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Introduction by
Professor Eric Foner, The City University of New York
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MOUNT
VERNON, 12 June. -- Unsollicited by, and unknown to Mr.
Paine, I take the liberty of hinting the services and the
distressed (for so I think it may be called) situation of
that Gentleman.
"That
his Common Sense, and many of his Crisis, were well timed
and had a happy effect upon the public mind, none, I
believe, who will recur to the epocha's at which they were
published will deny. -- That his services hitherto have
passed of[f] unnoticed is obvious to all; and that he is
chagreened and necessitous I will undertake to aver. -- Does
not common justice then point to some compensation?
"He is
not in circumstances to refuse the bounty of the public. New
York, not the least distressed nor most able State in the
Union, has set the example. He prefers the benevolence of
the States individually to an allowance from Congress, for
reasons which are conclusive in his own mind, and such as I
think may be approved by others.
His views are moderate,
a decent independency is, I believe, the height of his
ambition, and if you view his services in the American cause
in the same important light that I do, I am sure you will
have pleasure in obtaining it for him.
"I am
with esteem and regard, Dr. Sir, yr. most obdt. servt., --
GEORGE WASHINGTON."' |
"I
know not whether any man in the world has had more influence on its
inhabitants or affairs for the last thirty years than Tom Paine." So
wrote John Adams in 1805. Neither a personal friend nor political
admirer of Paine's, the conservative Adams believed that Paine's
influence had, on the whole, been pernicious. In 1776 Adams had rushed
into print to combat what he called the "democratical" philosophy
of Paine's great pamphlet Common Sense, and in the 1790s he had
ridiculed the spread of egalitarian ideas on both sides of the Atlantic
as "Paine's yellow fever." But Adams, like many of his contemporaries,
was forced to admit that, in an age of pamphleteering, Paine had become
the greatest pamphleteer of all. In Common Sense and the Crisis papers
in America, and Rights of Man, The Age of Reason, and Agrarian Justice
in Europe, Paine had done more than bring the political issues of his
time to an unprecedented popular audience. He had helped to create the
very language of politics, the vocabulary in which men and women
expressed timeless discontents and voiced aspirations for a better
world. The slogans and rallying cries we associate with the late
eighteenth century -- "the Age of Reason" "the times that try men's
souls" -- derive from Paine's writings. Most of all, Rights of Man, his
greatest and most widely read work, remains today a classic statement of
the egalitarian, democratic faith of the Age of Revolution.
Striking as Paine's success as a pamphleteer was, it was no less
remarkable than the trajectory of his life. Unlike most of the men who
made the American Revolution, who sprang from middle- and upper-class
families long resident on American soil, Paine's origins lay among the
lower orders of eighteenth-century England. He did not even arrive in
America until the very eve of the war for independence, and never sank
deep roots there. "Where liberty is not," he once told Benjamin
Franklin, "there is my country." Nor is his ultimate legacy easily
assessed. Unlike Jefferson, Washington, Adams, and his other
contemporaries, Paine was never accorded a place among the Revolutionary
leaders canonized in American popular culture. His memory was primarily
kept alive by succeeding generations of radicals, who found in him an
outstanding symbol of resistance to established authority.
Certainly Paine's early life gave no indication of the greatness he was
to achieve. Born in Thetford, England, in 1737, the son of a
Quaker staymaker (i.e., corset-maker) and a local attorney's daughter,
Paine spent the first thirty-seven years of his life in obscurity. He
attempted to make a living at his father's craft, later tried his hand
as a teacher and shopkeeper, and served as excise-tax collector in
Lewes, an unenviable position in a region where smuggling was virtually
a way of life. Paine was well into middle age by the time he embarked
for America, but so scanty is information concerning his early career
that the formative influences which shaped his thinking remain largely
unknown. Certainly his father's Quaker faith influenced his later
humanitarianism. Paine also developed a strong interest in Newtonian
science, a common theme in the lives of eighteenth-century reformers,
who found in the harmonious Newtonian system based on natural laws a
sharp contrast to governmental structures resting simply on precedent
and the obviously "irrational" principle of hereditary rule. Paine had
also had some contact with a group of London advocates of Parliamentary
reform, and may well have been influenced by underground currents of
popular republicanism dating back to the seventeenth century. But
whatever these early influences, one thing is certain: not until he
emigrated to America in 1774 did Paine find an environment capable of
nourishing the seeds of his political discontent.
