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- THOMAS PAINE -- 1892 1
- SUMTER'S GUN. 13
- VIVISECTION. 15
- WESTERN SOCIETY OF THE ARMY OF THE POTOMAC BANQUET. 16
-
- **** ****
-
- This file, its printout, or copies of either
- are to be copied and given away, but NOT sold.
-
- Bank of Wisdom, Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
-
- The Works of ROBERT G. INGERSOLL
-
- **** ****
-
- THOMAS PAINE.
-
- 1892
-
- "A great man's memory may outlive his life half a year,
- But, by'r lady, he must build churches then."
-
-
- EIGHTY-THREE years ago Thomas Paine ceased to defend himself.
- The moment he became dumb all his enemies found a tongue. He was
- attacked on every hand. The Tories of England had been waiting for
- their revenge. The believers in kings, in hereditary government,
- the nobility of every land, execrated his memory. Their greatest
- enemy was dead. The believers in human slavery, and all who
- clamored for the rights of the States as against the sovereignty of
- a Nation, joined in the chorus of denunciation. In addition to
- this, the believers in the inspiration of the Scriptures, the
- occupants of orthodox pulpits, the professors in Christian
- colleges, and the religious historians, were his sworn and
- implacable foes.
-
- This man had gratified no ambition at the expense of his
- fellow-men; he had desolated no country with the flame and sword of
- war; he had not wrung millions from the poor and unfortunate; he
- had betrayed no trust, and yet he was almost universally despised.
- He gave his life for the benefit of mankind. Day and night for
- many, many weary years, he labored for the good of others, and gave
- himself body and soul to the great cause of human liberty. And yet
- he won the hatred of the people for whose benefit, for whose
- emancipation, for whose civilization, for whose exaltation he gave
- his life.
-
- Against him every slander that malignity could coin and
- hypocrisy pass was gladly and joyously taken as genuine, and every
- truth with regard to his career was believed to be counterfeit. He
- was attacked by thousands where he was defended by one, and the one
- who defended him was instantly attacked, silenced, or destroyed.
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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- THOMAS PAINE.
-
- At last his life has been written by Moncure D. Conway, and
- the real history of Thomas Paine, of what he attempted and
- accomplished, of what he taught and suffered, has been
- intelligently, truthfully and candidly given to the world.
- Henceforth the slanderer will be without excuse.
-
- He who reads Mr. Conway's pages will find that Thomas Paine
- was more than a patriot -- that he was a philanthropist -- a lover
- not only of his country, but of all mankind. He will find that his
- sympathies were with those who suffered, without regard to religion
- or race, country or complexion, He will find that this great man
- did not hesitate to attack the governing class of his native land
- -- to commit what was called treason against the king, that he
- might do battle for the rights of men; that in spite of the
- prejudices of birth, he took the side of the American Colonies;
- that he gladly attacked the political abuses and absurdities that
- had been fostered by altars and thrones for many centuries; that he
- was for the people against nobles and kings, and that he put his
- life in pawn for the good of others.
-
- In the winter of 1774, Thomas Paine came to America. After a
- time he was employed as one of the writers on the Pennsylvania
- Magazine.
-
- Let us see what he did, calculated to excite the hatred of his
- fellow-men.
-
- The first article he ever wrote in America, and the first ever
- published by him anywhere, appeared in that magazine on the 8th of
- March, 1775. It was an attack on American slavery -- a plea for the
- rights of the negro. In that article will be found substantially
- all the arguments that can be urged against that most infamous of
- all institutions. Every line is full of humanity, pity, tenderness,
- and love of justice. Five days after this article appeared the
- American Anti-Slavery Society was formed. Certainly this should not
- excite our hatred. To-day the civilized world agrees with the essay
- written by Thomas Paine in 1775.
-
- At that time great interests were against him. The owners of
- slaves became his enemies, and the pulpits, supported by slave
- labor, denounced this abolitionist.
-
- The next article published by Thomas Paine, in the same
- magazine, and for the next month, was an attack on the practice of
- dueling, showing that it was barbarous, that it did not even tend
- to settle the right or wrong of a dispute, that it could not be
- defended on any just grounds, and that its influence was degrading
- and cruel. The civilized world now agrees with the opinions of
- Thomas Paine upon that barbarous practice.
-
- In May, 1775, appeared in the same magazine another article
- written by Thomas Paine, a Protest Against Cruelty to Animals. He
- began the work that was so successfully and gloriously carried out
- by Henry Bergh, one of the noblest, one of the grandest, men that
- this continent has produced.
-
- The good people of this world agree with Thomas Paine.
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
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- THOMAS PAINE.
-
- In August of the same year he wrote a plea for the Rights of
- Woman, the first ever published in the New World. Certainly he
- should not be hated for that.
-
- He was the first to suggest a union of the colonies. Before
- the Declaration of Independence was issued, Paine had written of
- and about the Free and Independent States of America. He had also
- spoken of the United Colonies as the "Glorious Union," and he was
- the first to write these words: "The United States of America."
-
- In May, 1775, Washington said: "If you ever hear of me joining
- in any such measure (as separation from Great Britain) you have my
- leave to set me down for everything wicked." He had also said: "It
- is not the wish or interest of the government (meaning
- Massachusetts), or of any other upon this continent, separately or
- collectively, to set up for independence." And in the same year
- Benjamin Franklin assured Chatham that no one in America was in
- favor of separation. As a matter of fact, the people of the
- colonies wanted a redress of their grievances -- they were not
- dreaming of separation, of independence.
