[On December 19th,
1776 Thomas
Paine’s pamphlet The Crisis was published
in Philadelphia. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy The Crisis and other American Revolutionary writings, leading up to
a special weekend wish for the AmericanStudies Elves!]
On the
importance of contexts, and what they can help us see in a crucial historical
text.
The December 19th,
1776 first
number of Thomas Paine’s (eventually) sixteen
pamphlets titled The Crisis
begins this way: “These are the times
that try men's souls. The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot will, in this
crisis, shrink from the service of his country; but he that stands it NOW,
deserves the love and thanks of man and woman. Tyranny, like hell, is not easily
conquered; yet we have this consolation with us, that the harder the conflict,
the more glorious the triumph. What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly:
‘Tis dearness only that gives everything its value.” As I transcribe those
words I’m looking at them in the same place I imagine most of us students of
American literature and history have encountered and read them: an anthology.
In this particular case, the Norton
Anthology of American Literature Shorter Eighth Edition, where Paine’s
words and excerpted pamphlet sit between excerpts from his other famous
pamphlet “Common
Sense” and the start of Thomas Jefferson’s entry.
We’ve got to
read historical texts somewhere (especially in the pre-intertubes days of my high
school and college education), and anthologies are a handy place to do so. But
it’s not always easy, when encountering them in that way, to think sufficiently
about the contexts of their publication. In the case of Paine’s text, he had a
very specific such context for “these are the times”: the ongoing defeat of
George Washington and the Continental Army in the New
York and New Jersey campaign. By early December, 1776 Washington
had lost a number of engagements with the forces of British General William
Howe, and the American
troops had withdrawn across the Delaware River, leaving New York and New
Jersey in mostly British hands. Congress
had even withdrawn from the city of Philadelphia, and it seemed quite
possible that both the Continental Army and the Revolution itself would not
survive this first post-Declaration winter. Certainly not a time or place when
summer soldiers and sunshine patriots could hope to find much warmth, and
certainly a particularly fraught moment that makes clear why Paine capitalizes “NOW”
in his first paragraph (his only such capitalization there).
It’s not just
that Paine’s pamphlet was so directly inspired by its historical context,
though—it also quite possibly influenced that unfolding context. A few days
after the pamphlet’s initial publication, Washington may have read a reprint
aloud to his men, with whom he was camped in Pennsylvania (the historical
record is ambiguous on this score, as this
article traces, but Washington and the army at least knew of the pamphlet
soon after its publication). On the night of December 25th,
Washington led many of those troops in the famous crossing of the
Delaware, a surprise attack on the British forces at Trenton that
significantly shifted
the course of not only this campaign but the whole early Revolutionary
conflict. It’s easy to see such historical moments as inevitable in hindsight,
but of course it was anything but, just as the outcome of the Revolution was far
from certain in December 1776 (and would remain far
from certain for many years to come). Those uncertainties help us
understand the existence and tone of Paine’s pamphlet—and also help us see
recognize the role that Paine’s inspiring words played in helping carry those Revolutionary
efforts forward.
Next writing
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Revolutionary writings or writers you’d highlight?
No comments:
Post a Comment