Bearing a letter of introduction from Benjamin Franklin, whom he had met
through mutual scientific acquaintances in London, Paine arrived in
Philadelphia as the ten-year-old crisis between Britain and her American
possessions was reaching a point of no return. The first Continental
Congress had convened in the city in December 1773, bringing to
Philadelphia the most prominent leaders of the thirteen colonies.
Talk of political change agitated the city's clubs, taverns; and
workshops. Paine secured a position as editor of the Pennsylvania
Magazine, and in the months that followed made the acquaint ance of
Benjamin Rush and other leaders in the struggle against Britain. It was
Rush who suggested that Paine write a pamphlet on the conflict, although
he specifically warned him to avoid the word "independence." Although
war between British and colonial soldiers had broken out in
Massachusetts in 1775, attaining the "rights of Englishmen," not
national independence, was still the avowed goal of most patriot
leaders.
Common Sense, Paine's remarkable pamphlet advocating the independence of
America and the establishment of republican government, appeared on
January 9, 1776, and immediately caused a sensation. It outlined ideas
that would continue to define the remainder of Paine's career: the
superiority of re publican government to monarchy, equality of rights
among all citizens, and the world significance of the American
Revolution. It also revealed Paine as a brilliant, innovative stylist,
capable of breaking with time- honored traditions of political writing
to forge a new language that would reach out to a mass audience.
Paine began Common Sense not with a discussion of America's relations
with Great Britain but with an analysis of the nature of government. His
most striking phrases were reserved for a savage attack on "the so much
boasted Constitution of England," and the very principle of hereditary
rule. His description of the accession of William the Conqueror seven
centuries earlier would become one of his most frequently quoted
passages: "A French bastard landing with an armed banditti and
establishing himself king of England against the consent of the natives,
is in plain terms a very paltry rascally original.... The plain truth is
that the antiquity of the English monarchy will not bear looking into."
Far from Britain enjoying the most perfect system of government on
earth, as even American leaders had contended, the king was nothing more
than "the royal brute of England," and the constitution simply "the base
remains of two ancient tyrannies, compounded with some new Republican
materials.... The remains of monarchial tyranny in the person of the
king ... the remains of aristocratical tyranny in the persons of the
peers." Paine called instead for the creation of republican government
-- based entirely on the representation of the people -- in a newly
independent America, and a written constitution guaranteeing the rights
of persons and property and establishing freedom of religion.
Common Sense then turned to a discussion of independence, rebutting the
arguments of proponents of reconciliation. "There is something absurd,"
Paine wrote, "in supposing a continent to be perpetually governed by an
island," But he reserved his most eloquent words for a soaring vision of
the meaning of American independence. Paine transformed the struggle
over the rights of Englishmen into a contest with meaning for all
mankind:
O! ye that love
mankind! Ye that dare oppose not only tyranny but the tyrant, stand
forth! Every spot of the old world is overrun with oppression. Freedom
hath been hunted round the globe. Asia and Africa have long expelled
her. Europe regards her as a stranger, and England hath given her
warning to depart. O! receive the fugitive and prepare in time an asylum
for mankind.
The
immediate success of Common Sense was nothing short of astonishing. The
pamphlet sold perhaps 150,000 copies and was credited with converting
countless men and women to the cause of independence. One American
announced, "You have declared the sentiments of millions. Your
production may justly be compared to a land-flood that sweeps all before
it. We were blind, but on reading these enlightening words the scales
have fallen from our eyes." It was not that what Paine had said was
strikingly new. Many of the elements of his argument -- the distinction
between the Old World and the New, the absurdity of hereditary
privilege, even the possibility of independence -- had been voiced
before. What was new was the way in which Paine wove these themes into a
coherent statement, and the language in which he expressed them, a
language aimed at extending political discussion beyond the narrow
bounds of the eighteenth century's "political nation."