-
- In 1775 Paine wrote the pamphlet known as "Common Sense." This
- was published on the 10th of January, 1776. It was the first appeal
- for independence, the first cry for national life, for absolute
- separation. No pamphlet, no book, ever kindled such a sudden
- conflagration, -- a purifying flame, in which the prejudices and
- fears of millions were consumed. To read it now, after the lapse of
- more than a hundred years, hastens the blood. It is but the meager
- truth to say that Thomas Paine did more for the cause of
- separation, to sow the seeds of independence, than any other man of
- his time. Certainly we should not despise him for this. The
- Declaration of Independence followed, and in that declaration will
- be found not only the thoughts, but some of the expressions of
- Thomas Paine.
-
- During the war, and in the very darkest hours, Paine wrote
- what is called "The Crisis," a series of pamphlets giving from time
- to time his opinion of events, and his prophecies. These marvelous
- publications produced an effect nearly as great as the pamphlet
- "Common Sense." These strophes, written by the bivouac fires, had
- in them the soul of battle.
-
- In all he wrote, Paine was direct and natural. He touched the
- very heart of the subject. He was not awed by names or titles, by
- place or power. He never lost his regard for truth, for principle
- -- never wavered in his allegiance to reason, to what he believed
- to be right. His arguments were so lucid, so unanswerable, his
- comparisons and analogies so apt, so unexpected, that they excited
- the passionate admiration of friends and the unquenchable hatred of
- enemies. So great were these appeals to patriotism, to the love of
- liberty, the pride of independence, the glory of success, that it
- was said by some of the best and greatest of that time that the
- American cause owed as much to the pen of Paine as to the sword of
- Washington.
-
- On the 2d day of November, 1779, there was introduced into the
- Assembly of Pennsylvania an act for the abolition of slavery. The
-
-
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- THOMAS PAINE.
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- preamble was written by Thomas Paine. To him belongs the honor and
- glory of having written the first Proclamation of Emancipation in
- America -- Paine the first, Lincoln the last.
-
- Paine, of all others, succeeded in getting aid for the
- struggling colonies from France. "According to Lamartine, the King,
- Louis XVI., loaded Paine with favors, and a gift of six millions
- was confided into the hands of Franklin and Paine. On the 25th of
- August, 1781, Paine reached Boston bringing two million five
- hundred thousand livres in silver, and in convoy a ship laden with
- clothing and military stores."
-
- "In November, 1779, Paine was elected clerk to the General
- Assembly of Pennsylvania. In 1780, the Assembly received a letter
- from General Washington in the field, saying that he feared the
- distresses in the army would lead to mutiny in the ranks. This
- letter was read by Paine to the Assembly. He immediately wrote to
- Blair McClenaghan, a Philadelphia merchant, explaining the urgency,
- and inclosing five hundred dollars, the amount of salary due him as
- clerk, as his contribution towards a relief fund. The merchant
- called a meeting the next day, and read Paine's letter, A
- subscription list was immediately circulated, and in a short time
- about one million five hundred thousand dollars was raised. With
- this capital the Pennsylvania bank -- afterwards the bank of North
- America -- was established for the relief of the army."
-
- In 1783 "Paine wrote a memorial to Chancellor Livingston,
- Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Robert Morris, Minister of Finance,
- and his assistant, urging the necessity of adding a Continental
- Legislature to Congress, to be elected by the several States.
- Robert Morris invited the Chancellor and a number of eminent men to
- meet Paine at dinner, where his plea for a stronger Union was
- discussed and approved. This was probably the earliest of a series
- of consultations preliminary to the Constitutional Convention."
-
- "On the 19th of April, 1783, it being the eighth anniversary
- of the Battle of Lexington, Paine printed a little pamphlet
- entitled 'Thoughts on Peace and the Probable Advantages Thereof.'"
- In this pamphlet he pleads for "a supreme Nationality absorbing all
- cherished sovereignties." Mr. Conway calls this pamphlet Paine's
- "Farewell Address," and gives the following extract:
-
- "It was the cause of America that made me an author. The
- force with which it struck my mind, and the dangerous
- condition in which the country was 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 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...
- But as the scenes of war are closed, and every man preparing
- for home and happier times, I therefore take leave of the
- subject. I have most sincerely followed it from beginning to
- end, and through all its turns and windings; and whatever
-
-
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- THOMAS PAINE.
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- 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."
-
- Paine had made some enemies, first, by attacking African
- slavery, and, second, by insisting upon the sovereignty of the
- Nation.
-
- During the Revolution our forefathers, in order to justify
- making war on Great Britain, were compelled to take the ground that
- all men are entitled to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.
- In no other way could they justify their action. After the war, the
- meaner instincts began to take possession of the mind, and those
- who had fought for their own liberty were perfectly willing to
- enslave others. We must also remember that the Revolution was begun
- and carried on by a noble minority -- that the majority were really
- in favor of Great Britain and did what they dared to prevent the
- success of the American cause. The minority, however, had control
- of affairs. They were active, energetic, enthusiastic, and
- courageous, and the majority were overawed, shamed, and suppressed.
- But when peace came, the majority asserted themselves and the
- interests of trade and commerce were consulted. Enthusiasm slowly
- died, and patriotism was mingled with the selfishness of traffic.
