of a
country putting herself to such an amazing charge to conquer and enslave
another, as Britain has done. The sum is too great for her to think of
with any tolerable degree of temper; and when we consider the burden she
sustains, as well as the disposition she has shown, it would be the height
of folly in us to suppose that she would not reimburse herself by the most
rapid means, had she America once more within her power. With such an
oppression of expense, what would an empty conquest be to her! What relief
under such circumstances could she derive from a victory without a prize?
It was money, it was revenue she first went to war for, and nothing but
that would satisfy her. It is not the nature of avarice to be satisfied
with any thing else. Every passion that acts upon mankind has a peculiar
mode of operation. Many of them are temporary and fluctuating; they admit
of cessation and variety. But avarice is a fixed, uniform passion. It
neither abates of its vigor nor changes its object; and the reason why it
does not, is founded in the nature of things, for wealth has not a rival
where avarice is a ruling passion. One beauty may excel another, and
extinguish from the mind of man the pictured remembrance of a former one:
but wealth is the phoenix of avarice, and therefore it cannot seek a new
object, because there is not another in the world.</p>
<p>I now pass on to show the value of the present taxes, and compare them
with the annual expense; but this I shall preface with a few explanatory
remarks.</p>
<p>There are two distinct things which make the payment of taxes difficult;
the one is the large and real value of the sum to be paid, and the other
is the scarcity of the thing in which the payment is to be made; and
although these appear to be one and the same, they are in several
instances riot only different, but the difficulty springs from different
causes.</p>
<p>Suppose a tax to be laid equal to one half of what a man's yearly income
is, such a tax could not be paid, because the property could not be
spared; and on the other hand, suppose a very trifling tax was laid, to be
collected in pearls, such a tax likewise could not be paid, because they
could not be had. Now any person may see that these are distinct cases,
and the latter of them is a representation of our own.</p>
<p>That the difficulty cannot proceed from the former, that is, from the real
value or weight of the tax, is evident at the first view to any person who
will consider it.</p>
<p>The amount of the quota of taxes for this State for the year, 1780, (and
so in proportion for every other State,) is twenty millions of dollars,
which at seventy for one, is but sixty-four thousand two hundred and
eighty pounds three shillings sterling, and on an average, is no more than
three shillings and five pence sterling per head, per annum, per man,
woman and child, or threepence two-fifths per head per month. Now here is
a clear, positive fact, that cannot be contradicted, and which proves that
the difficulty cannot be in the weight of the tax, for in itself it is a
trifle, and far from being adequate to our quota of the expense of the
war. The quit-rents of one penny sterling per acre on only one half of the
state, come to upwards of fifty thousand pounds, which is almost as much
as all the taxes of the present year, and as those quit-rents made no part
of the taxes then paid, and are now discontinued, the quantity of money
drawn for public-service this year, exclusive of the militia fines, which
I shall take notice of in the process of this work, is less than what was
paid and payable in any year preceding the revolution, and since the last
war; what I mean is, that the quit-rents and taxes taken together came to
a larger sum then, than the present taxes without the quit-rents do now.</p>
<p>My intention by these arguments and calculations is to place the
difficulty to the right cause, and show that it does not proceed from the
weight or worth of the tax, but from the scarcity of the medium in which
it is paid; and to illustrate this point still further, I shall now show,
that if the tax of twenty millions of dollars was of four times the real
value it now is, or nearly so, which would be about two hundred and fifty
thousand pounds sterling, and would be our full quota, this sum would have
been raised with more ease, and have been less felt, than the present sum
of only sixty-four thousand two hundred and eighty pounds.</p>
<p>The convenience or inconvenience of paying a tax in money arises from the
quantity of money that can be spared out of trade.</p>
<p>When the emissions stopped, the continent was left in possession of two
hundred millions of dollars, perhaps as equally dispersed as it was
possible for trade to do it. And as no more was to be issued, the rise or
fall of prices could neither increase nor diminish the quantity. It
therefore remained the same through all the fluctuations of trade and
exchange.</p>
<p>Now had the exchange stood at twenty for one, which was the rate Congress
calculated upon when they arranged the quota of the several states, the
latter end of last year, trade would have been carried on for nearly four
times less money than it is now, and consequently the twenty millions
would have been spared with much greater ease, and when collected would
have been of almost four times the value that they now are. And on the
other hand, was the depreciation to be ninety or one hundred for one, the
quantity required for trade would be more than at sixty or seventy for
one, and though the value of them would be less, the difficulty of sparing
the money out of trade would be greater. And on these facts and arguments
I rest the matter, to prove that it is not the want of property, but the
scarcity of the medium by which the proportion of property for taxation is
to be measured out, that makes the embarrassment which we lie under. There
is not money enough, and, what is equally as true, the people will not let
there be money enough.</p>
<p>While I am on the subject of the currency, I shall offer one remark which
will appear true to everybody, and can be accounted for by nobody, which
is, that the better the times were, the worse the money grew; and the
worse the times were, the better the money stood. It never depreciated by
any advantage obtained by the enemy. The troubles of 1776, and the loss of
Philadelphia in 1777, made no sensible impression on it, and every one
knows that the surrender of Charleston did not produce the least
alteration in the rate of exchange, which, for long before, and for more
than three months after, stood at sixty for one. It seems as if the
certainty of its being our own, made us careless of its value, and that
the most distant thoughts of losing it made us hug it the closer, like
something we were loth to part with; or that we depreciate it for our
pastime, which, when called to seriousness by the enemy, we leave off to
renew again at our leisure. In short, our good luck seems to break us, and
our bad makes us whole.</p>
<p>Passing on from this digression, I shall now endeavor to bring into one
view the several parts which I have already stated, and form thereon some
propositions, and conclude.</p>
<p>I have placed before the reader, the average tax per head, paid by the
people of England; which is forty shillings sterling.</p>
<p>And I have shown the rate on an average per head, which will defray all
the expenses of the war to us, and support the several governments without
running the country into debt, which is thirteen shillings and four pence.</p>
<p>I have shown what the peace establishment may be conducted for, viz., an
eighth part of what it would be, if under the government of Britain.</p>
<p>And I have likewise shown what the average per head of the present taxes
is, namely, three shillings and fivepence sterling, or threepence
two-fifths per month; and that their whole yearly value, in sterling, is
only sixty-four thousand two hundred and eighty pounds. Whereas our quota,
to keep the payments equal with the expenses, is two hundred and fifty
thousand pounds. Consequently, there is a deficiency of one hundred and
eighty-five thousand seven hundred and twenty pounds, and the same
proportion of defect, according to the several quotas, happens in every
other state. And this defect is the cause why the army has been so
indifferently fed, clothed and paid. It is the cause, likewise, of the
nerveless state of the campaign, and the insecurity of the country. Now,
if a tax equal to thirteen and fourpence per head, will remove all these
difficulties, and make people secure in their homes, leave them to follow
the business of their stores and farms unmolested, and not only drive out
but keep out the enemy from the country; and if the neglect of raising
this sum will let them in, and produce the evils which might be prevented—on
which side, I ask, does the wisdom, interest and policy lie? Or, rather,
would it not be an insult to reason, to put the question? The sum, when
proportioned out according to the several abilities of the people, can
hurt no one, but an inroad from the enemy ruins hundreds of families.</p>
<p>Look at the destruction done in this city [Philadelphia]. The many houses
totally destroyed, and others damaged; the waste of fences in the country
round it, besides the plunder of furniture, forage, and provisions. I do
not suppose that half a million sterling would reinstate the sufferers;
and, does this, I ask, bear any proportion to the expense that would make
us secure? The damage, on an average, is at least ten pounds sterling per
head, which is as much as thirteen shillings and fourpence per head comes
to for fifteen years. The same has happened on the frontiers, and in the
Jerseys, New York, and other places where the enemy has been—Carolina
and Georgia are likewise suffering the same fate.</p>
<p>That the people generally do not understand the insufficiency of the taxes
to carry on the war, is evident, not only from common observation, but
from the construction of several petitions which were presented to the
Assembly of this state, against the recommendation of Congress of the 18th
of March last, for taking up and funding the present currency at forty to
one, and issuing new money in its stead. The prayer of the petition was,
that the currency might be appreciated by taxes (meaning the present
taxes) and that part of the taxes be applied to the support of the army,
if the army could not be otherwise supported. Now it could not have been
possible for such a petition to have been presented, had the petitioners
known, that so far from part of the taxes being sufficient for the support
of the whole of them falls three-fourths short of the year's expenses.</p>
<p>Before I proceed to propose methods by which a sufficiency of money may be
raised, I shall take a short view of the general state of the country.</p>
<p>Notwithstanding the weight of the war, the ravages of the enemy, and the
obstructions she has thrown in the way of trade and commerce, so soon does
a young country outgrow misfortune, that America has already surmounted
many that heavily oppressed her. For the first year or two of the war, we
were shut up within our ports, scarce venturing to look towards the ocean.
Now our rivers are beautified with large and valuable vessels, our stores
filled with merchandise, and the produce of the country has a ready
market, and an advantageous price. Gold and silver, that for a while
seemed to have retreated again within the bowels of the earth, have once
more risen into circulation, and every day adds new strength to trade,
commerce and agriculture. In a pamphlet, written by Sir John Dalrymple,
and dispersed in America in the year 1775, he asserted that two twenty-gun
ships, nay, says he, tenders of those ships, stationed between Albermarle
sound and Chesapeake bay, would shut up the trade of America for 600
miles. How little did Sir John Dalrymple know of the abilities of America!</p>
<p>While under the government of Britain, the trade of this country was
loaded with restrictions. It was only a few foreign ports which we were
allowed to sail to. Now it is otherwise; and allowing that the quantity of
trade is but half what it was before the war, the case must show the vast
advantage of an open trade, because the present quantity under her
restrictions could not support itself; from which I infer, that if half
the quantity without the restrictions can bear itself up nearly, if not
quite, as well as the whole when subject to them, how prosperous must the
condition of America be when the whole shall return open with all the
world. By the trade I do not mean the employment of a merchant only, but
the whole interest and business of the country taken collectively.</p>
<p>It is not so much my intention, by this publication, to propose particular
plans for raising money, as it is to show the necessity and the advantages
to be derived from it. My principal design is to form the disposition of
the people to the measures which I am fully persuaded it is their interest
and duty to adopt, and which need no other force to accomplish them than
the force of being felt. But as every hint may be useful, I shall throw
out a sketch, and leave others to make such improvements upon it as to
them may appear reasonable.</p>
<p>The annual sum wanted is two millions, and the average rate in which it
falls, is thirteen shillings and fourpence per head.</p>
<p>Suppose, then, that we raise half the sum and sixty thousand pounds over.
The average rate thereof will be seven shillings per head.</p>
<p>In this case we shall have half the supply that we want, and an annual
fund of sixty thousand pounds whereon to borrow the other million; because
sixty thousand pounds is the interest of a million at six per cent.; and
if at the end of another year we should be obliged, by the continuance of
the war, to borrow another million, the taxes will be increased to seven
shillings and sixpence; and thus for every million borrowed, an additional
tax, equal to sixpence per head, must be levied.</p>
<p>The sum to be raised next year will be one million and sixty thousand
pounds: one half of which I would propose should be raised by duties on
imported goods, and prize goods, and the other half by a tax on landed
property and houses, or such other means as each state may devise.</p>
<p>But as the duties on imports and prize goods must be the same in all the
states, therefore the rate per cent., or what other form the duty shall be
laid, must be ascertained and regulated by Congress, and ingrafted in that
form into the law of each state; and the monies arising therefrom carried
into the treasury of each state. The duties to be paid in gold or silver.</p>
<p>There are many reasons why a duty on imports is the most convenient duty
or tax that can be collected; one of which is, because the whole is
payable in a few places in a country, and it likewise operates with the
greatest ease and equality, because as every one pays in proportion to
what he consumes, so people in general consume in proportion to what they
can afford; and therefore the tax is regulated by the abilities which
every man supposes himself to have, or in other words, every man becomes
his own assessor, and pays by a little at a time, when it suits him to
buy. Besides, it is a tax which people may pay or let alone by not
consuming the articles; and though the alternative may have no influence
on their conduct, the power of choosing is an agreeable thing to the mind.