The
first thing that struck contemporaries about Common Sense was its tone,
Paine's "daring impudence" and "uncommon frenzy," as critics described
it. The roots of his outrage may well have lain in the years of
disappointment in England. But Paine was indeed a conscious artist. He
intentionally rejected the decorous and reasonable language of previous
pamphlets in order to make a point: that kings were simply men, entitled
to no more deference and respect than they earned. And there was more to
his literary style than his assaults on monarchy. Addressing a mass
audience unfamiliar with legal precedents, classical learning, and
complex rhetoric, Paine strove for simplicity. The hallmarks of his
style were clarity, directness, and forcefulness. He employed
straightforward grammar, and rarely referred to any work other than the
Bible. The message conveyed in his literary style was that anyone could
grasp the nature of politics and government: all that was necessary was
common sense.
In
Common Sense and his subsequent writings, Paine outlined a vision of
republican government and society that would exert a profound influence
on the transatlantic radical tradition. For Paine, a republic was simply
a government devoted to the common good and equality of rights among its
citizens. America, Paine believed, was uniquely fitted to create a
republican government because of its relatively equal distribution of
wealth (excepting, of course, black slavery). In such a circumstance,
governmental structures need not be particularly complex. Indeed, a
central axiom of Paine's outlook, one that has led modern anarchists to
claim him as an intellectual forebear, was the distinction between
society and government: "Society is in every state a blessing, but
government, even in its best state, is but a necessary evil." Without
the expensive and oppressive governmental systems of Europe -- the
courts, kings, and landed aristocracies -- men and women could, Paine
believed, dispense with familiar structures of government. Indeed, Paine
contended that much of the misery in the Old World derived not from
economic exploitation but from war, excessive taxation, political
oppression. and corruption -- all inescapable consequences of monarchy
and hereditary right.
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"He introduced English readers to American definitions of
republican government, and broke with the time-honored
tradition of employing "democracy" as synonym for anarchy,
using it instead in its modern sense as a government
reflecting the will of the majority." -- Introduction by
Professor Eric Foner, The City University of New York |
Paine thus entered the multifaceted debate about the definition of
republicanism that played so central a role in the political experience
of the Revolutionary generation. For Paine and other thinkers of the
era, what was characteristic of republics was not so much a specific
structure of government as a set of qualities among the citizenry. The
key terms in republican discourse were virtue - the willingness to
subordinate selfish interests to the good of the whole; equality --
which encompassed not simply equal treatment before the law, but also
the absence of vast disparities of personal wealth; and independence --
the ability to resist outside coercion. All were seen to rest on a broad
diffusion of private property among the citizens. Only property provided
the autonomy that enabled men to exercise their political rights freely
and to rise above personal concerns to pursue the good of the entire
society. Even Paine, while in America, believed personal servants --
propertyless men dependent on others for a livelihood -- should not
exercise the franchise, although later, in England, he came to advocate
universal male suffrage.
Within the republican tradition, of course, there existed numerous
crosscurrents and competing strands. Paine's version was shaped not
simply by the writings of the English "country party" theorists whose
writings so strongly influenced eighteenth-century American
thought, but by his own experiences in England and America. An artisan
himself, Paine had forged a special relationship with the radical
artisan community of Philadelphia. Indeed, on both sides of the Atlantic
in these years, artisans proved particularly receptive to the
democratic, egalitarian emphasis of Paine's republicanism. If American
thinkers like Jefferson identified the yeoman farmer as the social basis
on which republican government should rest, and as the most virtuous of
all citizens, Paine often spoke for the artisans of the cities. He was
an urbanite, a cosmopolitan, and a strong proponent of economic
progress. If Jefferson's republicanism looked to the past, fearing
economic and social changes that threatened to undermine the small
farmer's independence, Paine, like the artisans, embraced economic
growth. To Paine, the past was a burden, not a guide, and the present
only a temporary resting place from which to propel society into the
future. Paine envisioned a society in which republican government
together with economic growth would produce social harmony, equality,
and an economic abundance in which all classes would share.
Common Sense marked Paine's emergence as a leading figure in the
American struggle for independence. For the next several years he was
deeply involved in American affairs, writing the famous Crisis papers to
bolster the morale of the American army and to suggest solutions to some
of the financial and political problems that confronted the new nation.