-
- But, after all, the enemies of Paine were few, the friends
- were many. He had the respect and admiration of the greatest and
- the best, and was enjoying the fruits of his labor.
-
- The Revolution was ended, the colonies were free. They had
- been united, they formed a Nation, and the United States of America
- had a place on the map of the world.
-
- Paine was not a politician. He had not labored for seven years
- to get an office. His services were no longer needed in America. He
- concluded to educate the English people, to inform them of their
- rights, to expose the pretenses, follies and fallacies, the crimes
- and cruelties of nobles, kings, and parliaments. In the brain and
- heart of this man were the dream and hope of the universal
- republic. He had confidence in the people. He hated tyranny and
- war, despised the senseless pomp and vain show of crowned robbers,
- laughed at titles, and the "honorable" badges worn by the
- obsequious and servile, by fawners and followers; loved liberty
- with all his heart, and bravely fought against those who could give
- the rewards of place and gold, and for those who could pay only
- with thanks.
-
- Hoping to hasten the day of freedom, he wrote the "Rights of
- Man" -- a book that laid the foundation for all the real liberty
- that the English now enjoy -- a book that made known to Englishmen
- the Declaration of Nature, and convinced millions that all are
- children of the same mother, entitled to share equally in her
- gifts. Every Englishman who has outgrown the ideas of 1688 should
- remember Paine with love and reverence. Every Englishman who has
- sought to destroy abuses, to lessen or limit the prerogatives of
- the crown, to extend the suffrage, to do away with "rotten
- boroughs," to take taxes from knowledge, to increase and protect
- the freedom of speech and the press, to do away with bribes under
-
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- THOMAS PAINE.
-
- the name of pensions, and to make England a government of
- principles rather than of persons, has been compelled to adopt the
- creed and use the arguments of Thomas Paine. In England every step
- toward freedom has been a triumph of Paine over Burke and Pitt. No
- man ever rendered a greater service to his native land.
-
- The book called the "Rights of Man" was the greatest
- contribution that literature had given to liberty. It rests on the
- bed-rock. No attention is paid to precedents except to show that
- they are wrong. Paine was not misled by the proverbs that wolves
- had written for sheep. He had the intelligence to examine for
- himself, and the courage to publish his conclusions. As soon as the
- "Rights of Man" was published the Government was alarmed. Every
- effort was made to suppress it. The author was indicted; those who
- published, and those who sold, were arrested and imprisoned. But
- the new gospel had been preached -- a great man had shed light --
- a new force had been born, and it was beyond the power of nobles
- and kings to undo what the author-hero had done.
-
- To avoid arrest and probable death, Paine left England. He had
- sown with brave hand the seeds of thought, and he knew that he had
- lighted a fire that nothing could extinguish until England should
- be free.
-
- The fame of Thomas Paine had reached France in many ways --
- principally through Lafayette. His services in America were well
- known. The pamphlet "Common Sense" had been published in French,
- and its effect had been immense. "The Rights of Man" that had
- created, and was then creating, such a stir in England, was also
- known to the French. The lovers of liberty everywhere were the
- friends and admirers of Thomas Paine. In America, England,
- Scotland, Ireland, and France he was known as the defender of
- popular rights. He had preached a new gospel. He had given a new
- Magna Charta to the people.
-
- So popular was Paine in France that he was elected by three
- constituencies to the National Convention. He chose to represent
- Calais. From the moment he entered French territory he was received
- with almost royal honors. He at once stood with the foremost, and
- was welcomed by all enlightened patriots. As in America, so in
- France, he knew no idleness -- he was an organizer and worker. The
- first thing he did was to found the first Republican Society, and
- the next to write its Manifesto, in which the ground was taken that
- France did not need a king; that the people should govern
- themselves. In this Manifesto was this argument:
-
- "What kind of office must that be in a government which
- requires neither experience nor ability to execute? that may
- be abandoned to the desperate chance of birth; that may be
- filled with an idiot, a madman, a tyrant, with equal effect as
- with the good, the virtuous, the wise? An office of this
- nature is a mere nonentity; it is a place of show, not of
- use."
-
- He said:
-
-
-
-
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- THOMAS PAINE.
-
- "I am not the personal enemy of kings. Quite the
- contrary. No man wishes more heartily than myself to see them
- all in the happy and honorable state of private individuals;
- but I am the avowed, open and intrepid enemy of what is called
- monarchy; and I am such by principles which nothing can either
- alter or corrupt, by my attachment to humanity, by the anxiety
- which I feel within myself for the dignity and honor of the
- human race."
-
- One of the grandest things done by Thomas Paine was his effort
- to save the life of Louis XVI. The Convention was in favor of
- death. Paine was a foreigner. His career had caused some
- jealousies. He knew the danger he was in -- that the tiger was
- already crouching for a spring -- but he was true to his
- principles. He was opposed to the death penalty. He remembered that
- Louis XVI. had been the friend of America, and he very cheerfully
- risked his life, not only for the good of France, not only to save
- the king, but to pay a debt of gratitude. He asked the Convention
- to exile the king to the United States. He asked this as a member
- of the Convention and as a citizen of the United States. As an
- American he felt grateful not only to the king, but to every
- Frenchman, He, the adversary of all kings, asked the Convention to
- remember that kings were men, and subject to human frailties. He
- took still another step, and said: "As France has been the first of
- European nations to abolish royalty, let us also be the first to
- abolish the punishment of death."