For my own part, it would be a satisfaction to me was there a duty on all
sorts of liquors during the war, as in my idea of things it would be an
addition to the pleasures of society to know, that when the health of the
army goes round, a few drops, from every glass becomes theirs. How often
have I heard an emphatical wish, almost accompanied by a tear, "Oh, that
our poor fellows in the field had some of this!" Why then need we suffer
under a fruitless sympathy, when there is a way to enjoy both the wish and
the entertainment at once.</p>
<p>But the great national policy of putting a duty upon imports is, that it
either keeps the foreign trade in our own hands, or draws something for
the defence of the country from every foreigner who participates in it
with us.</p>
<p>Thus much for the first half of the taxes, and as each state will best
devise means to raise the other half, I shall confine my remarks to the
resources of this state.</p>
<p>The quota, then, of this state, of one million and sixty thousand pounds,
will be one hundred and thirty-three thousand two hundred and fifty
pounds, the half of which is sixty-six thousand six hundred and
twenty-five pounds; and supposing one fourth part of Pennsylvania
inhabited, then a tax of one bushel of wheat on every twenty acres of
land, one with another, would produce the sum, and all the present taxes
to cease. Whereas, the tithes of the bishops and clergy in England,
exclusive of the taxes, are upwards of half a bushel of wheat on every
single acre of land, good and bad, throughout the nation.</p>
<p>In the former part of this paper, I mentioned the militia fines, but
reserved speaking of the matter, which I shall now do. The ground I shall
put it upon is, that two millions sterling a year will support a
sufficient army, and all the expenses of war and government, without
having recourse to the inconvenient method of continually calling men from
their employments, which, of all others, is the most expensive and the
least substantial. I consider the revenues created by taxes as the first
and principal thing, and fines only as secondary and accidental things. It
was not the intention of the militia law to apply the fines to anything
else but the support of the militia, neither do they produce any revenue
to the state, yet these fines amount to more than all the taxes: for
taking the muster-roll to be sixty thousand men, the fine on forty
thousand who may not attend, will be sixty thousand pounds sterling, and
those who muster, will give up a portion of time equal to half that sum,
and if the eight classes should be called within the year, and one third
turn out, the fine on the remaining forty thousand would amount to
seventy-two millions of dollars, besides the fifteen shillings on every
hundred pounds of property, and the charge of seven and a half per cent.
for collecting, in certain instances which, on the whole, would be upwards
of two hundred and fifty thousand pounds sterling.</p>
<p>Now if those very fines disable the country from raising a sufficient
revenue without producing an equivalent advantage, would it not be for the
ease and interest of all parties to increase the revenue, in the manner I
have proposed, or any better, if a better can be devised, and cease the
operation of the fines? I would still keep the militia as an organized
body of men, and should there be a real necessity to call them forth, pay
them out of the proper revenues of the state, and increase the taxes a
third or fourth per cent. on those who do not attend. My limits will not
allow me to go further into this matter, which I shall therefore close
with this remark; that fines are, of all modes of revenue, the most
unsuited to the minds of a free country. When a man pays a tax, he knows
that the public necessity requires it, and therefore feels a pride in
discharging his duty; but a fine seems an atonement for neglect of duty,
and of consequence is paid with discredit, and frequently levied with
severity.</p>
<p>I have now only one subject more to speak of, with which I shall conclude,
which is, the resolve of Congress of the 18th of March last, for taking up
and funding the present currency at forty for one, and issuing new money
in its stead.</p>
<p>Every one knows that I am not the flatterer of Congress, but in this
instance they are right; and if that measure is supported, the currency
will acquire a value, which, without it, it will not. But this is not all:
it will give relief to the finances until such time as they can be
properly arranged, and save the country from being immediately doubled
taxed under the present mode. In short, support that measure, and it will
support you.</p>
<p>I have now waded through a tedious course of difficult business, and over
an untrodden path. The subject, on every point in which it could be
viewed, was entangled with perplexities, and enveloped in obscurity, yet
such are the resources of America, that she wants nothing but system to
secure success.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.<br/></p>
<p>PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 4, 1780.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CRISIS X. ON THE KING OF ENGLAND'S SPEECH. </h2>
<p>OF all the innocent passions which actuate the human mind there is none
more universally prevalent than curiosity. It reaches all mankind, and in
matters which concern us, or concern us not, it alike provokes in us a
desire to know them.</p>
<p>Although the situation of America, superior to every effort to enslave
her, and daily rising to importance and opulence, has placed her above the
region of anxiety, it has still left her within the circle of curiosity;
and her fancy to see the speech of a man who had proudly threatened to
bring her to his feet, was visibly marked with that tranquil confidence
which cared nothing about its contents. It was inquired after with a
smile, read with a laugh, and dismissed with disdain.</p>
<p>But, as justice is due, even to an enemy, it is right to say, that the
speech is as well managed as the embarrassed condition of their affairs
could well admit of; and though hardly a line of it is true, except the
mournful story of Cornwallis, it may serve to amuse the deluded commons
and people of England, for whom it was calculated.</p>
<p>"The war," says the speech, "is still unhappily prolonged by that restless
ambition which first excited our enemies to commence it, and which still
continues to disappoint my earnest wishes and diligent exertions to
restore the public tranquillity."</p>
<p>How easy it is to abuse truth and language, when men, by habitual
wickedness, have learned to set justice at defiance. That the very man who
began the war, who with the most sullen insolence refused to answer, and
even to hear the humblest of all petitions, who has encouraged his
officers and his army in the most savage cruelties, and the most
scandalous plunderings, who has stirred up the Indians on one side, and
the negroes on the other, and invoked every aid of hell in his behalf,
should now, with an affected air of pity, turn the tables from himself,
and charge to another the wickedness that is his own, can only be equalled
by the baseness of the heart that spoke it.</p>
<p>To be nobly wrong is more manly than to be meanly right, is an expression
I once used on a former occasion, and it is equally applicable now. We
feel something like respect for consistency even in error. We lament the
virtue that is debauched into a vice, but the vice that affects a virtue
becomes the more detestable: and amongst the various assumptions of
character, which hypocrisy has taught, and men have practised, there is
none that raises a higher relish of disgust, than to see disappointed
inveteracy twisting itself, by the most visible falsehoods, into an
appearance of piety which it has no pretensions to.</p>
<p>"But I should not," continues the speech, "answer the trust committed to
the sovereign of a free people, nor make a suitable return to my subjects
for their constant, zealous, and affectionate attachment to my person,
family and government, if I consented to sacrifice, either to my own
desire of peace, or to their temporary ease and relief, those essential
rights and permanent interests, upon the maintenance and preservation of
which, the future strength and security of this country must principally
depend."</p>
<p>That the man whose ignorance and obstinacy first involved and still
continues the nation in the most hopeless and expensive of all wars,
should now meanly flatter them with the name of a free people, and make a
merit of his crime, under the disguise of their essential rights and
permanent interests, is something which disgraces even the character of
perverseness. Is he afraid they will send him to Hanover, or what does he
fear? Why is the sycophant thus added to the hypocrite, and the man who
pretends to govern, sunk into the humble and submissive memorialist?</p>
<p>What those essential rights and permanent interests are, on which the
future strength and security of England must principally depend, are not
so much as alluded to. They are words which impress nothing but the ear,
and are calculated only for the sound.</p>
<p>But if they have any reference to America, then do they amount to the
disgraceful confession, that England, who once assumed to be her
protectress, has now become her dependant. The British king and ministry
are constantly holding up the vast importance which America is of to
England, in order to allure the nation to carry on the war: now, whatever
ground there is for this idea, it ought to have operated as a reason for
not beginning it; and, therefore, they support their present measures to
their own disgrace, because the arguments which they now use, are a direct
reflection on their former policy.</p>
<p>"The favorable appearance of affairs," continues the speech, "in the East
Indies, and the safe arrival of the numerous commercial fleets of my
kingdom, must have given you satisfaction."</p>
<p>That things are not quite so bad every where as in America may be some
cause of consolation, but can be none for triumph. One broken leg is
better than two, but still it is not a source of joy: and let the
appearance of affairs in the East Indies be ever so favorable, they are
nevertheless worse than at first, without a prospect of their ever being
better. But the mournful story of Cornwallis was yet to be told, and it
was necessary to give it the softest introduction possible.</p>
<p>"But in the course of this year," continues the speech, "my assiduous
endeavors to guard the extensive dominions of my crown have not been
attended with success equal to the justice and uprightness of my views."—What
justice and uprightness there was in beginning a war with America, the
world will judge of, and the unequalled barbarity with which it has been
conducted, is not to be worn from the memory by the cant of snivelling
hypocrisy.</p>
<p>"And it is with great concern that I inform you that the events of war
have been very unfortunate to my arms in Virginia, having ended in the
loss of my forces in that province."—And our great concern is that
they are not all served in the same manner.</p>
<p>"No endeavors have been wanted on my part," says the speech, "to
extinguish that spirit of rebellion which our enemies have found means to
foment and maintain in the colonies; and to restore to my deluded subjects
in America that happy and prosperous condition which they formerly derived
from a due obedience to the laws."</p>
<p>The expression of deluded subjects is become so hacknied and contemptible,
and the more so when we see them making prisoners of whole armies at a
time, that the pride of not being laughed at would induce a man of common
sense to leave it off. But the most offensive falsehood in the paragraph
is the attributing the prosperity of America to a wrong cause. It was the
unremitted industry of the settlers and their descendants, the hard labor
and toil of persevering fortitude, that were the true causes of the
prosperity of America. The former tyranny of England served to people it,
and the virtue of the adventurers to improve it. Ask the man, who, with
his axe, has cleared a way in the wilderness, and now possesses an estate,
what made him rich, and he will tell you the labor of his hands, the sweat
of his brow, and the blessing of heaven. Let Britain but leave America to
herself and she asks no more. She has risen into greatness without the
knowledge and against the will of England, and has a right to the
unmolested enjoyment of her own created wealth.</p>
<p>"I will order," says the speech, "the estimates of the ensuing year to be
laid before you. I rely on your wisdom and public spirit for such supplies
as the circumstances of our affairs shall be found to require. Among the
many ill consequences which attend the continuation of the present war, I
most sincerely regret the additional burdens which it must unavoidably
bring upon my faithful subjects."</p>
<p>It is strange that a nation must run through such a labyrinth of trouble,
and expend such a mass of wealth to gain the wisdom which an hour's
reflection might have taught. The final superiority of America over every
attempt that an island might make to conquer her, was as naturally marked
in the constitution of things, as the future ability of a giant over a
dwarf is delineated in his features while an infant. How far providence,
to accomplish purposes which no human wisdom could foresee, permitted such
extraordinary errors, is still a secret in the womb of time, and must
remain so till futurity shall give it birth.</p>
<p>"In the prosecution of this great and important contest," says the speech,
"in which we are engaged, I retain a firm confidence in the protection of
divine providence, and a perfect conviction in the justice of my cause,
and I have no doubt, but, that by the concurrence and support of my
Parliament, by the valour of my fleets and armies, and by a vigorous,
animated, and united exertion of the faculties and resources of my people,
I shall be enabled to restore the blessings of a safe and honorable peace
to all my dominions."</p>
<p>The King of England is one of the readiest believers in the world. In the
beginning of the contest he passed an act to put America out of the
protection of the crown of England, and though providence, for seven years
together, has put him out of her protection, still the man has no doubt.
Like Pharaoh on the edge of the Red Sea, he sees not the plunge he is
making, and precipitately drives across the flood that is closing over his
head.</p>
<p>I think it is a reasonable supposition, that this part of the speech was
composed before the arrival of the news of the capture of Cornwallis: for
it certainly has no relation to their condition at the time it was spoken.
But, be this as it may, it is nothing to us. Our line is fixed. Our lot is
cast; and America, the child of fate, is arriving at maturity. We have
nothing to do but by a spirited and quick exertion, to stand prepared for
war or peace. Too great to yield, and too noble to insult; superior to
misfortune, and generous in success, let us untaintedly preserve the
character which we have gained, and show to future ages an example of
unequalled magnanimity. There is something in the cause and consequence of
America that has drawn on her the attention of all mankind. The world has
seen her brave. Her love of liberty; her ardour in supporting it; the
justice of her claims, and the constancy of her fortitude have won her the
esteem of Europe, and attached to her interest the first power in that
country.</p>
<p>Her situation now is such, that to whatever point, past, present or to
come, she casts her eyes, new matter rises to convince her that she is
right. In her conduct towards her enemy, no reproachful sentiment lurks in
secret. No sense of injustice is left upon the mind. Untainted with
ambition, and a stranger to revenge, her progress has been marked by
providence, and she, in every stage of the conflict, has blest her with
success.</p>
<p>But let not America wrap herself up in delusive hope and suppose the
business done. The least remissness in preparation, the least relaxation
in execution, will only serve to prolong the war, and increase expenses.
If our enemies can draw consolation from misfortune, and exert themselves
upon despair, how much more ought we, who are to win a continent by the
conquest, and have already an earnest of success?</p>
<p>Having, in the preceding part, made my remarks on the several matters
which the speech contains, I shall now make my remarks on what it does not
contain.</p>
<p>There is not a syllable in its respecting alliances. Either the injustice
of Britain is too glaring, or her condition too desperate, or both, for
any neighboring power to come to her support. In the beginning of the
contest, when she had only America to contend with, she hired assistance
from Hesse, and other smaller states of Germany, and for nearly three
years did America, young, raw, undisciplined and unprovided, stand against
the power of Britain, aided by twenty thousand foreign troops, and made a
complete conquest of one entire army. The remembrance of those things
ought to inspire us with confidence and greatness of mind, and carry us
through every remaining difficulty with content and cheerfulness. What are
the little sufferings of the present day, compared with the hardships that
are past? There was a time, when we had neither house nor home in safety;
when every hour was the hour of alarm and danger; when the mind, tortured
with anxiety, knew no repose, and every thing, but hope and fortitude, was
bidding us farewell.</p>
<p>It is of use to look back upon these things; to call to mind the times of
trouble and the scenes of complicated anguish that are past and gone. Then
every expense was cheap, compared with the dread of conquest and the
misery of submission. We did not stand debating upon trifles, or
contending about the necessary and unavoidable charges of defence. Every
one bore his lot of suffering, and looked forward to happier days, and
scenes of rest.</p>
<p>Perhaps one of the greatest dangers which any country can be exposed to,
arises from a kind of trifling which sometimes steals upon the mind, when
it supposes the danger past; and this unsafe situation marks at this time
the peculiar crisis of America. What would she once have given to have
known that her condition at this day should be what it now is? And yet we
do not seem to place a proper value upon it, nor vigorously pursue the
necessary measures to secure it. We know that we cannot be defended, nor
yet defend ourselves, without trouble and expense. We have no right to
expect it; neither ought we to look for it. We are a people, who, in our
situation, differ from all the world. We form one common floor of public
good, and, whatever is our charge, it is paid for our own interest and
upon our own account.</p>
<p>Misfortune and experience have now taught us system and method; and the
arrangements for carrying on the war are reduced to rule and order. The
quotas of the several states are ascertained, and I intend in a future
publication to show what they are, and the necessity as well as the
advantages of vigorously providing for them.</p>
<p>In the mean time, I shall conclude this paper with an instance of British
clemency, from Smollett's History of England, vol. xi., printed in London.