He also took part in the conflicts that convulsed revolutionary
Pennsylvania, influencing the state's 1776 constitution, the most
democratic frame of government of the period, and playing a role in the
abolition of slavery in Pennsylvania in 1780.
Yet
with the close of the war for independence, Paine's interest in American
politics began to wane. The problems of peace he found less stirring
than the struggle for independence. Madame Roland, who came to know
Paine during the French Revolution, made an astute observation about his
cast of mind: "I find him more fit, as it were, to scatter the kindling
sparks than to lay the foundation or prepare the formation of a
government. Paine is better at lighting the way for revolution than
drafting a constitution ... or the day-to- ay work of a legislator." By
1787, Paine was ready to return to Europe. The immediate reason was to
promote his design for an iron bridge -- one of several scientific
inventions on which he worked during his lifetime. But it came as no
surprise to those who knew him that Paine soon found himself caught up
in another political upheaval, this time in the land of his birth.
Paine returned to England on the eve of events that fundamentally
transformed the political climate. The outbreak of the French Revolution
in 1189 cast an ever-deepening shadow over English affairs,
reinvigorating demands for political reform but also inspiring
conservatives to rally around king and country. In November 1790,
Edmund Burke published Reflections on the Revolution in France, which
not only denounced events in France and extolled the British political
system, but unfolded a classic exposition of eighteenth-century
conservative thought. Authority, religion, morality, law -- these were
the crucial concepts in Burke's schema of politics. His central idea was
that English liberties were "an entailed inheritance derived to us from
our forefathers, and to be transmitted to our posterity." Society and
government were like a family, in which each generation sought to
transmit and slowly improve upon the traditions it had inherited.
Gradual change might be acceptable, but a sudden overthrow of existing
institutions would lead only to the sort of chaos that was convulsing
France. Rebellion in one quarter, moreover, threatened the
disintegration of the whole, so England had to quarantine herself
against the contagion of revolution. For Burke, the accumulated wisdom
of the past was a far better guide to political behavior than abstract
"prattling about the rights of men," which had the dangerous tendency to
overthrow long-established institutions and upset the "principles of
natural subordination" that stable government required of "the body of
the people."
Prior to 1790, Burke had been known as a reformer, an advocate of the
American cause in the 1770s and of relieving the political disabilities
of Catholics and Dissenters. He and Paine had become acquaintances of
"some intimacy" in 1788 and 1789, and had exchanged letters on
developments in France. But it was inevitable that their paths would
diverge. To Burke, the fall of the Bastille proved the French were "not
fit for liberty," while to Paine it heralded the dawn of a new era for
Europe. When mobs stormed Versailles in October 1789, Burke wrote, "in
France the elements which compose human society seem all to be
dissolved, and a world of monsters is to be produced in the place of
it." Burke saw in France only anarchy; Paine perceived the unfolding of
an "age of revolution," in which republican principles, now legitimized
by the success of the American Revolution, would be embraced in the Old
World.
Paine, moreover, knowing humble origins and difficult
circumstances for most of his life, evinced a real compassion for the
plight of the poor, while Burke's phrase "the swinish multitude" -- made
famous through ironic repetition by radicals -- told more of his inner
thinking than a host of legalistic arguments. Paine was not the first
friend of the French Revolution to respond to Burke; Mary
Wollstonecraft, Dr. Richard Price, and others had preceded him. But
Paine's reply, Rights of Man, became the classic defense not only of
revolutionary France but also of equality, democracy, and a new order
for Europe. The Burke-Paine debate was the classic confrontation
between tradition and innovation, hierarchy and equality, order and
revolution.
Dedicated to George Washington, the first portion of Rights of Man
appeared on March 16, 1791. In part, it was a vindication of events in
France, in part a critique of the British system of government. Long
sections narrated the overthrow of the ancien regime, challenging
Burke's version of the storming of the Bastille, the march on
Versailles, and other events. Paine was particularly outraged by the
contrast between Burke's sympathy for the royal family and his studied
indifference to the suffering of the old regime's victims:
Not one glance of
compassion, not one commiserating reflection, that I can find throughout
his book, has he bestowed on those who lingered out the most wretched of
lives, a life without hope, in the most miserable of prisons ... He
is not affected by the reality of distress touching the heart, but by
the showy resemblage of it striking his imagination. He pities the
plumage, but forgets the dying bird.