-
- Even after the death of Louis had been voted, Paine made
- another appeal. With a courage born of the highest possible sense
- of duty he said:
-
- "France has but one ally -- the United States of America.
- That is the only nation that can furnish France with naval
- provisions, for the kingdoms of Northern Europe are, or soon
- will be, at war with her. It happens that the person now under
- discussion is regarded in America as a deliverer of their
- country. I can assure you that his execution will there spread
- universal sorrow, and it is in your power not thus to wound
- the feelings of your ally. Could I speak the French language
- I would descend to your bar, and in their name become your
- petitioner to respite the execution of your sentence on Louis.
- Ah, citizens, give not the tyrant of England the triumph of
- seeing the man perish on the scaffold who helped my dear
- brothers of America to break his chains."
-
- This was worthy of the man who had said: "Where Liberty is
- not, there is my country."
-
- Paine was second on the committee to prepare the draft of a
- constitution for France to be submitted to the Convention. He was
- the real author, not only of the draft of the Constitution, but of
- the Declaration of Rights.
-
- In France, as in America, he took the lead. His first thoughts
- seemed to be first principles. He was clear because he was
- profound. People without ideas experience great difficulty in
- finding words to express them.
-
-
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- THOMAS PAINE.
-
- From the moment that Paine cast his vote in favor of mercy --
- in favor of life -- the shadow of the guillotine was on him, He
- knew that when he voted for the King's life, he voted for his own
- death. Paine remembered that the king had been the friend of
- America, and to him ingratitude seemed the worst of crimes. He
- worked to destroy the monarch, not the man; the king, not the
- friend. He discharged his duty and accepted death. This was the
- heroism of goodness -- the sublimity of devotion.
-
- Believing that his life was near its close, he made up his
- mind to give to the world his thoughts concerning "revealed
- religion." This he had for some time intended to do, but other
- matters had claimed his attention. Feeling that there was no time
- to be lost, he wrote the first part of the "Age of Reason," and
- gave the manuscript to Joel Barlow. Six hours after, he was
- arrested. The second part was written in prison while he was
- waiting for death.
-
- Paine clearly saw that men could not be really free, or defend
- the freedom they had, unless they were free to think and speak. He
- knew that the church was the enemy of liberty, that the altar and
- throne were in partnership, that they helped each other and divided
- the spoils.
-
- He felt that, being a man, he had the right to examine the
- creeds and the Scriptures for himself, and that, being an honest
- man, it was his duty and his privilege to tell his fellow-men the
- conclusions at which he arrived.
-
- He found that the creeds of all orthodox churches were absurd
- and cruel, and that the Bible was no better. Of course he found
- that there were some good things in the creeds and in the Bible.
- These he defended, but the infamous, the inhuman, he attacked.
-
- In matters of religion he pursued the same course that he had
- in things political. He depended upon experience, and above all on
- reason. He refused to extinguish the light in his own soul. He was
- true to himself, and gave to others his honest thoughts. He did not
- seek wealth, or place, or fame. He sought the truth.
-
- He had felt it to be his duty to attack the institution of
- slavery in America, to raise his voice against dueling, to plead
- for the rights of woman, to excite pity for the sufferings of
- domestic animals, the speechless friends of man; to plead the cause
- of separation, of independence, of American nationality, to attack
- the abuses and crimes of monarchs to do what he could to give
- freedom to the world.
-
- He thought it his duty to take another step. Kings asserted
- that they derived their power, their right to govern, from God. To
- this assertion Paine replied with the "Rights of Man." Priests
- pretended that they were the authorized agents of God. Paine
- replied with the "Age of Reason."
-
- This book is still a power, and will be as long as the
- absurdities and cruelties of the creeds and the Bible have
- defenders. The "Age of Reason" affected the priests just as the
-
-
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- "Rights of Man" affected nobles and kings. The kings answered the
- arguments of Paine with laws, the priests with lies. Kings appealed
- to force, priests to fraud. Mr. Conway has written in regard to the
- "Age of Reason" the most impressive and the most interesting
- chapter in his book.
-
- Paine contended for the rights of the individual, -- for the
- jurisdiction of the soul. Above all religions he placed Reason,
- above all kings, Men, and above all men Law.
-
- The first part of the "Age of Reason" was written in the
- shadow of a prison, the second part in the gloom of death. From
- that shadow, from that gloom, came a flood of light. This
- testament, by which the wealth of a marvelous brain, the love of a
- great and heroic heart were given to the world, was written in the
- presence of the scaffold, when the writer believed he was giving
- his last message to his fellow-men.
-
- The "Age of Reason" was his crime.
-
- Franklin, Jefferson, Sumner and Lincoln, the four greatest
- statesmen that America has produced, were believers in the creed of
- Thomas Paine.
-
- The Universalists and Unitarians have found their best
- weapons, their best arguments, in the "Age of Reason."
-
- Slowly, but surely, the churches are adopting not only the
- arguments, but the opinions of the great Reformer.
-
- Theodore Parker attacked the Old Testament and Calvinistic
- theology with the same weapons and with a bitterness excelled by no
- man who has expressed his thoughts in our language.
-
- Paine was a century in advance of his time. If he were living
- now his sympathy would be with Savage, Chadwick, Professor Briggs
- and the "advanced theologians." He, too, would talk about the
- "higher criticism," and the latest definition of "inspiration."