It will serve to show how dismal the situation of a conquered people is,
and that the only security is an effectual defence.</p>
<p>We all know that the Stuart family and the house of Hanover opposed each
other for the crown of England. The Stuart family stood first in the line
of succession, but the other was the most successful.</p>
<p>In July, 1745, Charles, the son of the exiled king, landed in Scotland,
collected a small force, at no time exceeding five or six thousand men,
and made some attempts to re-establish his claim. The late Duke of
Cumberland, uncle to the present King of England, was sent against him,
and on the 16th of April following, Charles was totally defeated at
Culloden, in Scotland. Success and power are the only situations in which
clemency can be shown, and those who are cruel, because they are
victorious, can with the same facility act any other degenerate character.</p>
<p>"Immediately after the decisive action at Culloden, the Duke of Cumberland
took possession of Inverness; where six and thirty deserters, convicted by
a court martial, were ordered to be executed: then he detached several
parties to ravage the country. One of these apprehended The Lady
Mackintosh, who was sent prisoner to Inverness, plundered her house, and
drove away her cattle, though her husband was actually in the service of
the government. The castle of Lord Lovat was destroyed. The French
prisoners were sent to Carlisle and Penrith: Kilmarnock, Balmerino,
Cromartie, and his son, The Lord Macleod, were conveyed by sea to London;
and those of an inferior rank were confined in different prisons. The
Marquis of Tullibardine, together with a brother of the Earl of Dunmore,
and Murray, the pretender's secretary, were seized and transported to the
Tower of London, to which the Earl of Traquaire had been committed on
suspicion; and the eldest son of Lord Lovat was imprisoned in the castle
of Edinburgh. In a word, all the jails in Great Britain, from the capital,
northwards, were filled with those unfortunate captives; and great numbers
of them were crowded together in the holds of ships, where they perished
in the most deplorable manner, for want of air and exercise. Some rebel
chiefs escaped in two French frigates that arrived on the coast of
Lochaber about the end of April, and engaged three vessels belonging to
his Britannic majesty, which they obliged to retire. Others embarked on
board a ship on the coast of Buchan, and were conveyed to Norway, from
whence they travelled to Sweden. In the month of May, the Duke of
Cumberland advanced with the army into the Highlands, as far as Fort
Augustus, where he encamped; and sent off detachments on all hands, to
hunt down the fugitives, and lay waste the country with fire and sword.
The castles of Glengary and Lochiel were plundered and burned; every
house, hut, or habitation, met with the same fate, without distinction;
and all the cattle and provision were carried off; the men were either
shot upon the mountains, like wild beasts, or put to death in cold blood,
without form of trial; the women, after having seen their husbands and
fathers murdered, were subjected to brutal violation, and then turned out
naked, with their children, to starve on the barren heaths. One whole
family was enclosed in a barn, and consumed to ashes. Those ministers of
vengeance were so alert in the execution of their office, that in a few
days there was neither house, cottage, man, nor beast, to be seen within
the compass of fifty miles; all was ruin, silence, and desolation."</p>
<p>I have here presented the reader with one of the most shocking instances
of cruelty ever practised, and I leave it, to rest on his mind, that he
may be fully impressed with a sense of the destruction he has escaped, in
case Britain had conquered America; and likewise, that he may see and feel
the necessity, as well for his own personal safety, as for the honor, the
interest, and happiness of the whole community, to omit or delay no one
preparation necessary to secure the ground which we so happily stand upon.</p>
<p>TO THE PEOPLE OF AMERICA<br/>
<br/>
On the expenses, arrangements and disbursements for<br/>
carrying on the war, and finishing it with honor<br/>
and advantage<br/></p>
<p>WHEN any necessity or occasion has pointed out the convenience of
addressing the public, I have never made it a consideration whether the
subject was popular or unpopular, but whether it was right or wrong; for
that which is right will become popular, and that which is wrong, though
by mistake it may obtain the cry or fashion of the day, will soon lose the
power of delusion, and sink into disesteem.</p>
<p>A remarkable instance of this happened in the case of Silas Deane; and I
mention this circumstance with the greater ease, because the poison of his
hypocrisy spread over the whole country, and every man, almost without
exception, thought me wrong in opposing him. The best friends I then had,
except Mr. [Henry] Laurens, stood at a distance, and this tribute, which
is due to his constancy, I pay to him with respect, and that the readier,
because he is not here to hear it. If it reaches him in his imprisonment,
it will afford him an agreeable reflection.</p>
<p>"As he rose like a rocket, he would fall like a stick," is a metaphor
which I applied to Mr. Deane, in the first piece which I published
respecting him, and he has exactly fulfilled the description. The credit
he so unjustly obtained from the public, he lost in almost as short a
time. The delusion perished as it fell, and he soon saw himself stripped
of popular support. His more intimate acquaintances began to doubt, and to
desert him long before he left America, and at his departure, he saw
himself the object of general suspicion. When he arrived in France, he
endeavored to effect by treason what he had failed to accomplish by fraud.
His plans, schemes and projects, together with his expectation of being
sent to Holland to negotiate a loan of money, had all miscarried. He then
began traducing and accusing America of every crime, which could injure
her reputation. "That she was a ruined country; that she only meant to
make a tool of France, to get what money she could out of her, and then to
leave her and accommodate with Britain." Of all which and much more,
Colonel Laurens and myself, when in France, informed Dr. Franklin, who had
not before heard of it. And to complete the character of traitor, he has,
by letters to his country since, some of which, in his own handwriting,
are now in the possession of Congress, used every expression and argument
in his power, to injure the reputation of France, and to advise America to
renounce her alliance, and surrender up her independence.* Thus in France
he abuses America, and in his letters to America he abuses France; and is
endeavoring to create disunion between two countries, by the same arts of
double-dealing by which he caused dissensions among the commissioners in
Paris, and distractions in America. But his life has been fraud, and his
character has been that of a plodding, plotting, cringing mercenary,
capable of any disguise that suited his purpose. His final detection has
very happily cleared up those mistakes, and removed that uneasiness, which
his unprincipled conduct occasioned. Every one now sees him in the same
light; for towards friends or enemies he acted with the same deception and
injustice, and his name, like that of Arnold, ought now to be forgotten
among us. As this is the first time that I have mentioned him since my
return from France, it is my intention that it shall be the last. From
this digression, which for several reasons I thought necessary to give, I
now proceed to the purport of my address.</p>
<p>* Mr. William Marshall, of this city [Philadelphia], formerly a<br/>
pilot, who had been taken at sea and carried to England, and got from<br/>
thence to France, brought over letters from Mr. Deane to America, one of<br/>
which was directed to "Robert Morris, Esq." Mr. Morris sent it unopened<br/>
to Congress, and advised Mr. Marshall to deliver the others there, which<br/>
he did. The letters were of the same purport with those which have been<br/>
already published under the signature of S. Deane, to which they had<br/>
frequent reference.<br/></p>
<p>I consider the war of America against Britain as the country's war, the
public's war, or the war of the people in their own behalf, for the
security of their natural rights, and the protection of their own
property. It is not the war of Congress, the war of the assemblies, or the
war of government in any line whatever. The country first, by mutual
compact, resolved to defend their rights and maintain their independence,
at the hazard of their lives and fortunes; they elected their
representatives, by whom they appointed their members of Congress, and
said, act you for us, and we will support you. This is the true ground and
principle of the war on the part of America, and, consequently, there
remains nothing to do, but for every one to fulfil his obligation.</p>
<p>It was next to impossible that a new country, engaged in a new
undertaking, could set off systematically right at first. She saw not the
extent of the struggle that she was involved in, neither could she avoid
the beginning. She supposed every step that she took, and every resolution
which she formed, would bring her enemy to reason and close the contest.
Those failing, she was forced into new measures; and these, like the
former, being fitted to her expectations, and failing in their turn, left
her continually unprovided, and without system. The enemy, likewise, was
induced to prosecute the war, from the temporary expedients we adopted for
carrying it on. We were continually expecting to see their credit
exhausted, and they were looking to see our currency fail; and thus,
between their watching us, and we them, the hopes of both have been
deceived, and the childishness of the expectation has served to increase
the expense.</p>
<p>Yet who, through this wilderness of error, has been to blame? Where is the
man who can say the fault, in part, has not been his? They were the
natural, unavoidable errors of the day. They were the errors of a whole
country, which nothing but experience could detect and time remove.
Neither could the circumstances of America admit of system, till either
the paper currency was fixed or laid aside. No calculation of a finance
could be made on a medium failing without reason, and fluctuating without
rule.</p>
<p>But there is one error which might have been prevented and was not; and as
it is not my custom to flatter, but to serve mankind, I will speak it
freely. It certainly was the duty of every assembly on the continent to
have known, at all times, what was the condition of its treasury, and to
have ascertained at every period of depreciation, how much the real worth
of the taxes fell short of their nominal value. This knowledge, which
might have been easily gained, in the time of it, would have enabled them
to have kept their constituents well informed, and this is one of the
greatest duties of representation. They ought to have studied and
calculated the expenses of the war, the quota of each state, and the
consequent proportion that would fall on each man's property for his
defence; and this must have easily shown to them, that a tax of one
hundred pounds could not be paid by a bushel of apples or an hundred of
flour, which was often the case two or three years ago. But instead of
this, which would have been plain and upright dealing, the little line of
temporary popularity, the feather of an hour's duration, was too much
pursued; and in this involved condition of things, every state, for the
want of a little thinking, or a little information, supposed that it
supported the whole expenses of the war, when in fact it fell, by the time
the tax was levied and collected, above three-fourths short of its own
quota.</p>
<p>Impressed with a sense of the danger to which the country was exposed by
this lax method of doing business, and the prevailing errors of the day, I
published, last October was a twelvemonth, the Crisis Extraordinary, on
the revenues of America, and the yearly expense of carrying on the war. My
estimation of the latter, together with the civil list of Congress, and
the civil list of the several states, was two million pounds sterling,
which is very nearly nine millions of dollars.</p>
<p>Since that time, Congress have gone into a calculation, and have estimated
the expenses of the War Department and the civil list of Congress
(exclusive of the civil list of the several governments) at eight millions
of dollars; and as the remaining million will be fully sufficient for the
civil list of the several states, the two calculations are exceedingly
near each other.</p>
<p>The sum of eight millions of dollars have called upon the states to
furnish, and their quotas are as follows, which I shall preface with the
resolution itself.</p>
<p>"By the United States in Congress assembled.<br/>
<br/>
"October 30, 1781.<br/></p>
<p>"Resolved, That the respective states be called upon to furnish the
treasury of the United States with their quotas of eight millions of
dollars, for the War Department and civil list for the ensuing year, to be
paid quarterly, in equal proportions, the first payment to be made on the
first day of April next.</p>
<p>"Resolved, That a committee, consisting of a member from each state, be
appointed to apportion to the several states the quota of the above sum.</p>
<p>"November 2d. The committee appointed to ascertain the proportions of the
several states of the monies to be raised for the expenses of the ensuing
year, report the following resolutions:</p>
<p>"That the sum of eight millions of dollars, as required to be raised by
the resolutions of the 30th of October last, be paid by the states in the
following proportion:</p>
<p>New Hampshire....... $ 373,598<br/>
Massachusetts....... 1,307,596<br/>
Rhode Island........ 216,684<br/>
Connecticut......... 747,196<br/>
New York............ 373,598<br/>
New Jersey.......... 485,679<br/>
Pennsylvania........ 1,120,794<br/>
Delaware............ 112,085<br/>
Maryland............ 933,996<br/>
Virginia............ 1,307,594<br/>
North Carolina...... 622,677<br/>
South Carolina...... 373,598<br/>
Georgia............. 24,905<br/>
<br/>
$8,000,000<br/></p>
<p>"Resolved, That it be recommended to the several states, to lay taxes for
raising their quotas of money for the United States, separate from those
laid for their own particular use."</p>
<p>On these resolutions I shall offer several remarks.</p>
<p>1st, On the sum itself, and the ability of the country.<br/>
2d, On the several quotas, and the nature of a union. And,<br/>
3d, On the manner of collection and expenditure.<br/></p>
<p>1st, On the sum itself, and the ability of the country. As I know my own
calculation is as low as possible, and as the sum called for by congress,
according to their calculation, agrees very nearly therewith, I am
sensible it cannot possibly be lower. Neither can it be done for that,
unless there is ready money to go to market with; and even in that case,
it is only by the utmost management and economy that it can be made to do.</p>
<p>By the accounts which were laid before the British Parliament last spring,
it appeared that the charge of only subsisting, that is, feeding their
army in America, cost annually four million pounds sterling, which is very
nearly eighteen millions of dollars. Now if, for eight millions, we can
feed, clothe, arm, provide for, and pay an army sufficient for our
defence, the very comparison shows that the money must be well laid out.</p>
<p>It may be of some use, either in debate or conversation, to attend to the
progress of the expenses of an army, because it will enable us to see on
what part any deficiency will fall.</p>
<p>The first thing is, to feed them and prepare for the sick.</p>
<p><i>Second</i>, to clothe them.<br/>
<i>Third</i>, to arm and furnish them.<br/>
<i>Fourth</i>, to provide means for removing them from place to place. And,<br/>
<i>Fifth</i>, to pay them.<br/></p>
<p>The first and second are absolutely necessary to them as men. The third
and fourth are equally as necessary to them as an army. And the fifth is
their just due. Now if the sum which shall be raised should fall short,
either by the several acts of the states for raising it, or by the manner
of collecting it, the deficiency will fall on the fifth head, the
soldiers' pay, which would be defrauding them, and eternally disgracing
ourselves. It would be a blot on the councils, the country, and the
revolution of America, and a man would hereafter be ashamed to own that he
had any hand in it.</p>
<p>But if the deficiency should be still shorter, it would next fall on the
fourth head, the means of removing the army from place to place; and, in
this case, the army must either stand still where it can be of no use, or
seize on horses, carts, wagons, or any means of transportation which it
can lay hold of; and in this instance the country suffers. In short, every
attempt to do a thing for less than it can he done for, is sure to become
at last both a loss and a dishonor.</p>
<p>But the country cannot bear it, say some. This has been the most expensive
doctrine that ever was held out, and cost America millions of money for
nothing. Can the country bear to be overrun, ravaged, and ruined by an
enemy? This will immediately follow where defence is wanting, and defence
will ever be wanting, where sufficient revenues are not provided. But this
is only one part of the folly. The second is, that when the danger comes,
invited in part by our not preparing against it, we have been obliged, in
a number of instances, to expend double the sums to do that which at first
might have been done for half the money. But this is not all. A third
mischief has been, that grain of all sorts, flour, beef fodder, horses,
carts, wagons, or whatever was absolutely or immediately wanted, have been
taken without pay. Now, I ask, why was all this done, but from that
extremely weak and expensive doctrine, that the country could not bear it?