Paine pointedly contrasted the new French system of govern ment, with
its broad right of suffrage, with that of England: "Can anything be more
limited, and at the same time more capricious, than what the
qualifications are in England?" he asked. As in Common Sense, he
reserved his sharpest barbs for monarchy and hereditary privilege:
"The idea of hereditary legislators is as inconsistent as that of
hereditary judges, or hereditary juries, and as absurd as an hereditary
mathematician, or an hereditary wise man."
In
contrast to Burke's invocation of precedent and experience to justify
the English constitution, Rights of Man insisted that every generation
had the right and duty to act for itself.
The vanity and
presumption of governing beyond the grave, is the most ridiculous and
insolent of all tyrannies. Man has no property in man; neither has any
generation property in the generations which are to follow.... I am
contending for the rights of the living, and against their being willed
away by the manuscript assumed authority of the dead.
In
Paine's appeal, centuries-old taboos and inhibitions came tumbling down,
and in the process English radicalism was transformed. In place of
modest demands for Parliamentary reform, Paine announced that nothing
les than "a general revolution in the principle and construction of
governments" was on the agenda in Europe.
Not
only was Paine's political stance diametrically apposed to Burke's, but
his literary style, as in Common Sense, marked a striking departure from
the conventions of English political writing. "I wished to know," he
later explained, "the manner in which a work, written in a style of
thinking and expression different to what had been customary in England,
would be received." As in America, Paine's style and content were of one
piece. If Burke addressed the narrow "political nation" of voters and
officeholders, Paine's audience was the entire adult population. His
very tone, idiom, and rhetoric suggested that the issues of the day
could be addressed in the language of common speech. Where Burke drew
upon classical authorities, legal precedents, and obscure works of
political philosophy to make his case, Paine employed the language of
everyday life ("What a stroke has Mr. Burke now made! To use a sailor's
phrase, he has swabbed the deck!"). Paine translated foreign expressions
("Aux armes -- to arms"), used familiar anecdotes, and in images like
"the puppet-show of state and aristocracy" evoked the farces,
ballad-dramas, and other forms of popular theater so common in
eighteenth-century England. And he held Burke's tortuous literary
style up to ridicule: "As the wondering audience, whom Mr. Burke
supposes himself talking to, may not understand all this learned jargon.
I will undertake to be its interpreter."
Eleven months after the first, a second part of Rights of Man appeared.
While Part One had essentially been a defense of the French Revolution,
Paine now outlined his general theory of government and society. Rights
of Man, Part Two, is probably Paine's greatest work and the finest
example of political pamphleteering in the Age of Revolution. As in
Common Sense, Paine began with the distinction between society and
government. Society, resting on the mutual needs and "social affections"
of mankind, was natural and benevolent; government, at least in the Old
World, presented nothing more than "a disgustful picture of human
wretchedness." Echoing his description of William the Conqueror in
Common Sense, Paine assailed the origin of monarchy in a "band of
ruffians" whose chief contrived to "lose the name of robber in that of
monarch." He introduced English readers to American definitions
of republican government, and broke with the time-honored tradition of
employing "democracy" as synonym for anarchy, using it instead in its
modern sense as a government reflecting the will of the majority.
So
far, little that Paine said was new, although he had never said it
better. But suddenly, in Chapter Five, Paine unveiled a new vision, that
of the republican state as an agent of the social welfare. Previously,
Paine's radicalism had been essentially political. The "hordes of
miserable poor, with which the old countries abound," he believed, were
the consequence of bad government. Now, without completely breaking with
his earlier view, or challenging private property as an institution, be
insisted that more than simply a transition to republicanism would be
required to alleviate the plight of the European masses. Paine outlined
a breathtaking economic program. as close to a welfare state as could be
imagined in the eighteenth century. The basis of taxation would be
changed from regressive levies on consumption to a progressive tax on
landed property. From the proceeds, every poor family would receive
funds to enable it to raise and educate its children, a system of social
security would be established, enabling workers to retire on a pension
at age sixty, public employment would be provided for those in need of
work, and funds would be appropriated for a decent burial to those who
died in poverty. At the same time, laws limiting wages would be
abolished, since workingmen ought to be free to "make their own
bargains" without the interference of the state.