- These advanced thinkers substantially are repeating the "Age of
- Reason." They still wear the old uniform -- clinging to the toggery
- of theology -- but inside of their religious rags they agree with
- Thomas Paine.
-
- Not one argument that Paine urged against the inspiration of
- the Bible, against the truth of miracles, against the barbarities
- and infamies of the Old Testament, against the pretensions of
- priests and the claims of kings, has ever been answered.
-
- His arguments in favor of the existence of what he was pleased
- to call the God of Nature were as weak as those of all Theists have
- been. But in all the affairs of this world, his clearness of
- vision, lucidity of expression, cogency of argument, aptness of
- comparison, power of statement and comprehension of the subject in
- hand, with all its bearings and consequences, have rarely, if ever,
- bean excelled.
-
-
-
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- He had no reverence for mistakes because they were old. He did
- not admire the castles of Feudalism even when they were covered
- with ivy. He not only said that the Bible was not inspired, but he
- demonstrated that it could not all be true. This was "brutal." He
- presented arguments so strong, so clear, so convincing, that they
- could not be answered. This was "vulgar."
-
- He stood for liberty against kings, for humanity against
- creeds and gods. This was "cowardly and low." He gave his life to
- free and civilize his fellow-men. This was "infamous."
-
- Paine was arrested and imprisoned in December, 1793. He was,
- to say the least, neglected by Gouverneur Morris and Washington. He
- was released through the efforts of James Monroe, in November,
- 1794. He was called back to the Convention, but too late to be of
- use. As most of the actors had suffered death, the tragedy was
- about over and the curtain was falling. Paine remained in Paris
- until the "Reign of Terror" was ended and that of the Corsican
- tyrant had commenced.
-
- Paine came back to America hoping to spend the remainder of
- his life surrounded by those for whose happiness and freedom he had
- labored so many years. He expected to be rewarded with the love and
- reverence of the American people.
-
- In 1794 James Monroe had written to Paine these words:
-
- It is unnecessary for me to tell you how much all your
- countrymen, I speak of the great mass of the people, are
- interested in your welfare. They have not forgot the history
- of their own Revolution and the difficult scenes through which
- they passed; nor do they review its several stages without
- reviving in their bosoms a due sensibility of the merits of
- those who served them in that great and arduous conflict The
- crime of ingratitude has not yet stained, and I hope never
- will stain, our national character. You are considered by them
- as not only having rendered important services in our own
- Revolution, but as being on a more extensive scale the friend
- of human rights and a distinguished and able advocate of
- public liberty. To the welfare of Thomas Paine we are not and
- cannot be indifferent."
-
- In the same year Mr. Monroe wrote a letter to the Committee of
- General Safety, asking for the release of Mr. Paine, in which,
- among other things, he said:
-
- "The services Thomas Paine rendered to his country in its
- struggle for freedom have implanted in the hearts of his
- countrymen a sense of gratitude never to be effaced as long as
- they shall deserve the title of a just and generous people."
-
- On reaching America, Paine found that the sense of gratitude
- had been effaced. He found that the Federalists hated him with all
- their hearts because he believed in the rights of the people and
- was still true to the splendid principles advocated during the
- darkest days of the Revolution. In almost every pulpit he found a
- malignant and implacable foe, and the pews were filled with his
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 10
-
- THOMAS PAINE.
-
- enemies. The slave-holders hated him. He was held responsible even
- for the crimes of the French Revolution. He was regarded as a
- blasphemer, an Atheist, an enemy of God and man. The ignorant
- citizens of Bordentown, as cowardly as orthodox, longed to mob the
- author of "Common Sense" and "The Crisis." They thought he had sold
- himself to the Devil because he had defended God against the
- slanderous charges that he had inspired the writers of the Bible --
- because he had said that a being of infinite goodness and purity
- did not establish slavery and polygamy.
-
- Paine had insisted that men had the right to think for
- themselves. This so enraged the average American citizen that he
- longed for revenge.
-
- In 1802 the people of the United states had exceedingly crude
- ideas about the liberty of thought and expression. Neither had they
- any conception of religious freedom. Their highest thought on that
- subject was expressed by the word "toleration," and even this
- toleration extended only to the various Christian sects. Even the
- vaunted religious liberty of colonial Maryland was only to the
- effect that one kind of Christian should not fine, imprison and
- kill another kind of Christian, but all kinds of Christians had the
- right, and it was their duty, to brand, imprison and kill Infidels
- of every kind.
-
- Paine had been guilty of thinking for himself and giving his
- conclusions to the world without having asked the consent of a
- priest -- just as he had published his political opinions without
- leave of the king. He had published his thoughts on religion and
- had appealed to reason -- to the light in every mind, to the
- humanity, the pity, the goodness which he believed to be in every
- heart. He denied the right of kings to make laws and of priests to
- make creeds. He insisted that the people should make laws, and that
- every human being should think for himself. While some believed in
- the freedom of religion, he believed in the religion of freedom.
-
- If Paine had been a hypocrite, if he had concealed his
- opinions, if he had defended slavery with quotations from the
- "sacred Scriptures" -- if he had cared nothing for the liberties of
- men in other lands -- if he had said that the state could not live
- without the church -- if he had sought for place instead of truth,
- he would have won wealth and power, and his brow would have been
- crowned with the laurel of fame.