That is, that she could not bear, in the first instance, that which would
have saved her twice as much at last; or, in proverbial language, that she
could not bear to pay a penny to save a pound; the consequence of which
has been, that she has paid a pound for a penny. Why are there so many
unpaid certificates in almost every man's hands, but from the parsimony of
not providing sufficient revenues? Besides, the doctrine contradicts
itself; because, if the whole country cannot bear it, how is it possible
that a part should? And yet this has been the case: for those things have
been had; and they must be had; but the misfortune is, that they have been
obtained in a very unequal manner, and upon expensive credit, whereas,
with ready money, they might have been purchased for half the price, and
nobody distressed.</p>
<p>But there is another thought which ought to strike us, which is, how is
the army to bear the want of food, clothing and other necessaries? The man
who is at home, can turn himself a thousand ways, and find as many means
of ease, convenience or relief: but a soldier's life admits of none of
those: their wants cannot be supplied from themselves: for an army, though
it is the defence of a state, is at the same time the child of a country,
or must be provided for in every thing.</p>
<p>And lastly, the doctrine is false. There are not three millions of people
in any part of the universe, who live so well, or have such a fund of
ability, as in America. The income of a common laborer, who is
industrious, is equal to that of the generality of tradesmen in England.
In the mercantile line, I have not heard of one who could be said to be a
bankrupt since the war began, and in England they have been without
number. In America almost every farmer lives on his own lands, and in
England not one in a hundred does. In short, it seems as if the poverty of
that country had made them furious, and they were determined to risk all
to recover all.</p>
<p>Yet, notwithstanding those advantages on the part of America, true it is,
that had it not been for the operation of taxes for our necessary defence,
we had sunk into a state of sloth and poverty: for there was more wealth
lost by neglecting to till the earth in the years 1776, '77, and '78, than
the quota of taxes amounts to. That which is lost by neglect of this kind,
is lost for ever: whereas that which is paid, and continues in the
country, returns to us again; and at the same time that it provides us
with defence, it operates not only as a spur, but as a premium to our
industry.</p>
<p>I shall now proceed to the second head, viz., on the several quotas, and
the nature of a union.</p>
<p>There was a time when America had no other bond of union, than that of
common interest and affection. The whole country flew to the relief of
Boston, and, making her cause, their own, participated in her cares and
administered to her wants. The fate of war, since that day, has carried
the calamity in a ten-fold proportion to the southward; but in the mean
time the union has been strengthened by a legal compact of the states,
jointly and severally ratified, and that which before was choice, or the
duty of affection, is now likewise the duty of legal obligation.</p>
<p>The union of America is the foundation-stone of her independence; the rock
on which it is built; and is something so sacred in her constitution, that
we ought to watch every word we speak, and every thought we think, that we
injure it not, even by mistake. When a multitude, extended, or rather
scattered, over a continent in the manner we were, mutually agree to form
one common centre whereon the whole shall move to accomplish a particular
purpose, all parts must act together and alike, or act not at all, and a
stoppage in any one is a stoppage of the whole, at least for a time.</p>
<p>Thus the several states have sent representatives to assemble together in
Congress, and they have empowered that body, which thus becomes their
centre, and are no other than themselves in representation, to conduct and
manage the war, while their constituents at home attend to the domestic
cares of the country, their internal legislation, their farms, professions
or employments, for it is only by reducing complicated things to method
and orderly connection that they can be understood with advantage, or
pursued with success. Congress, by virtue of this delegation, estimates
the expense, and apportions it out to the several parts of the empire
according to their several abilities; and here the debate must end,
because each state has already had its voice, and the matter has undergone
its whole portion of argument, and can no more be altered by any
particular state, than a law of any state, after it has passed, can be
altered by any individual. For with respect to those things which
immediately concern the union, and for which the union was purposely
established, and is intended to secure, each state is to the United States
what each individual is to the state he lives in. And it is on this grand
point, this movement upon one centre, that our existence as a nation, our
happiness as a people, and our safety as individuals, depend.</p>
<p>It may happen that some state or other may be somewhat over or under
rated, but this cannot be much. The experience which has been had upon the
matter, has nearly ascertained their several abilities. But even in this
case, it can only admit of an appeal to the United States, but cannot
authorise any state to make the alteration itself, any more than our
internal government can admit an individual to do so in the case of an act
of assembly; for if one state can do it, then may another do the same, and
the instant this is done the whole is undone.</p>
<p>Neither is it supposable that any single state can be a judge of all the
comparative reasons which may influence the collective body in arranging
the quotas of the continent. The circumstances of the several states are
frequently varying, occasioned by the accidents of war and commerce, and
it will often fall upon some to help others, rather beyond what their
exact proportion at another time might be; but even this assistance is as
naturally and politically included in the idea of a union as that of any
particular assigned proportion; because we know not whose turn it may be
next to want assistance, for which reason that state is the wisest which
sets the best example.</p>
<p>Though in matters of bounden duty and reciprocal affection, it is rather a
degeneracy from the honesty and ardor of the heart to admit any thing
selfish to partake in the government of our conduct, yet in cases where
our duty, our affections, and our interest all coincide, it may be of some
use to observe their union. The United States will become heir to an
extensive quantity of vacant land, and their several titles to shares and
quotas thereof, will naturally be adjusted according to their relative
quotas, during the war, exclusive of that inability which may
unfortunately arise to any state by the enemy's holding possession of a
part; but as this is a cold matter of interest, I pass it by, and proceed
to my third head, viz., on the manner of collection and expenditure.</p>
<p>It has been our error, as well as our misfortune, to blend the affairs of
each state, especially in money matters, with those of the United States;
whereas it is our case, convenience and interest, to keep them separate.
The expenses of the United States for carrying on the war, and the
expenses of each state for its own domestic government, are distinct
things, and to involve them is a source of perplexity and a cloak for
fraud. I love method, because I see and am convinced of its beauty and
advantage. It is that which makes all business easy and understood, and
without which, everything becomes embarrassed and difficult.</p>
<p>There are certain powers which the people of each state have delegated to
their legislative and executive bodies, and there are other powers which
the people of every state have delegated to Congress, among which is that
of conducting the war, and, consequently, of managing the expenses
attending it; for how else can that be managed, which concerns every
state, but by a delegation from each? When a state has furnished its
quota, it has an undoubted right to know how it has been applied, and it
is as much the duty of Congress to inform the state of the one, as it is
the duty of the state to provide the other.</p>
<p>In the resolution of Congress already recited, it is recommended to the
several states to lay taxes for raising their quotas of money for the
United States, separate from those laid for their own particular use.</p>
<p>This is a most necessary point to be observed, and the distinction should
follow all the way through. They should be levied, paid and collected,
separately, and kept separate in every instance. Neither have the civil
officers of any state, nor the government of that state, the least right
to touch that money which the people pay for the support of their army and
the war, any more than Congress has to touch that which each state raises
for its own use.</p>
<p>This distinction will naturally be followed by another. It will occasion
every state to examine nicely into the expenses of its civil list, and to
regulate, reduce, and bring it into better order than it has hitherto
been; because the money for that purpose must be raised apart, and
accounted for to the public separately. But while the, monies of both were
blended, the necessary nicety was not observed, and the poor soldier, who
ought to have been the first, was the last who was thought of.</p>
<p>Another convenience will be, that the people, by paying the taxes
separately, will know what they are for; and will likewise know that those
which are for the defence of the country will cease with the war, or soon
after. For although, as I have before observed, the war is their own, and
for the support of their own rights and the protection of their own
property, yet they have the same right to know, that they have to pay, and
it is the want of not knowing that is often the cause of dissatisfaction.</p>
<p>This regulation of keeping the taxes separate has given rise to a
regulation in the office of finance, by which it is directed:</p>
<p>"That the receivers shall, at the end of every month, make out an exact
account of the monies received by them respectively, during such month,
specifying therein the names of the persons from whom the same shall have
been received, the dates and the sums; which account they shall
respectively cause to be published in one of the newspapers of the state;
to the end that every citizen may know how much of the monies collected
from him, in taxes, is transmitted to the treasury of the United States
for the support of the war; and also, that it may be known what monies
have been at the order of the superintendent of finance. It being proper
and necessary, that, in a free country, the people should be as fully
informed of the administration of their affairs as the nature of things
will admit."</p>
<p>It is an agreeable thing to see a spirit of order and economy taking
place, after such a series of errors and difficulties. A government or an
administration, who means and acts honestly, has nothing to fear, and
consequently has nothing to conceal; and it would be of use if a monthly
or quarterly account was to be published, as well of the expenditures as
of the receipts. Eight millions of dollars must be husbanded with an
exceeding deal of care to make it do, and, therefore, as the management
must be reputable, the publication would be serviceable.</p>
<p>I have heard of petitions which have been presented to the assembly of
this state (and probably the same may have happened in other states)
praying to have the taxes lowered. Now the only way to keep taxes low is,
for the United States to have ready money to go to market with: and though
the taxes to be raised for the present year will fall heavy, and there
will naturally be some difficulty in paying them, yet the difficulty, in
proportion as money spreads about the country, will every day grow less,
and in the end we shall save some millions of dollars by it. We see what a
bitter, revengeful enemy we have to deal with, and any expense is cheap
compared to their merciless paw. We have seen the unfortunate Carolineans
hunted like partridges on the mountains, and it is only by providing means
for our defence, that we shall be kept from the same condition. When we
think or talk about taxes, we ought to recollect that we lie down in peace
and sleep in safety; that we can follow our farms or stores or other
occupations, in prosperous tranquillity; and that these inestimable
blessings are procured to us by the taxes that we pay. In this view, our
taxes are properly our insurance money; they are what we pay to be made
safe, and, in strict policy, are the best money we can lay out.</p>
<p>It was my intention to offer some remarks on the impost law of five per
cent. recommended by Congress, and to be established as a fund for the
payment of the loan-office certificates, and other debts of the United
States; but I have already extended my piece beyond my intention. And as
this fund will make our system of finance complete, and is strictly just,
and consequently requires nothing but honesty to do it, there needs but
little to be said upon it.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.<br/></p>
<p>PHILADELPHIA, March 5, 1782.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CRISIS. XI. ON THE PRESENT STATE OF NEWS. </h2>
<p>SINCE the arrival of two, if not three packets in quick succession, at New
York, from England, a variety of unconnected news has circulated through
the country, and afforded as great a variety of speculation.</p>
<p>That something is the matter in the cabinet and councils of our enemies,
on the other side of the water, is certain—that they have run their
length of madness, and are under the necessity of changing their measures
may easily be seen into; but to what this change of measures may amount,
or how far it may correspond with our interest, happiness and duty, is yet
uncertain; and from what we have hitherto experienced, we have too much
reason to suspect them in every thing. I do not address this publication
so much to the people of America as to the British ministry, whoever they
may be, for if it is their intention to promote any kind of negotiation,
it is proper they should know beforehand, that the United States have as
much honor as bravery; and that they are no more to be seduced from their
alliance than their allegiance; that their line of politics is formed and
not dependent, like that of their enemy, on chance and accident. On our
part, in order to know, at any time, what the British government will do,
we have only to find out what they ought not to do, and this last will be
their conduct. Forever changing and forever wrong; too distant from
America to improve in circumstances, and too unwise to foresee them;
scheming without principle, and executing without probability, their whole
line of management has hitherto been blunder and baseness. Every campaign
has added to their loss, and every year to their disgrace; till unable to
go on, and ashamed to go back, their politics have come to a halt, and all
their fine prospects to a halter.</p>
<p>Could our affections forgive, or humanity forget the wounds of an injured
country—we might, under the influence of a momentary oblivion, stand
still and laugh. But they are engraven where no amusement can conceal
them, and of a kind for which there is no recompense. Can ye restore to us
the beloved dead? Can ye say to the grave, give up the murdered? Can ye
obliterate from our memories those who are no more? Think not then to
tamper with our feelings by an insidious contrivance, nor suffocate our
humanity by seducing us to dishonor.</p>
<p>In March 1780, I published part of the Crisis, No. VIII., in the
newspapers, but did not conclude it in the following papers, and the
remainder has lain by me till the present day. There appeared about that
time some disposition in the British cabinet to cease the further
prosecution of the war, and as I had formed my opinion that whenever such
a design should take place, it would be accompanied by a dishonorable
proposition to America, respecting France, I had suppressed the remainder
of that number, not to expose the baseness of any such proposition. But
the arrival of the next news from England, declared her determination to
go on with the war, and consequently as the political object I had then in