"From all we now see," Paine had written at the close of the first part
of Rights of Man. "nothing of reform in the political world ought to be
held improbable. It is an age of revolutions, in which every thing may
be looked for." And the response to his pamphlet seemed fully to justify
Paine's optimism. Rights of Man, historian E. P. Thompson writes,
became the "foundation-text of the English working-class movement."
In a population of ten million, the two parts sold perhaps 250,000
copies within two years. Rights of Man transformed the English radical
tradition, providing political reformers with an explicit social
program, making the traditional demands for Parliamentary reform
meaningful to the daily lives of the lower classes. Some middle-class
reformers embraced Paine's ideas, though more were appalled by his
attack on the monarchy and his call for working people to enter the
stage of politics. But the places of those who deserted the ranks of
reform were more than taken up by a new generation of artisan and
lower-class radicals, organized into "corresponding societies"
throughout the British Isles.
Paine freed such men to think in new and
startling ways about the political and social order, to imagine for the
first time a complete transformation of British life. There was little
room in these societies for gradual constitutional reform, but much talk
of utopian dreams of a better world. They accepted Paine's fervent
conviction that the American and French revolutions demonstrated that
constitutions could be drawn up from first principles. The dead weight
of the past, Karl Marx once wrote, "weighs like a nightmare on the
brains of the living." Paine's mission was to free mankind from this
burden.
So
too, Paine provided a radical sociology, a way of thinking about the
social order that would remain characteristic of radical thought on both
sides of the Atlantic well into the nineteenth century. As in America,
Paine envisioned a society of small property owners, united voluntarily
for the common good. Republican government would serve the interests of
all classes; indeed, it would create a society without the class
conflict that wracked the Old World. But in this harmonious vision one
social group was missing: the landed aristocracy, which would be
destroyed once its court-provided privileges were abolished. For
Paine, society was not divided precisely between rich and poor, or
between capital and labor, but between aristocracy and people (or, as
they would later be called, nonproducers and producers):
Why ... does Mr.
Burke talk of this House of Peers, as the pillar of the landed interest?
Were that pillar to sink into the earth, the same landed property would
continue, and the same ploughing, sowing, and reaping would go on. The
Aristocracy are not the farmers who work the land ... but are the mere
consumers of rent.
Not
surprisingly, the response of the English government to the flames of
revolution abroad and the threat of political upheaval at home was
political repression. Paine himself was quickly indicted for seditious
libel and fled to France one step ahead of the law. By 1795 the radical
societies had been crushed. It was symptomatic of the differences
between British and American political culture at the close of the
eighteenth century that Paine's ideas were outlawed in the former but
had become commonplace in the latter. Thomas Jefferson, who
considered the pamphlet a formidable weapon "against the political
heresies which have sprung up among us," helped publicize Rights of Man
in America. John Adams's young son John Quincy Adams did publish a
series of anonymous newspaper pieces attacking Paine, but few in America
would disagree with Paine's defense of republican government or his
attack on monarchy. The French Revolution, by 1792, did divide American
polities, but far more Americans seem to have responded favorably to the
pamphlet than against it. As for the social chapter, which had the most
profound impact in England, Paine himself did not believe his
far-reaching proposals were relevant to America, where the problem of
poverty was far less acute than in England. The ideas of Rights of Man
did not seem dangerous in America because, thanks in part to Paine's
earlier writings, they were already embedded in the common currency of
the political culture.
Paine lived for seventeen years after the publication of Rights of Man.
In France, where he remained until 1802, his career entered its most
problematic phase. Elected to the National Convention as a symbol of
appreciation for his defense of the Revolution, Paine quickly found
himself out of step with rapidly changing political events. His
political associates were among the Girondin faction, and with their
fall Paine found himself imprisoned in 1793 in the Luxembourg Palace,
which now held opponents of the Jacobin regime. He remained there
for ten months, in constant danger of execution. Released in 1794, he
spent several unhappy years longing for an opportunity to return to
America.