-
- He made what the pious call the "mistake" of being true to
- himself -- of living with an unstained soul. He had lived and
- labored for the people. The people were untrue to him. They
- returned evil for good, hatred for benefits received, and yet this
- great chivalric soul remembered their ignorance and loved them with
- all his heart, and fought their oppressors with all his strength.
-
- We must remember what the churches and creeds were in that
- day, what the theologians really taught, and what the people
- believed. To save a few in spite of their vices, and to damn the
- many without regard to their virtues, and all for the glory of the
- Damner: -- this was Calvinism. "He that hath ears to hear, let him
- hear," but he that hath a brain to think must not think. He that
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 11
-
- THOMAS PAINE.
-
- believeth without evidence is good, and he that believeth in spite
- of evidence is a saint. Only the wicked doubt, only the blasphemer
- denies. This was orthodox Christianity.
-
- Thomas Paine had the courage, the sense, the heart, to
- denounce these horrors, these absurdities, these infinite infamies.
- He did what he could to drive these theological wipers, these
- Calvinistic cobras, these fanged and hissing serpents of
- superstition from the heart of man.
-
- A few civilized men agreed with him then, and the world has
- progressed since 1809. Intellectual wealth has accumulated; vast
- mental estates have been left to the world. Geologists have forced
- secrets from the rocks, astronomers from the stars, historians from
- old records and lost languages. In every direction the thinker and
- the investigator have ventured and explored, and even the pews have
- begun to ask questions of the pulpits. Humboldt has lived, and
- Darwin and Haeckel and Huxley, and the armies led by them, have
- changed the thought of the world.
-
- The churches of 1809 could not be the friends of Thomas Paine.
- No church asserting that belief is necessary to salvation ever was,
- or ever will be, the champion of true liberty. A church founded on
- slavery -- that is to say, on blind obedience, worshiping
- irresponsible and arbitrary power, must of necessity be the enemy
- of human freedom.
-
- The orthodox churches are now anxious to save the little that
- Paine left of their creed. If one now believes in God, and lends a
- little financial aid, he is considered a good and desirable member.
- He need not define God after the manner of the catechism. He may
- talk about a "Power that works for righteousness," or the tortoise
- Truth that beats the rabbit Lie in the long run, or the
- "Unknowable," or the Unconditioned," or the "Cosmic Force," or the
- "Ultimate Atom," or "Protoplasm," or the "What" -- provided he
- begins this word with a capital.
-
- We must also remember that there is a difference between
- independence and liberty. Millions have fought for independence --
- to throw off some foreign yoke -- and yet were at heart the enemies
- of true liberty. A man in jail, sighing to be free, may be said to
- be in favor of liberty, but not from principle; but a man who,
- being free, risks or gives his life to free the enslaved, is a true
- soldier of liberty.
-
- Thomas Paine had passed the legendary limit of life. One by
- one most of his old friends and acquaintances had deserted him.
- Maligned on every side, execrated, shunned and abhorred -- his
- virtues denounced as vices -- his services forgotten -- his
- character blackened, he preserved the poise and balance of his
- soul. He was a victim of the people, but his convictions remained
- unshaken. He was still a soldier in the army of freedom, and still
- tried to enlighten and civilize those who were impatiently waiting
- for his death, Even those who loved their enemies hated him, their
- friend -- the friend of the whole world -- with all their hearts.
-
- On the 8th of June, 1809, death came -- Death, almost his only
- friend.
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 12
-
- THOMAS PAINE.
-
- At his funeral no pomp, no pageantry, no civic procession, no
- military display. In a carriage, a woman and her son who had lived
- on the bounty of the dead -- on horseback, a Quaker, the humanity
- of whose heart dominated the creed of his head -- and, following on
- foot, two negroes filled with gratitude -- constituted the funeral
- cortege of Thomas Paine.
-
- He who had received the gratitude of many millions, the thanks
- of generals and statesmen -- he who had been the friend and
- companion of the wisest and best -- he who had taught a people to
- be free, and whose words had inspired armies and enlightened
- nations, was thus given back to Nature, the mother of us all.
-
- If the people of the great Republic knew the life of this
- generous, this chivalric man, the real story of his services, his
- sufferings and his triumphs of what he did to compel the robed and
- crowned, the priests and kings, to give back to the people liberty,
- the jewel of the soul; if they knew that he was the first to write,
- "The Religion of Humanity"; if they knew that he, above all others,
- planted and watered the seeds of independence, of union, of
- nationality, in the hearts of our forefathers -- that his words
- were gladly repeated by the best and bravest in many lands; if they
- knew that he attempted, by the purest means, to attain the noblest
- and loftiest ends -- that he was original, sincere, intrepid, and
- that he could truthfully say: "The world is my country, to do good
- my religion" -- if the people only knew all this -- the truth --
- they would repeat the words of Andrew Jackson: "Thomas Paine needs
- no monument made with hands; he has erected a monument in the
- hearts of all lovers of liberty."
-
- North American Review, August, 1892.
-
- **** ****
-
- SUMTER'S GUN.
-
- 1861 -- April 12th -- 1891.
-
- FOR about three-quarters of a century the statesmen, that is
- to say, the politicians, of the North and South, had been busy
- making compromises, adopting constitutions and enacting laws; busy
- making speeches, framing platforms and political pretenses, to the
- end that liberty and slavery might dwell in peace and friendship
- under the same flag.