view was not become a subject, it was unnecessary in me to bring it
forward, which is the reason it was never published. The matter which I
allude to in the unpublished part, I shall now make a quotation of, and
apply it as the more enlarged state of things, at this day, shall make
convenient or necessary. It was as follows:</p>
<p>"By the speeches which have appeared from the British Parliament, it is
easy to perceive to what impolitic and imprudent excesses their passions
and prejudices have, in every instance, carried them during the present
war. Provoked at the upright and honorable treaty between America and
France, they imagined that nothing more was necessary to be done to
prevent its final ratification, than to promise, through the agency of
their commissioners (Carlisle, Eden, and Johnstone) a repeal of their once
offensive acts of Parliament. The vanity of the conceit, was as
unpardonable as the experiment was impolitic. And so convinced am I of
their wrong ideas of America, that I shall not wonder, if, in their last
stage of political frenzy, they propose to her to break her alliance with
France, and enter into one with them. Such a proposition, should it ever
be made, and it has been already more than once hinted at in Parliament,
would discover such a disposition to perfidiousness, and such disregard of
honor and morals, as would add the finishing vice to national corruption.—I
do not mention this to put America on the watch, but to put England on her
guard, that she do not, in the looseness of her heart, envelop in disgrace
every fragment of reputation."—Thus far the quotation.</p>
<p>By the complection of some part of the news which has transpired through
the New York papers, it seems probable that this insidious era in the
British politics is beginning to make its appearance. I wish it may not;
for that which is a disgrace to human nature, throws something of a shade
over all the human character, and each individual feels his share of the
wound that is given to the whole. The policy of Britain has ever been to
divide America in some way or other. In the beginning of the dispute, she
practised every art to prevent or destroy the union of the states, well
knowing that could she once get them to stand singly, she could conquer
them unconditionally. Failing in this project in America, she renewed it
in Europe; and, after the alliance had taken place, she made secret offers
to France to induce her to give up America; and what is still more
extraordinary, she at the same time made propositions to Dr. Franklin,
then in Paris, the very court to which she was secretly applying, to draw
off America from France. But this is not all. On the 14th of September,
1778, the British court, through their secretary, Lord Weymouth, made
application to the Marquis d'Almadovar, the Spanish ambassador at London,
to "ask the mediation," for these were the words, of the court of Spain,
for the purpose of negotiating a peace with France, leaving America (as I
shall hereafter show) out of the question. Spain readily offered her
mediation, and likewise the city of Madrid as the place of conference, but
withal, proposed, that the United States of America should be invited to
the treaty, and considered as independent during the time the business was
negotiating. But this was not the view of England. She wanted to draw
France from the war, that she might uninterruptedly pour out all her force
and fury upon America; and being disappointed in this plan, as well
through the open and generous conduct of Spain, as the determination of
France, she refused the mediation which she had solicited. I shall now
give some extracts from the justifying memorial of the Spanish court, in
which she has set the conduct and character of Britain, with respect to
America, in a clear and striking point of light.</p>
<p>The memorial, speaking of the refusal of the British court to meet in
conference with commissioners from the United States, who were to be
considered as independent during the time of the conference, says,</p>
<p>"It is a thing very extraordinary and even ridiculous, that the court of
London, who treats the colonies as independent, not only in acting, but of
right, during the war, should have a repugnance to treat them as such only
in acting during a truce, or suspension of hostilities. The convention of
Saratoga; the reputing General Burgoyne as a lawful prisoner, in order to
suspend his trial; the exchange and liberation of other prisoners made
from the colonies; the having named commissioners to go and supplicate the
Americans, at their own doors, request peace of them, and treat with them
and the Congress: and, finally, by a thousand other acts of this sort,
authorized by the court of London, which have been, and are true signs of
the acknowledgment of their independence.</p>
<p>"In aggravation of all the foregoing, at the same time the British cabinet
answered the King of Spain in the terms already mentioned, they were
insinuating themselves at the court of France by means of secret
emissaries, and making very great offers to her, to abandon the colonies
and make peace with England. But there is yet more; for at this same time
the English ministry were treating, by means of another certain emissary,
with Dr. Franklin, minister plenipotentiary from the colonies, residing at
Paris, to whom they made various proposals to disunite them from France,
and accommodate matters with England.</p>
<p>"From what has been observed, it evidently follows, that the whole of the
British politics was, to disunite the two courts of Paris and Madrid, by
means of the suggestions and offers which she separately made to them; and
also to separate the colonies from their treaties and engagements entered
into with France, and induce them to arm against the house of Bourbon, or
more probably to oppress them when they found, from breaking their
engagements, that they stood alone and without protection.</p>
<p>"This, therefore, is the net they laid for the American states; that is to
say, to tempt them with flattering and very magnificent promises to come
to an accommodation with them, exclusive of any intervention of Spain or
France, that the British ministry might always remain the arbiters of the
fate of the colonies. But the Catholic king (the King of Spain) faithful
on the one part of the engagements which bind him to the Most Christian
king (the King of France) his nephew; just and upright on the other, to
his own subjects, whom he ought to protect and guard against so many
insults; and finally, full of humanity and compassion for the Americans
and other individuals who suffer in the present war; he is determined to
pursue and prosecute it, and to make all the efforts in his power, until
he can obtain a solid and permanent peace, with full and satisfactory
securities that it shall be observed."</p>
<p>Thus far the memorial; a translation of which into English, may be seen in
full, under the head of State Papers, in the Annual Register, for 1779.</p>
<p>The extracts I have here given, serve to show the various endeavors and
contrivances of the enemy, to draw France from her connection with
America, and to prevail on her to make a separate peace with England,
leaving America totally out of the question, and at the mercy of a
merciless, unprincipled enemy. The opinion, likewise, which Spain has
formed of the British cabinet's character for meanness and perfidiousness,
is so exactly the opinion of America respecting it, that the memorial, in
this instance, contains our own statements and language; for people,
however remote, who think alike, will unavoidably speak alike.</p>
<p>Thus we see the insidious use which Britain endeavored to make of the
propositions of peace under the mediation of Spain. I shall now proceed to
the second proposition under the mediation of the Emperor of Germany and
the Empress of Russia; the general outline of which was, that a congress
of the several powers at war should meet at Vienna, in 1781, to settle
preliminaries of peace. I could wish myself at liberty to make use of all
the information which I am possessed of on this subject, but as there is a
delicacy in the matter, I do not conceive it prudent, at least at present,
to make references and quotations in the same manner as I have done with
respect to the mediation of Spain, who published the whole proceedings
herself; and therefore, what comes from me, on this part of the business,
must rest on my own credit with the public, assuring them, that when the
whole proceedings, relative to the proposed Congress of Vienna shall
appear, they will find my account not only true, but studiously moderate.</p>
<p>We know at the time this mediation was on the carpet, the expectation of
the British king and ministry ran high with respect to the conquest of
America. The English packet which was taken with the mail on board, and
carried into l'Orient, in France, contained letters from Lord G. Germaine
to Sir Henry Clinton, which expressed in the fullest terms the ministerial
idea of a total conquest. Copies of those letters were sent to congress
and published in the newspapers of last year. Colonel [John] Laurens
brought over the originals, some of which, signed in the handwriting of
the then secretary, Germaine, are now in my possession.</p>
<p>Filled with these high ideas, nothing could be more insolent towards
America than the language of the British court on the proposed mediation.
A peace with France and Spain she anxiously solicited; but America, as
before, was to be left to her mercy, neither would she hear any
proposition for admitting an agent from the United States into the
congress of Vienna.</p>
<p>On the other hand, France, with an open, noble and manly determination,
and a fidelity of a good ally, would hear no proposition for a separate
peace, nor even meet in congress at Vienna, without an agent from America:
and likewise that the independent character of the United States,
represented by the agent, should be fully and unequivocally defined and
settled before any conference should be entered on. The reasoning of the
court of France on the several propositions of the two imperial courts,
which relate to us, is rather in the style of an American than an ally,
and she advocated the cause of America as if she had been America herself.—Thus
the second mediation, like the first, proved ineffectual. But since that
time, a reverse of fortune has overtaken the British arms, and all their
high expectations are dashed to the ground. The noble exertions to the
southward under General [Nathaniel] Greene; the successful operations of
the allied arms in the Chesapeake; the loss of most of their islands in
the West Indies, and Minorca in the Mediterranean; the persevering spirit
of Spain against Gibraltar; the expected capture of Jamaica; the failure
of making a separate peace with Holland, and the expense of an hundred
millions sterling, by which all these fine losses were obtained, have read
them a loud lesson of disgraceful misfortune and necessity has called on
them to change their ground.</p>
<p>In this situation of confusion and despair, their present councils have no
fixed character. It is now the hurricane months of British politics. Every
day seems to have a storm of its own, and they are scudding under the bare
poles of hope. Beaten, but not humble; condemned, but not penitent; they
act like men trembling at fate and catching at a straw. From this
convulsion, in the entrails of their politics, it is more than probable,
that the mountain groaning in labor, will bring forth a mouse, as to its
size, and a monster in its make. They will try on America the same
insidious arts they tried on France and Spain.</p>
<p>We sometimes experience sensations to which language is not equal. The
conception is too bulky to be born alive, and in the torture of thinking,
we stand dumb. Our feelings, imprisoned by their magnitude, find no way
out—and, in the struggle of expression, every finger tries to be a
tongue. The machinery of the body seems too little for the mind, and we
look about for helps to show our thoughts by. Such must be the sensation
of America, whenever Britain, teeming with corruption, shall propose to
her to sacrifice her faith.</p>
<p>But, exclusive of the wickedness, there is a personal offence contained in
every such attempt. It is calling us villains: for no man asks the other
to act the villain unless he believes him inclined to be one. No man
attempts to seduce the truly honest woman. It is the supposed looseness of
her mind that starts the thoughts of seduction, and he who offers it calls
her a prostitute. Our pride is always hurt by the same propositions which
offend our principles; for when we are shocked at the crime, we are
wounded by the suspicion of our compliance.</p>
<p>Could I convey a thought that might serve to regulate the public mind, I
would not make the interest of the alliance the basis of defending it. All
the world are moved by interest, and it affords them nothing to boast of.
But I would go a step higher, and defend it on the ground of honor and
principle. That our public affairs have flourished under the alliance—that
it was wisely made, and has been nobly executed—that by its
assistance we are enabled to preserve our country from conquest, and expel
those who sought our destruction—that it is our true interest to
maintain it unimpaired, and that while we do so no enemy can conquer us,
are matters which experience has taught us, and the common good of
ourselves, abstracted from principles of faith and honor, would lead us to
maintain the connection.</p>
<p>But over and above the mere letter of the alliance, we have been nobly and
generously treated, and have had the same respect and attention paid to
us, as if we had been an old established country. To oblige and be obliged
is fair work among mankind, and we want an opportunity of showing to the
world that we are a people sensible of kindness and worthy of confidence.
Character is to us, in our present circumstances, of more importance than
interest. We are a young nation, just stepping upon the stage of public
life, and the eye of the world is upon us to see how we act. We have an
enemy who is watching to destroy our reputation, and who will go any
length to gain some evidence against us, that may serve to render our
conduct suspected, and our character odious; because, could she accomplish
this, wicked as it is, the world would withdraw from us, as from a people
not to be trusted, and our task would then become difficult. There is
nothing which sets the character of a nation in a higher or lower light
with others, than the faithfully fulfilling, or perfidiously breaking, of
treaties. They are things not to be tampered with: and should Britain,
which seems very probable, propose to seduce America into such an act of
baseness, it would merit from her some mark of unusual detestation. It is
one of those extraordinary instances in which we ought not to be contented
with the bare negative of Congress, because it is an affront on the
multitude as well as on the government. It goes on the supposition that
the public are not honest men, and that they may be managed by
contrivance, though they cannot be conquered by arms. But, let the world
and Britain know, that we are neither to be bought nor sold; that our mind
is great and fixed; our prospect clear; and that we will support our
character as firmly as our independence.</p>
<p>But I will go still further; General Conway, who made the motion, in the
British Parliament, for discontinuing offensive war in America, is a
gentleman of an amiable character. We have no personal quarrel with him.
But he feels not as we feel; he is not in our situation, and that alone,
without any other explanation, is enough. The British Parliament suppose
they have many friends in America, and that, when all chance of conquest
is over, they will be able to draw her from her alliance with France. Now,
if I have any conception of the human heart, they will fail in this more
than in any thing that they have yet tried.</p>
<p>This part of the business is not a question of policy only, but of honor
and honesty; and the proposition will have in it something so visibly low
and base, that their partisans, if they have any, will be ashamed of it.
Men are often hurt by a mean action who are not startled at a wicked one,
and this will be such a confession of inability, such a declaration of
servile thinking, that the scandal of it will ruin all their hopes.</p>
<p>In short, we have nothing to do but to go on with vigor and determination.