Nonetheless, Paine in these years was able to compose his last great
pamphlets: The Age of Reason and Agrarian Justice. The first was an
exposition of Deism and an attack on the basic principles of
Christianity, rejecting the Bible as the revealed word of God and
exalting reason and science as modes of understanding the natural world.
Reprinted in countless editions, the pamphlet became the most popular
Deist work ever written. It established Paine as an inspiration to
nineteenth-century freethinkers, but alienated devout believers, who
tarred Paine, inaccurately, with the labels "infidel" and "atheist."
His last great work, Agrarian Justice, published in 1796, criticized the
accumulation of landed property in the hands of a few men of wealth as a
major cause of poverty in Europe. Like so many of his other
writings, it helped inspire an important strand of the
nineteenth-century radical tradition -- land reform.
In
1802, Paine finally got his wish and, at age sixty-five, returned to
America. He lived out the rest of his life in obscurity, contributing
occasional essays to the Jeffersonian press but finding himself under
constant assault in this most evangelical of cultures for his Deist
writings. His final years were ones of "lonely, private misery."
Isolated from his old associates, drinking heavily, he died in 1809.
Six mourners attended the funeral of the man who had once inspired mil
lions to think in new ways about the world in which they lived, and his
death passed virtually unnoticed in the American press.
What, then, was Paine's legacy? In England, as we have seen, his
writings inspired the birth of a working-class radicalism to which Paine
has remained a hero down to the present day. (The former head of the Labour Party, Michael Foot, is also the honorary president of Britain's
Thomas Paine Society.) In America, it is difficult, however, to discern
a sustained tradition of Paineite radicalism. But it would be wrong to
underestimate Paine's impact on the evolution of the American radical
tradition. More than any other individual, it was Paine who defined the
terms and created the political language of nineteenth-century American
radicalism. Even those who rejected his religious beliefs could not
escape the impact of Paine's radical variant of republicanism. Paine's
writings provided a vision of the good society, a definition of active
citizen ship, which helped inspire expressions of protest ranging from
the labor movement of the 1830s to the Populists of the 1890s. Thus,
despite the fact that Paine as an individual was often forgotten,
Paine's thought deeply affected the evolution of radicalism in
nineteenth-century America.
There were always those Americans, moreover, who found in Paine an
abiding symbol of the radical persona. Even while Paine pursued his
checkered career as founding father of British radicalism and unhappy
participant in revolutionary France, his writings had helped inspire the
formation of the Democratic-Republican societies in the United States.
Formed to promote the party of Jefferson and defend the French
Revolution, the societies distributed copies of Rights of Man and drank
toasts to Paine as the quintessential opponent of aristocratic tyranny.
The ranks of American Paineites were reinforced by an influx of British
radicals in the 1790s and in the early nineteenth century. Later, in the
1830s, the early labor movement held dinners to honor Paine's birthday.
Thomas Skidmore, a leading figure in the New York Workingmen's Party,
published The Rights of Man to Property, whose title suggested both a
tribute to Paine and the need to move beyond his analysis, to extend
political equality, which had been achieved in America, to the economic
realm. Similarly, George Henry Evans, an immigrant British reformer,
drew on Agrarian Justice to agitate for the government to provide free
homesteads on the public lands for any individual desiring to escape
labor conditions in eastern cities. Later in the century, freethinkers
like Robert Ingersoll and radical democrats like Walt Whitman paid
homage to Paine's memory. Later still, Eugene V. Debs hailed Paine as a
founder of the radical tradition, the man who had said, "a share in two
revolutions is living to some purpose."
Despite Paine's exclusion from the list of revered revolutionary
forebears in the culture at large, then, his influence was indeed
profound. More than any other individual, Paine in his revolutionary
internationalism, his rationalism and faith in human nature, his
defiance of existing institutions, epitomized the radical cast of mind.
His ideas and personal example have continued to inspire those who
believe that the modern world has betrayed, not fulfilled, the high
hopes for a just social order raised during Paine's Age of Revolution.
--
Eric Foner
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