-
- Arrogance on one side, hypocrisy on the other.
-
- Right apologized to Wrong for the sake of the Union.
-
- The sources of justice were poisoned, and patriotism became
- the defender of piracy. In the name of humanity mothers were robbed
- of their babes.
-
- Thirty years ago to-day a shot was fired, and in a moment all
- the promises, all the laws, all the constitutional amendments, and
- all the idiotic and heartless decisions of courts and all the
- speeches of orators inspired by the hope of place and power, were
- blown into rags and ravelings, pieces and patches.
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 13
-
- SUMTER'S GUN.
-
- The North and South had been masquerading as friends, and in
- a moment, while the sound of that shot was ringing in their ears,
- they faced each other as enemies.
-
- The roar of that cannon announced the birth of a new epoch.
- The echoes of that shot went out, not only over the bay of
- Charleston, but over the hills, the prairies and forests of the
- continent.
-
- These echoes said marvelous things and uttered prophecies that
- none were wise enough to understand.
-
- Who at that time had the slightest conception of the immediate
- future? Who then was great enough to see the end? Who then was wise
- enough to know that the echoes would be kept alive and repeated for
- years by thousands and thousands of cannon, by millions of muskets,
- on the fields of ruthless war?
-
- At that time Abraham Lincoln, an Illinois lawyer, was barely
- a mouth in the President's chair, and that shot made him the most
- commanding and majestic figure of the nineteenth century -- a
- figure that stands alone.
-
- Who could have guessed the names of the heroes to be repeated
- by countless lips before the echoes of that shot should have died
- away?
-
- There was at that time a young man at Galena, silent,
- unobtrusive, unknown; and yet, the moment that shot was fired he
- was destined to lead the greatest host ever marshaled on a field of
- war, destined to receive the final sword of the Rebellion.
-
- There was another, in the Southwest, who heard one of the
- echoes of that shot, and who afterward marched from Atlanta to the
- sea; and another, far away by the Pacific, who also heard one of
- the echoes, and who became one of the immortal three.
-
- But, above all, the echoes were heard by millions of men and
- women in the fields of unpaid toil, and they knew not the meaning,
- but felt that they had heard a prophecy of freedom. And the echoes
- told of death and glory for many thousands -- of the agonies of
- women -- the sobs of orphans -- the sighs of the imprisoned, and
- the glad shouts of the delivered, the enfranchised, the redeemed.
-
- They who fired that gun did not dream that they were giving
- liberty to millions of people, including themselves, white as well
- as black, North as well as South, and that before the echoes should
- die away, all the shackles would be broken, all the constitutions
- and statutes of slavery repealed, and all the compromises merged
- and lost in a great compact made to preserve the liberties of all.
-
- END
-
- **** ****
-
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 14
-
- VIVISECTION.
-
- VIVISECTION is the Inquisition -- the Hell -- of Science, All
- the cruelty which the human -- or rather the inhuman -- heart is
- capable of inflicting, is in this one word. Below this there is no
- depth. This word lies like a coiled serpent at the bottom of the
- abyss.
-
- We can excuse, in part, the crimes of passion. We take into
- consideration the fact that man is liable to be caught by the
- whirlwind, and that from a brain on fire the soul rushes to a
- crime. But what excuse can ingenuity form for a man who
- deliberately -- with an un-accelerated pulse -- with the calmness
- of John Calvin at the murder of Serviettes -- seeks, with curious
- and cunning knives, in the living, quivering flesh of a dog, for
- all the throbbing nerves of pain? The wretches who commit these
- infamous crimes pretend that they are working for the good of man;
- that they are actuated by philanthropy; and that their pity for the
- sufferings of the human race drives out all pity for the animals
- they slowly torture to death. But those who are incapable of
- pitying animals are, as a matter of fact, incapable of pitying men.
- A physician who would cut a living rabbit in pieces -- laying bare
- the nerves, denuding them with knives, pulling them out with
- forceps -- would not hesitate to try experiments with men and women
- for the gratification of his curiosity.
-
- To settle some theory, he would trifle with the life of any
- patient in his power. By the same reasoning he will justify the
- vivisection of animals and patients. He will say that it is better
- that a few animals should suffer than that one human being should
- die; and that it is far better that one patient should die, if
- through the sacrifice of that one, several may be saved.
-
- Brain without heart is far more dangerous than heart without
- brain.
-
- Have these scientific assassins discovered anything of value?
- They may have settled some disputes as to the action of some organ,
- but have they added to the useful knowledge of the race?
-
- It is not necessary for a man to be a specialist in order to
- have and express his opinion as to the right or wrong of
- vivisection. It is not necessary to be a scientist or a naturalist
- to detest cruelty and to love mercy. Above all the discoveries of
- the thinkers, above all the inventions of the ingenious, above all
- the victories won on fields of intellectual conflict, rise human
- sympathy and a sense of justice.
-
- I know that good for the human race can never be accomplished
- by torture. I also know that all that has been ascertained by
- vivisection could have been done by the dissection of the dead. I
- know that all the torture has been useless. All the agony inflicted
- has simply hardened the hearts of the criminals, without
- enlightening their minds.
-
- It may be that the human race might be physically improved if
- all the sickly and deformed babes were killed, and if all the
- paupers, liars, drunkards, thieves, villains, and vivisectionists
- were murdered. All this might, in a few ages, result in the
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 15
-
- VIVISECTION.