The enemy is yet in our country. They hold New York, Charleston, and
Savannah, and the very being in those places is an offence, and a part of
offensive war, and until they can be driven from them, or captured in
them, it would be folly in us to listen to an idle tale. I take it for
granted that the British ministry are sinking under the impossibility of
carrying on the war. Let them then come to a fair and open peace with
France, Spain, Holland and America, in the manner they ought to do; but
until then, we can have nothing to say to them.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.<br/>
<br/>
PHILADELPHIA, May 22, 1782.<br/></p>
<p>A SUPERNUMERARY CRISIS<br/>
<br/>
TO SIR GUY CARLETON.<br/></p>
<p>IT is the nature of compassion to associate with misfortune; and I address
this to you in behalf even of an enemy, a captain in the British service,
now on his way to the headquarters of the American army, and unfortunately
doomed to death for a crime not his own. A sentence so extraordinary, an
execution so repugnant to every human sensation, ought never to be told
without the circumstances which produced it: and as the destined victim is
yet in existence, and in your hands rests his life or death, I shall
briefly state the case, and the melancholy consequence.</p>
<p>Captain Huddy, of the Jersey militia, was attacked in a small fort on
Tom's River, by a party of refugees in the British pay and service, was
made prisoner, together with his company, carried to New York and lodged
in the provost of that city: about three weeks after which, he was taken
out of the provost down to the water-side, put into a boat, and brought
again upon the Jersey shore, and there, contrary to the practice of all
nations but savages, was hung up on a tree, and left hanging till found by
our people who took him down and buried him. The inhabitants of that part
of the country where the murder was committed, sent a deputation to
General Washington with a full and certified statement of the fact.
Struck, as every human breast must be, with such brutish outrage, and
determined both to punish and prevent it for the future, the General
represented the case to General Clinton, who then commanded, and demanded
that the refugee officer who ordered and attended the execution, and whose
name is Lippencott, should be delivered up as a murderer; and in case of
refusal, that the person of some British officer should suffer in his
stead. The demand, though not refused, has not been complied with; and the
melancholy lot (not by selection, but by casting lots) has fallen upon
Captain Asgill, of the Guards, who, as I have already mentioned, is on his
way from Lancaster to camp, a martyr to the general wickedness of the
cause he engaged in, and the ingratitude of those whom he served.</p>
<p>The first reflection which arises on this black business is, what sort of
men must Englishmen be, and what sort of order and discipline do they
preserve in their army, when in the immediate place of their headquarters,
and under the eye and nose of their commander-in-chief, a prisoner can be
taken at pleasure from his confinement, and his death made a matter of
sport.</p>
<p>The history of the most savage Indians does not produce instances exactly
of this kind. They, at least, have a formality in their punishments. With
them it is the horridness of revenge, but with your army it is a still
greater crime, the horridness of diversion. The British generals who have
succeeded each other, from the time of General Gage to yourself, have all
affected to speak in language that they have no right to. In their
proclamations, their addresses, their letters to General Washington, and
their supplications to Congress (for they deserve no other name) they talk
of British honor, British generosity, and British clemency, as if those
things were matters of fact; whereas, we whose eyes are open, who speak
the same language with yourselves, many of whom were born on the same spot
with you, and who can no more be mistaken in your words than in your
actions, can declare to all the world, that so far as our knowledge goes,
there is not a more detestable character, nor a meaner or more barbarous
enemy, than the present British one. With us, you have forfeited all
pretensions to reputation, and it is only by holding you like a wild
beast, afraid of your keepers, that you can be made manageable. But to
return to the point in question.</p>
<p>Though I can think no man innocent who has lent his hand to destroy the
country which he did not plant, and to ruin those that he could not
enslave, yet, abstracted from all ideas of right and wrong on the original
question, Captain Asgill, in the present case, is not the guilty man. The
villain and the victim are here separated characters. You hold the one and
we the other. You disown, or affect to disown and reprobate the conduct of
Lippincut, yet you give him a sanctuary; and by so doing you as
effectually become the executioner of Asgill, as if you had put the rope
on his neck, and dismissed him from the world. Whatever your feelings on
this interesting occasion may be are best known to yourself. Within the
grave of your own mind lies buried the fate of Asgill. He becomes the
corpse of your will, or the survivor of your justice. Deliver up the one,
and you save the other; withhold the one, and the other dies by your
choice.</p>
<p>On our part the case is exceeding plain; an officer has been taken from
his confinement and murdered, and the murderer is within your lines. Your
army has been guilty of a thousand instances of equal cruelty, but they
have been rendered equivocal, and sheltered from personal detection. Here
the crime is fixed; and is one of those extraordinary cases which can
neither be denied nor palliated, and to which the custom of war does not
apply; for it never could be supposed that such a brutal outrage would
ever be committed. It is an original in the history of civilized
barbarians, and is truly British. On your part you are accountable to us
for the personal safety of the prisoners within your walls. Here can be no
mistake; they can neither be spies nor suspected as such; your security is
not endangered, nor your operations subjected to miscarriage, by men
immured within a dungeon. They differ in every circumstance from men in
the field, and leave no pretence for severity of punishment. But if to the
dismal condition of captivity with you must be added the constant
apprehensions of death; if to be imprisoned is so nearly to be entombed;
and if, after all, the murderers are to be protected, and thereby the
crime encouraged, wherein do you differ from [American] Indians either in
conduct or character?</p>
<p>We can have no idea of your honor, or your justice, in any future
transaction, of what nature it may be, while you shelter within your lines
an outrageous murderer, and sacrifice in his stead an officer of your own.
If you have no regard to us, at least spare the blood which it is your
duty to save. Whether the punishment will be greater on him, who, in this
case, innocently dies, or on him whom sad necessity forces to retaliate,
is, in the nicety of sensation, an undecided question? It rests with you
to prevent the sufferings of both. You have nothing to do but to give up
the murderer, and the matter ends.</p>
<p>But to protect him, be he who he may, is to patronize his crime, and to
trifle it off by frivolous and unmeaning inquiries, is to promote it.
There is no declaration you can make, nor promise you can give that will
obtain credit. It is the man and not the apology that is demanded.</p>
<p>You see yourself pressed on all sides to spare the life of your own
officer, for die he will if you withhold justice. The murder of Captain
Huddy is an offence not to be borne with, and there is no security which
we can have, that such actions or similar ones shall not be repeated, but
by making the punishment fall upon yourselves. To destroy the last
security of captivity, and to take the unarmed, the unresisting prisoner
to private and sportive execution, is carrying barbarity too high for
silence. The evil must be put an end to; and the choice of persons rests
with you. But if your attachment to the guilty is stronger than to the
innocent, you invent a crime that must destroy your character, and if the
cause of your king needs to be so supported, for ever cease, sir, to
torture our remembrance with the wretched phrases of British honor,
British generosity and British clemency.</p>
<p>From this melancholy circumstance, learn, sir, a lesson of morality. The
refugees are men whom your predecessors have instructed in wickedness, the
better to fit them to their master's purpose. To make them useful, they
have made them vile, and the consequence of their tutored villany is now
descending on the heads of their encouragers. They have been trained like
hounds to the scent of blood, and cherished in every species of dissolute
barbarity. Their ideas of right and wrong are worn away in the constant
habitude of repeated infamy, till, like men practised in execution, they
feel not the value of another's life.</p>
<p>The task before you, though painful, is not difficult; give up the
murderer, and save your officer, as the first outset of a necessary
reformation. COMMON SENSE.</p>
<p>PHILADELPHIA May 31, 1782.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0016" id="link2H_4_0016"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CRISIS. XII. TO THE EARL OF SHELBURNE. </h2>
<p>MY LORD,—A speech, which has been printed in several of the British
and New York newspapers, as coming from your lordship, in answer to one
from the Duke of Richmond, of the 10th of July last, contains expressions
and opinions so new and singular, and so enveloped in mysterious
reasoning, that I address this publication to you, for the purpose of
giving them a free and candid examination. The speech I allude to is in
these words:</p>
<p>"His lordship said, it had been mentioned in another place, that he had
been guilty of inconsistency. To clear himself of this, he asserted that
he still held the same principles in respect to American independence
which he at first imbibed. He had been, and yet was of opinion, whenever
the Parliament of Great Britain acknowledges that point, the sun of
England's glory is set forever. Such were the sentiments he possessed on a
former day, and such the sentiments he continued to hold at this hour. It
was the opinion of Lord Chatham, as well as many other able statesmen.
Other noble lords, however, think differently, and as the majority of the
cabinet support them, he acquiesced in the measure, dissenting from the
idea; and the point is settled for bringing the matter into the full
discussion of Parliament, where it will be candidly, fairly, and
impartially debated. The independence of America would end in the ruin of
England; and that a peace patched up with France, would give that proud
enemy the means of yet trampling on this country. The sun of England's
glory he wished not to see set forever; he looked for a spark at least to
be left, which might in time light us up to a new day. But if independence
was to be granted, if Parliament deemed that measure prudent, he foresaw,
in his own mind, that England was undone. He wished to God that he had
been deputed to Congress, that be might plead the cause of that country as
well as of this, and that he might exercise whatever powers he possessed
as an orator, to save both from ruin, in a conviction to Congress, that,
if their independence was signed, their liberties were gone forever.</p>
<p>"Peace, his lordship added, was a desirable object, but it must be an
honorable peace, and not an humiliating one, dictated by France, or
insisted on by America. It was very true, that this kingdom was not in a
flourishing state, it was impoverished by war. But if we were not rich, it
was evident that France was poor. If we were straitened in our finances,
the enemy were exhausted in their resources. This was a great empire; it
abounded with brave men, who were able and willing to fight in a common
cause; the language of humiliation should not, therefore, be the language
of Great Britain. His lordship said, that he was not afraid nor ashamed of
those expressions going to America. There were numbers, great numbers
there, who were of the same way of thinking, in respect to that country
being dependent on this, and who, with his lordship, perceived ruin and
independence linked together."</p>
<p>Thus far the speech; on which I remark—That his lordship is a total
stranger to the mind and sentiments of America; that he has wrapped
himself up in fond delusion, that something less than independence, may,
under his administration, be accepted; and he wishes himself sent to
Congress, to prove the most extraordinary of all doctrines, which is, that
independence, the sublimest of all human conditions, is loss of liberty.</p>
<p>In answer to which we may say, that in order to know what the contrary
word dependence means, we have only to look back to those years of severe
humiliation, when the mildest of all petitions could obtain no other
notice than the haughtiest of all insults; and when the base terms of
unconditional submission were demanded, or undistinguishable destruction
threatened. It is nothing to us that the ministry have been changed, for
they may be changed again. The guilt of a government is the crime of a
whole country; and the nation that can, though but for a moment, think and
act as England has done, can never afterwards be believed or trusted.
There are cases in which it is as impossible to restore character to life,
as it is to recover the dead. It is a phoenix that can expire but once,
and from whose ashes there is no resurrection. Some offences are of such a
slight composition, that they reach no further than the temper, and are
created or cured by a thought. But the sin of England has struck the heart
of America, and nature has not left in our power to say we can forgive.</p>
<p>Your lordship wishes for an opportunity to plead before Congress the cause
of England and America, and to save, as you say, both from ruin.</p>
<p>That the country, which, for more than seven years has sought our
destruction, should now cringe to solicit our protection, is adding the
wretchedness of disgrace to the misery of disappointment; and if England
has the least spark of supposed honor left, that spark must be darkened by
asking, and extinguished by receiving, the smallest favor from America;
for the criminal who owes his life to the grace and mercy of the injured,
is more executed by living, than he who dies.</p>
<p>But a thousand pleadings, even from your lordship, can have no effect.
Honor, interest, and every sensation of the heart, would plead against
you. We are a people who think not as you think; and what is equally true,
you cannot feel as we feel. The situations of the two countries are
exceedingly different. Ours has been the seat of war; yours has seen
nothing of it. The most wanton destruction has been committed in our
sight; the most insolent barbarity has been acted on our feelings. We can
look round and see the remains of burnt and destroyed houses, once the
fair fruit of hard industry, and now the striking monuments of British
brutality. We walk over the dead whom we loved, in every part of America,
and remember by whom they fell. There is scarcely a village but brings to
life some melancholy thought, and reminds us of what we have suffered, and
of those we have lost by the inhumanity of Britain. A thousand images
arise to us, which, from situation, you cannot see, and are accompanied by
as many ideas which you cannot know; and therefore your supposed system of
reasoning would apply to nothing, and all your expectations die of
themselves.</p>
<p>The question whether England shall accede to the independence of America,
and which your lordship says is to undergo a parliamentary discussion, is
so very simple, and composed of so few cases, that it scarcely needs a
debate.</p>
<p>It is the only way out of an expensive and ruinous war, which has no
object, and without which acknowledgment there can be no peace.</p>
<p>But your lordship says, the sun of Great Britain will set whenever she
acknowledges the independence of America.—Whereas the metaphor would
have been strictly just, to have left the sun wholly out of the figure,
and have ascribed her not acknowledging it to the influence of the moon.</p>
<p>But the expression, if true, is the greatest confession of disgrace that
could be made, and furnishes America with the highest notions of sovereign
independent importance. Mr. Wedderburne, about the year 1776, made use of
an idea of much the same kind,—Relinquish America! says he—What
is it but to desire a giant to shrink spontaneously into a dwarf.</p>
<p>Alas! are those people who call themselves Englishmen, of so little
internal consequence, that when America is gone, or shuts her eyes upon
them, their sun is set, they can shine no more, but grope about in
obscurity, and contract into insignificant animals? Was America, then, the
giant of the empire, and England only her dwarf in waiting! Is the case so
strangely altered, that those who once thought we could not live without
them, are now brought to declare that they cannot exist without us? Will
they tell to the world, and that from their first minister of state, that
America is their all in all; that it is by her importance only that they
can live, and breathe, and have a being? Will they, who long since
threatened to bring us to their feet, bow themselves to ours, and own that
without us they are not a nation? Are they become so unqualified to debate
on independence, that they have lost all idea of it themselves, and are
calling to the rocks and mountains of America to cover their
insignificance? Or, if America is lost, is it manly to sob over it like a
child for its rattle, and invite the laughter of the world by declarations
of disgrace? Surely, a more consistent line of conduct would be to bear it
without complaint; and to show that England, without America, can preserve
her independence, and a suitable rank with other European powers. You were
not contented while you had her, and to weep for her now is childish.</p>
<p>But Lord Shelburne thinks something may yet be done. What that something
is, or how it is to be accomplished, is a matter in obscurity. By arms
there is no hope. The experience of nearly eight years, with the expense
of an hundred million pounds sterling, and the loss of two armies, must
positively decide that point. Besides, the British have lost their
interest in America with the disaffected. Every part of it has been tried.
There is no new scene left for delusion: and the thousands who have been
ruined by adhering to them, and have now to quit the settlements which
they had acquired, and be conveyed like transports to cultivate the
deserts of Augustine and Nova Scotia, has put an end to all further
expectations of aid.</p>
<p>If you cast your eyes on the people of England, what have they to console
themselves with for the millions expended? Or, what encouragement is there
left to continue throwing good money after bad? America can carry on the
war for ten years longer, and all the charges of government included, for
less than you can defray the charges of war and government for one year.
And I, who know both countries, know well, that the people of America can
afford to pay their share of the expense much better than the people of
England can. Besides, it is their own estates and property, their own
rights, liberties and government, that they are defending; and were they
not to do it, they would deserve to lose all, and none would pity them.
The fault would be their own, and their punishment just.</p>
<p>The British army in America care not how long the war lasts. They enjoy an
easy and indolent life. They fatten on the folly of one country and the
spoils of another; and, between their plunder and their prey, may go home
rich. But the case is very different with the laboring farmer, the working
tradesman, and the necessitous poor in England, the sweat of whose brow
goes day after day to feed, in prodigality and sloth, the army that is
robbing both them and us. Removed from the eye of that country that
supports them, and distant from the government that employs them, they cut
and carve for themselves, and there is none to call them to account.</p>
<p>But England will be ruined, says Lord Shelburne, if America is
independent.</p>
<p>Then I say, is England already ruined, for America is already independent:
and if Lord Shelburne will not allow this, he immediately denies the fact
which he infers. Besides, to make England the mere creature of America, is
paying too great a compliment to us, and too little to himself.</p>
<p>But the declaration is a rhapsody of inconsistency. For to say, as Lord
Shelburne has numberless times said, that the war against America is
ruinous, and yet to continue the prosecution of that ruinous war for the
purpose of avoiding ruin, is a language which cannot be understood.
Neither is it possible to see how the independence of America is to
accomplish the ruin of England after the war is over, and yet not affect
it before. America cannot be more independent of her, nor a greater enemy
to her, hereafter than she now is; nor can England derive less advantages
from her than at present: why then is ruin to follow in the best state of
the case, and not in the worst? And if not in the worst, why is it to
follow at all?</p>
<p>That a nation is to be ruined by peace and commerce, and fourteen or
fifteen millions a-year less expenses than before, is a new doctrine in
politics. We have heard much clamor of national savings and economy; but
surely the true economy would be, to save the whole charge of a silly,
foolish, and headstrong war; because, compared with this, all other
retrenchments are baubles and trifles.</p>
<p>But is it possible that Lord Shelburne can be serious in supposing that
the least advantage can be obtained by arms, or that any advantage can be
equal to the expense or the danger of attempting it? Will not the capture
of one army after another satisfy him, must all become prisoners? Must
England ever be the sport of hope, and the victim of delusion? Sometimes
our currency was to fail; another time our army was to disband; then whole
provinces were to revolt. Such a general said this and that; another wrote
so and so; Lord Chatham was of this opinion; and lord somebody else of
another. To-day 20,000 Russians and 20 Russian ships of the line were to
come; to-morrow the empress was abused without mercy or decency. Then the
Emperor of Germany was to be bribed with a million of money, and the King
of Prussia was to do wonderful things. At one time it was, Lo here! and
then it was, Lo there! Sometimes this power, and sometimes that power, was
to engage in the war, just as if the whole world was mad and foolish like
Britain. And thus, from year to year, has every straw been catched at, and
every Will-with-a-wisp led them a new dance.</p>
<p>This year a still newer folly is to take place. Lord Shelburne wishes to
be sent to Congress, and he thinks that something may be done.</p>
<p>Are not the repeated declarations of Congress, and which all America
supports, that they will not even hear any proposals whatever, until the
unconditional and unequivocal independence of America is recognised; are
not, I say, these declarations answer enough?</p>
<p>But for England to receive any thing from America now, after so many
insults, injuries and outrages, acted towards us, would show such a spirit
of meanness in her, that we could not but despise her for accepting it.
And so far from Lord Shelburne's coming here to solicit it, it would be
the greatest disgrace we could do them to offer it. England would appear a
wretch indeed, at this time of day, to ask or owe any thing to the bounty
of America. Has not the name of Englishman blots enough upon it, without
inventing more? Even Lucifer would scorn to reign in heaven by permission,
and yet an Englishman can creep for only an entrance into America. Or, has
a land of liberty so many charms, that to be a doorkeeper in it is better
than to be an English minister of state?</p>
<p>But what can this expected something be? Or, if obtained, what can it
amount to, but new disgraces, contentions and quarrels? The people of
America have for years accustomed themselves to think and speak so freely
and contemptuously of English authority, and the inveteracy is so deeply
rooted, that a person invested with any authority from that country, and
attempting to exercise it here, would have the life of a toad under a
harrow. They would look on him as an interloper, to whom their compassion
permitted a residence. He would be no more than the Mungo of a farce; and
if he disliked that, he must set off. It would be a station of
degradation, debased by our pity, and despised by our pride, and would
place England in a more contemptible situation than any she has yet been
in during the war. We have too high an opinion of ourselves, even to think
of yielding again the least obedience to outlandish authority; and for a
thousand reasons, England would be the last country in the world to yield
it to. She has been treacherous, and we know it. Her character is gone,
and we have seen the funeral.</p>
<p>Surely she loves to fish in troubled waters, and drink the cup of
contention, or she would not now think of mingling her affairs with those
of America. It would be like a foolish dotard taking to his arms the bride
that despises him, or who has placed on his head the ensigns of her
disgust. It is kissing the hand that boxes his ears, and proposing to
renew the exchange. The thought is as servile as the war is wicked, and
shows the last scene of the drama to be as inconsistent as the first.</p>
<p>As America is gone, the only act of manhood is to let her go. Your
lordship had no hand in the separation, and you will gain no honor by
temporising politics. Besides, there is something so exceedingly
whimsical, unsteady, and even insincere in the present conduct of England,
that she exhibits herself in the most dishonorable colors. On the second
of August last, General Carleton and Admiral Digby wrote to General
Washington in these words:</p>
<p>"The resolution of the House of Commons, of the 27th of February last, has
been placed in Your Excellency's hands, and intimations given at the same
time that further pacific measures were likely to follow. Since which,
until the present time, we have had no direct communications with England;
but a mail is now arrived, which brings us very important information. We
are acquainted, sir, by authority, that negotiations for a general peace
have already commenced at Paris, and that Mr. Grenville is invested with
full powers to treat with all the parties at war, and is now at Paris in
execution of his commission. And we are further, sir, made acquainted,
that His Majesty, in order to remove any obstacles to this peace which he
so ardently wishes to restore, has commanded his ministers to direct Mr.
Grenville, that the independence of the Thirteen United Provinces, should
be proposed by him in the first instance, instead of making it a condition
of a general treaty."</p>
<p>Now, taking your present measures into view, and comparing them with the
declaration in this letter, pray what is the word of your king, or his
ministers, or the Parliament, good for? Must we not look upon you as a
confederated body of faithless, treacherous men, whose assurances are
fraud, and their language deceit? What opinion can we possibly form of
you, but that you are a lost, abandoned, profligate nation, who sport even
with your own character, and are to be held by nothing but the bayonet or
the halter?</p>
<p>To say, after this, that the sun of Great Britain will be set whenever she
acknowledges the independence of America, when the not doing it is the
unqualified lie of government, can be no other than the language of
ridicule, the jargon of inconsistency. There were thousands in America who
predicted the delusion, and looked upon it as a trick of treachery, to
take us from our guard, and draw off our attention from the only system of
finance, by which we can be called, or deserve to be called, a sovereign,
independent people. The fraud, on your part, might be worth attempting,
but the sacrifice to obtain it is too high.</p>
<p>There are others who credited the assurance, because they thought it
impossible that men who had their characters to establish, would begin
with a lie. The prosecution of the war by the former ministry was savage
and horrid; since which it has been mean, trickish, and delusive. The one
went greedily into the passion of revenge, the other into the subtleties
of low contrivance; till, between the crimes of both, there is scarcely
left a man in America, be he Whig or Tory, who does not despise or detest
the conduct of Britain.</p>
<p>The management of Lord Shelburne, whatever may be his views, is a caution
to us, and must be to the world, never to regard British assurances. A
perfidy so notorious cannot be hid. It stands even in the public papers of
New York, with the names of Carleton and Digby affixed to it. It is a
proclamation that the king of England is not to be believed; that the
spirit of lying is the governing principle of the ministry. It is holding
up the character of the House of Commons to public infamy, and warning all
men not to credit them. Such are the consequences which Lord Shelburne's
management has brought upon his country.</p>
<p>After the authorized declarations contained in Carleton and Digby's
letter, you ought, from every motive of honor, policy and prudence, to
have fulfilled them, whatever might have been the event. It was the least
atonement that you could possibly make to America, and the greatest
kindness you could do to yourselves; for you will save millions by a
general peace, and you will lose as many by continuing the war.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.</p>
<p>PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 29, 1782.</p>
<p>P. S. The manuscript copy of this letter is sent your lordship, by the way
of our head-quarters, to New York, inclosing a late pamphlet of mine,
addressed to the Abbe Raynal, which will serve to give your lordship some
idea of the principles and sentiments of America.</p>
<p>C. S.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0017" id="link2H_4_0017"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE CRISIS. XIII. THOUGHTS ON THE PEACE, AND PROBABLE ADVANTAGES </h2>
<p>THEREOF.</p>
<p>"THE times that tried men's souls,"* are over—and the greatest and
completest revolution the world ever knew, gloriously and happily
accomplished.</p>
<p>* "These are the times that try men's souls," The Crisis No. I.<br/>
published December, 1776.<br/></p>
<p>But to pass from the extremes of danger to safety—from the tumult of
war to the tranquillity of peace, though sweet in contemplation, requires
a gradual composure of the senses to receive it. Even calmness has the
power of stunning, when it opens too instantly upon us. The long and
raging hurricane that should cease in a moment, would leave us in a state
rather of wonder than enjoyment; and some moments of recollection must
pass, before we could be capable of tasting the felicity of repose. There
are but few instances, in which the mind is fitted for sudden transitions:
it takes in its pleasures by reflection and comparison and those must have
time to act, before the relish for new scenes is complete.</p>
<p>In the present case—the mighty magnitude of the object—the
various uncertainties of fate it has undergone—the numerous and
complicated dangers we have suffered or escaped—the eminence we now
stand on, and the vast prospect before us, must all conspire to impress us
with contemplation.</p>
<p>To see it in our power to make a world happy—to teach mankind the
art of being so—to exhibit, on the theatre of the universe a
character hitherto unknown—and to have, as it were, a new creation
intrusted to our hands, are honors that command reflection, and can
neither be too highly estimated, nor too gratefully received.</p>
<p>In this pause then of recollection—while the storm is ceasing, and
the long agitated mind vibrating to a rest, let us look back on the scenes
we have passed, and learn from experience what is yet to be done.</p>
<p>Never, I say, had a country so many openings to happiness as this. Her
setting out in life, like the rising of a fair morning, was unclouded and
promising. Her cause was good. Her principles just and liberal. Her temper
serene and firm. Her conduct regulated by the nicest steps, and everything
about her wore the mark of honor. It is not every country (perhaps there
is not another in the world) that can boast so fair an origin. Even the
first settlement of America corresponds with the character of the
revolution. Rome, once the proud mistress of the universe, was originally
a band of ruffians. Plunder and rapine made her rich, and her oppression
of millions made her great. But America need never be ashamed to tell her
birth, nor relate the stages by which she rose to empire.</p>
<p>The remembrance, then, of what is past, if it operates rightly, must
inspire her with the most laudable of all ambition, that of adding to the
fair fame she began with. The world has seen her great in adversity;
struggling, without a thought of yielding, beneath accumulated
difficulties, bravely, nay proudly, encountering distress, and rising in
resolution as the storm increased. All this is justly due to her, for her
fortitude has merited the character. Let, then, the world see that she can
bear prosperity: and that her honest virtue in time of peace, is equal to
the bravest virtue in time of war.</p>
<p>She is now descending to the scenes of quiet and domestic life. Not
beneath the cypress shade of disappointment, but to enjoy in her own land,
and under her own vine, the sweet of her labors, and the reward of her
toil.—In this situation, may she never forget that a fair national
reputation is of as much importance as independence. That it possesses a
charm that wins upon the world, and makes even enemies civil. That it
gives a dignity which is often superior to power, and commands reverence
where pomp and splendor fail.</p>
<p>It would be a circumstance ever to be lamented and never to be forgotten,
were a single blot, from any cause whatever, suffered to fall on a
revolution, which to the end of time must be an honor to the age that
accomplished it: and which has contributed more to enlighten the world,
and diffuse a spirit of freedom and liberality among mankind, than any
human event (if this may be called one) that ever preceded it.</p>
<p>It is not among the least of the calamities of a long continued war, that
it unhinges the mind from those nice sensations which at other times
appear so amiable. The continual spectacle of woe blunts the finer
feelings, and the necessity of bearing with the sight, renders it
familiar. In like manner, are many of the moral obligations of society
weakened, till the custom of acting by necessity becomes an apology, where
it is truly a crime. Yet let but a nation conceive rightly of its
character, and it will be chastely just in protecting it. None ever began
with a fairer than America and none can be under a greater obligation to
preserve it.</p>
<p>The debt which America has contracted, compared with the cause she has
gained, and the advantages to flow from it, ought scarcely to be
mentioned. She has it in her choice to do, and to live as happily as she
pleases. The world is in her hands. She has no foreign power to monopolize
her commerce, perplex her legislation, or control her prosperity. The
struggle is over, which must one day have happened, and, perhaps, never
could have happened at a better time.* And instead of a domineering
master, she has gained an ally whose exemplary greatness, and universal
liberality, have extorted a confession even from her enemies.</p>
<p>* That the revolution began at the exact period of time best fitted<br/>
to the purpose, is sufficiently proved by the event.—But the great<br/>
hinge on which the whole machine turned, is the Union of the States: and<br/>
this union was naturally produced by the inability of any one state to<br/>
support itself against any foreign enemy without the assistance of the<br/>
rest. Had the states severally been less able than they were when<br/>
the war began, their united strength would not have been equal to the<br/>
undertaking, and they must in all human probability have failed.—And,<br/>
on the other hand, had they severally been more able, they might not<br/>
have seen, or, what is more, might not have felt, the necessity<br/>
of uniting: and, either by attempting to stand alone or in small<br/>
confederacies, would have been separately conquered. Now, as we cannot<br/>
see a time (and many years must pass away before it can arrive) when the<br/>
strength of any one state, or several united, can be equal to the whole<br/>
of the present United States, and as we have seen the extreme difficulty<br/>
of collectively prosecuting the war to a successful issue, and<br/>
preserving our national importance in the world, therefore, from the<br/>
experience we have had, and the knowledge we have gained, we must,<br/>
unless we make a waste of wisdom, be strongly impressed with the<br/>
advantage, as well as the necessity of strengthening that happy union<br/>
which had been our salvation, and without which we should have been<br/>
a ruined people. While I was writing this note, I cast my eye on the<br/>
pamphlet, Common Sense, from which I shall make an extract, as it<br/>
exactly applies to the case. It is as follows: "I have never met with<br/>
a man, either in England or America, who has not confessed it as his<br/>
opinion that a separation between the countries would take place one<br/>
time or other; and there is no instance in which we have shown less<br/>
judgment, than in endeavoring to describe what we call the ripeness<br/>
or fitness of the continent for independence. As all men allow the<br/>
measure, and differ only in their opinion of the time, let us, in order<br/>
to remove mistakes, take a general survey of things, and endeavor, if<br/>
possible, to find out the very time. But we need not to go far,<br/>
the inquiry ceases at once, for, the time has found us. The general<br/>
concurrence, the glorious union of all things prove the fact. It is not<br/>
in numbers, but in a union, that our great strength lies. The continent<br/>
is just arrived at that pitch of strength, in which no single colony is<br/>
able to support itself, and the whole, when united, can accomplish<br/>
the matter; and either more or less than this, might be fatal in its<br/>
effects."<br/></p>
<p>With the blessings of peace, independence, and an universal commerce, the
states, individually and collectively, will have leisure and opportunity
to regulate and establish their domestic concerns, and to put it beyond
the power of calumny to throw the least reflection on their honor.