-
- production of a generation of physically perfect men and women; but
- what would such beings be worth, -- men and women healthy and
- heartless, muscular and cruel -- that is to say, intelligent wild
- beasts?
-
- Never can I be the friend of one who vivisects his fellow --
- creatures. I do not wish to touch his hand.
-
- When the angel of pity is driven from the heart; when the
- fountain of tears is dry, -- the soul becomes a serpent trawling in
- the dust of a desert.
-
- A letter written to Philip G. Peabody. May 27, 1890.
-
- **** ****
-
- WESTERN SOCIETY OF THE ARMY OF THE
-
- POTOMAC BANQUET.
-
- Chicago, January 31, 1894.
-
- FIRST of all, I wish to thank you for allowing me to be
- present. Next, I wish to congratulate you that you are all alive.
- I congratulate you that you were born in this century, the greatest
- century in the world's history, the greatest century of
- intellectual genius and of physical, mental and moral progress that
- the world ever knew. I congratulate you all that you are members of
- the Army of the Potomac. I believe that no better army ever marched
- under the flag of any nation. There was no difficulty that
- discouraged you; no defeat that disheartened you. For years you
- bore the heat and burden of battle; for years you saw your comrades
- torn by shot and shell, but wiping the tears from your cheeks you
- marched on with greater determination than ever to fight to the
- end.
-
- To the Army of the Potomac belong: the eternal honor of having
- obtained finally the sword of Rebellion. I congratulate you because
- you fought for the Republic, and I thank you for your courage. For
- by you the United States was kept on the map of the world, and our
- flag was kept floating. If not for your work, neither would have
- been there. You removed from it the only stain that was ever on it.
- You fought not only the battle of the Union, but of the whole
- world.
-
- I congratulate you that you live in a period when the North
- has attained a higher moral altitude than was ever attained by any
- nation. You now live in a country which believes in absolute
- freedom for all. In this country any man may reap what he sows and
- may give his honest thought to his fellow-men. It is wonderful to
- think what this Nation was before the Army of the Potomac came into
- existence. It believed in liberty as the convict believer in
- liberty. It was a country where men that had honest thoughts were
- ostracized. I thank you and your courage for what we are. Nothing
- ennobles a man so much as fighting for the right. Whoever fights
- for the wrong wounds himself. I believe that every man who fought
- in the Union army came out a stronger and a better and a nobler
- man.
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 16
-
- WESTERN SOCIETY OF THE ARMY
- OF THE POTOMAC BANQUET.
-
- I believe in this country. I am so young and so full of
- enthusiasm that I am a believer in National growth. I want this
- country to be territorial and to become larger than it is. I want
- a country worthy of Chicago. I want to pick up the West Indies,
- take in the Bermudas, the Bahamas and Barbados. They are our
- islands. They belong to this continent and it is a piece of
- impudence for any other nation to think of owning them. We want to
- grow. Such is the extravagance of my ambition that I even want the
- Sandwich Islands. They say that these islands are too far away from
- us; that they are two thousand miles from our shores. But they are
- nearer to our shores than to any other. I want them. I want a naval
- station there. I want America to be mistress of the Pacific. Then
- there is another thing in my mind. I want to grow North and South.
- I want Canada -- good people -- good land. I want that country. I
- do not want to steal it, but I want it. I want to go South with
- this Nation. My idea is this: There is only air enough between the
- Isthmus of Panama and the North Pole for one flag. A country that
- guarantees liberty to all cannot be too large. If any of these
- people are ignorant, we will educate them; give them the benefit of
- our free schools. Another thing -- I might as well sow a few seeds
- for next fall. I have heard many reasons why the South failed in
- the Rebellion, and why with the help of Northern dissensions and a
- European hatred the South did not succeed. I will tell you. In my
- judgment, the South failed, not on account of its army, but from
- other conditions. Luckily for us, the South had always been in
- favor of free trade.
-
- Secondly -- The South raised and sold raw material, and when,
- the war came it had no foundries, no factories, and no looms to
- weave the cloth for uniforms; no shops to make munitions; of war,
- and it had to get what supplies it could by running the blockade.
- We of the North had the cloth to clothe our soldiers, shops to make
- our bayonets; we had all the curious wheels that invention had
- produced, and had labor and genius, the power of steam, and the
- water to make what we needed, and we did not require anything from
- any other country. Suppose this whole country raised raw material
- and shipped it out, we would be in the condition that the South
- was. We want this Nation to be independent of the whole world. A
- nation to be ready to settle questions of dispute by war should be
- in a condition of absolute independence. For that reason I want all
- the wheels turning in this country, all the chimneys full of fire,
- all the looms running, the iron red hot everywhere. I want to see
- all mechanics having plenty of work with good wages and good homes
- for their families, good food, schools for their children, plenty
- of clothes, and enough to take care of a child if it happens to
- take sick. I am for the independence of America, the growth of
- America physically, mentally, and every other way. The time will
- come when all nations combined cannot take that flag out of the
- sky. I want to see this country so that if a deluge sweeps every
- other nation from the face of the globe we would have all we want
- made right here by our factories, by American brain and hand.
-
- I thank you that the republic still lives. I thank you that we
- are all lovers of freedom, I thank you for having helped establish
- a Government where every child has an opportunity, and where every
- avenue of advancement is open to all.
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 17