Character is much easier kept than recovered, and that man, if any such
there be, who, from sinister views, or littleness of soul, lends unseen
his hand to injure it, contrives a wound it will never be in his power to
heal.</p>
<p>As we have established an inheritance for posterity, let that inheritance
descend, with every mark of an honorable conveyance. The little it will
cost, compared with the worth of the states, the greatness of the object,
and the value of the national character, will be a profitable exchange.</p>
<p>But that which must more forcibly strike a thoughtful, penetrating mind,
and which includes and renders easy all inferior concerns, is the UNION OF
THE STATES. On this our great national character depends. It is this which
must give us importance abroad and security at home. It is through this
only that we are, or can be, nationally known in the world; it is the flag
of the United States which renders our ships and commerce safe on the
seas, or in a foreign port. Our Mediterranean passes must be obtained
under the same style. All our treaties, whether of alliance, peace, or
commerce, are formed under the sovereignty of the United States, and
Europe knows us by no other name or title.</p>
<p>The division of the empire into states is for our own convenience, but
abroad this distinction ceases. The affairs of each state are local. They
can go no further than to itself. And were the whole worth of even the
richest of them expended in revenue, it would not be sufficient to support
sovereignty against a foreign attack. In short, we have no other national
sovereignty than as United States. It would even be fatal for us if we had—too
expensive to be maintained, and impossible to be supported. Individuals,
or individual states, may call themselves what they please; but the world,
and especially the world of enemies, is not to be held in awe by the
whistling of a name. Sovereignty must have power to protect all the parts
that compose and constitute it: and as UNITED STATES we are equal to the
importance of the title, but otherwise we are not. Our union, well and
wisely regulated and cemented, is the cheapest way of being great—the
easiest way of being powerful, and the happiest invention in government
which the circumstances of America can admit of.—Because it collects
from each state, that which, by being inadequate, can be of no use to it,
and forms an aggregate that serves for all.</p>
<p>The states of Holland are an unfortunate instance of the effects of
individual sovereignty. Their disjointed condition exposes them to
numerous intrigues, losses, calamities, and enemies; and the almost
impossibility of bringing their measures to a decision, and that decision
into execution, is to them, and would be to us, a source of endless
misfortune.</p>
<p>It is with confederated states as with individuals in society; something
must be yielded up to make the whole secure. In this view of things we
gain by what we give, and draw an annual interest greater than the
capital.—I ever feel myself hurt when I hear the union, that great
palladium of our liberty and safety, the least irreverently spoken of. It
is the most sacred thing in the constitution of America, and that which
every man should be most proud and tender of. Our citizenship in the
United States is our national character. Our citizenship in any particular
state is only our local distinction. By the latter we are known at home,
by the former to the world. Our great title is AMERICANS—our
inferior one varies with the place.</p>
<p>So far as my endeavors could go, they have all been directed to conciliate
the affections, unite the interests, and draw and keep the mind of the
country together; and the better to assist in this foundation work of the
revolution, I have avoided all places of profit or office, either in the
state I live in, or in the United States; kept myself at a distance from
all parties and party connections, and even disregarded all private and
inferior concerns: and when we take into view the great work which we have
gone through, and feel, as we ought to feel, the just importance of it, we
shall then see, that the little wranglings and indecent contentions of
personal parley, are as dishonorable to our characters, as they are
injurious to our repose.</p>
<p>It was the cause of America that made me an author. The force with which
it struck my mind and the dangerous condition the country appeared to me
in, by courting an impossible and an unnatural reconciliation with those
who were determined to reduce her, instead of striking out into the only
line that could cement and save her, A DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE, made
it impossible for me, feeling as I did, to be silent: and if, in the
course of more than seven years, I have rendered her any service, I have
likewise added something to the reputation of literature, by freely and
disinterestedly employing it in the great cause of mankind, and showing
that there may be genius without prostitution.</p>
<p>Independence always appeared to me practicable and probable, provided the
sentiment of the country could be formed and held to the object: and there
is no instance in the world, where a people so extended, and wedded to
former habits of thinking, and under such a variety of circumstances, were
so instantly and effectually pervaded, by a turn in politics, as in the
case of independence; and who supported their opinion, undiminished,
through such a succession of good and ill fortune, till they crowned it
with success.</p>
<p>But as the scenes of war are closed, and every man preparing for home and
happier times, I therefore take my leave of the subject. I have most
sincerely followed it from beginning to end, and through all its turns and
windings: and whatever country I may hereafter be in, I shall always feel
an honest pride at the part I have taken and acted, and a gratitude to
nature and providence for putting it in my power to be of some use to
mankind.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.<br/></p>
<p>PHILADELPHIA, April 19, 1783.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> A SUPERNUMERARY CRISIS: TO THE PEOPLE OF AMERICA. </h2>
<p>IN "<i>Rivington's New York Gazette</i>," of December 6th, is a
publication, under the appearance of a letter from London, dated September
30th; and is on a subject which demands the attention of the United
States.</p>
<p>The public will remember that a treaty of commerce between the United
States and England was set on foot last spring, and that until the said
treaty could be completed, a bill was brought into the British Parliament
by the then chancellor of the exchequer, Mr. Pitt, to admit and legalize
(as the case then required) the commerce of the United States into the
British ports and dominions. But neither the one nor the other has been
completed. The commercial treaty is either broken off, or remains as it
began; and the bill in Parliament has been thrown aside. And in lieu
thereof, a selfish system of English politics has started up, calculated
to fetter the commerce of America, by engrossing to England the carrying
trade of the American produce to the West India islands.</p>
<p>Among the advocates for this last measure is Lord Sheffield, a member of
the British Parliament, who has published a pamphlet entitled
"Observations on the Commerce of the American States." The pamphlet has
two objects; the one is to allure the Americans to purchase British
manufactures; and the other to spirit up the British Parliament to
prohibit the citizens of the United States from trading to the West India
islands.</p>
<p>Viewed in this light, the pamphlet, though in some parts dexterously
written, is an absurdity. It offends, in the very act of endeavoring to
ingratiate; and his lordship, as a politician, ought not to have suffered
the two objects to have appeared together. The latter alluded to, contains
extracts from the pamphlet, with high encomiums on Lord Sheffield, for
laboriously endeavoring (as the letter styles it) "to show the mighty
advantages of retaining the carrying trade."</p>
<p>Since the publication of this pamphlet in England, the commerce of the
United States to the West Indies, in American vessels, has been
prohibited; and all intercourse, except in British bottoms, the property
of and navigated by British subjects, cut off.</p>
<p>That a country has a right to be as foolish as it pleases, has been proved
by the practice of England for many years past: in her island situation,
sequestered from the world, she forgets that her whispers are heard by
other nations; and in her plans of politics and commerce she seems not to
know, that other votes are necessary besides her own. America would be
equally as foolish as Britain, were she to suffer so great a degradation
on her flag, and such a stroke on the freedom of her commerce, to pass
without a balance.</p>
<p>We admit the right of any nation to prohibit the commerce of another into
its own dominions, where there are no treaties to the contrary; but as
this right belongs to one side as well as the other, there is always a way
left to bring avarice and insolence to reason.</p>
<p>But the ground of security which Lord Sheffield has chosen to erect his
policy upon, is of a nature which ought, and I think must, awaken in every
American a just and strong sense of national dignity. Lord Sheffield
appears to be sensible, that in advising the British nation and Parliament
to engross to themselves so great a part of the carrying trade of America,
he is attempting a measure which cannot succeed, if the politics of the
United States be properly directed to counteract the assumption.</p>
<p>But, says he, in his pamphlet, "It will be a long time before the American
states can be brought to act as a nation, neither are they to be feared as
such by us."</p>
<p>What is this more or less than to tell us, that while we have no national
system of commerce, the British will govern our trade by their own laws
and proclamations as they please. The quotation discloses a truth too
serious to be overlooked, and too mischievous not to be remedied.</p>
<p>Among other circumstances which led them to this discovery none could
operate so effectually as the injudicious, uncandid and indecent
opposition made by sundry persons in a certain state, to the
recommendations of Congress last winter, for an import duty of five per
cent. It could not but explain to the British a weakness in the national
power of America, and encourage them to attempt restrictions on her trade,
which otherwise they would not have dared to hazard. Neither is there any
state in the union, whose policy was more misdirected to its interest than
the state I allude to, because her principal support is the carrying
trade, which Britain, induced by the want of a well-centred power in the
United States to protect and secure, is now attempting to take away. It
fortunately happened (and to no state in the union more than the state in
question) that the terms of peace were agreed on before the opposition
appeared, otherwise, there cannot be a doubt, that if the same idea of the
diminished authority of America had occurred to them at that time as has
occurred to them since, but they would have made the same grasp at the
fisheries, as they have done at the carrying trade.</p>
<p>It is surprising that an authority which can be supported with so much
ease, and so little expense, and capable of such extensive advantages to
the country, should be cavilled at by those whose duty it is to watch over
it, and whose existence as a people depends upon it. But this, perhaps,
will ever be the case, till some misfortune awakens us into reason, and
the instance now before us is but a gentle beginning of what America must
expect, unless she guards her union with nicer care and stricter honor.
United, she is formidable, and that with the least possible charge a
nation can be so; separated, she is a medley of individual nothings,
subject to the sport of foreign nations.</p>
<p>It is very probable that the ingenuity of commerce may have found out a
method to evade and supersede the intentions of the British, in
interdicting the trade with the West India islands. The language of both
being the same, and their customs well understood, the vessels of one
country may, by deception, pass for those of another. But this would be a
practice too debasing for a sovereign people to stoop to, and too
profligate not to be discountenanced. An illicit trade, under any shape it
can be placed, cannot be carried on without a violation of truth. America
is now sovereign and independent, and ought to conduct her affairs in a
regular style of character. She has the same right to say that no British
vessel shall enter ports, or that no British manufactures shall be
imported, but in American bottoms, the property of, and navigated by
American subjects, as Britain has to say the same thing respecting the
West Indies. Or she may lay a duty of ten, fifteen, or twenty shillings
per ton (exclusive of other duties) on every British vessel coming from
any port of the West Indies, where she is not admitted to trade, the said
tonnage to continue as long on her side as the prohibition continues on
the other.</p>
<p>But it is only by acting in union, that the usurpations of foreign nations
on the freedom of trade can be counteracted, and security extended to the
commerce of America. And when we view a flag, which to the eye is
beautiful, and to contemplate its rise and origin inspires a sensation of
sublime delight, our national honor must unite with our interest to
prevent injury to the one, or insult to the other.</p>
<p>COMMON SENSE.<br/></p>
<p>NEW YORK, December 9, 1783.</p>
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