To be a Paine patriot
Barbara Clark Smith
[Reprinted from the
Bulletin of Thomas Paine Friends, Vol.12, No.3, Fall 2011,
p.6. Barbara Clark Smith is a historian who works in Washington, D.C.
She is author of many articles in scholarly journals and the popular
press. "To be a Paine patriot" was an op-ed in the Los
Angeles Times, 30 January, 2011. This article is reprinted with
permission of the author]
In light of our nation's current divisions and in honor of Thomas
Paine's birthday on Jan. 29, let us revisit his extraordinary
rhetoric. These are the times mat try men's souls," Paine
famously wrote. "The summer soldier and the sunshine patriot
will, in this crisis, shrink from the service of their country, but he
that stands it now, deserves the love and thanks of man and woman."
Those words are from the first of more than a dozen articles in
Paine's "Crisis" series, published between 1776 and 1783,
each addressing the American Revolution's changing tide. When that
first one was published in December 1776, America was at war, its
existence on the line, and yet the vision of a united republic was
beginning to fade.
The battles of Lexington and Concord hi 1775 had shaken the colonists
to their core. Americans first response had been an impressive unity.
"Pity for the sufferers, mixed with indignation at the violence,
and heightened with apprehensions of undergoing the same fate, made
the affair of Lexington the affair of the continent Every part of it
felt the shock, and all vibrated together," Paine later wrote.
Americans had rallied. They had taken an expansive view of national
loyalty as "the whole country flew to the relief of Boston, and,
making her cause their own."
There was an outpouring of enthusiasm for military service, while
those who could not fight contributed arms, clothing or financial aid.
The members of his generation would defend one another's lives and
relieve one another's distresses. When they called themselves "Sons
and Daughters of Liberty," they imagined themselves linked as by
the bonds of family.
By the time Paine started writing the "Crisis" papers,
conditions had changed. Everyone realized that the war would be
hard-fought, long and expensive. The nation needed more than
short-term militia service; it needed long-term enlistments. It needed
more man one-time generosity; it needed ongoing support.
Besides Tories, mere were people of uncertain loyalties who held
aloof from the contest And even some self-proclaimed patriots would
contribute little to the war effort unless it brought them profit
Merchants and dealers overcharged army agents for food, transport and
materiel. Some hoarded necessary commodities until desperate civilians
and soldiers were forced to pay outrageously high prices. With the
prospect of building one's own fortune, the sufferings of other
Americans suddenly became less pressing.
In this situation, Paine believed, the chief measure of Americans'
patriotism was their willingness to sacrifice in proportion to their
means and abilities. A patriot would forgo maximizing profits-even
forgo profits altogether-if they came at the expense of the soldiery,
the poor, or the national debt.
Paine was adamant that propertied men should contribute a fair share
of their wealth to keep the country solvent "Those who expect to
reap the blessings of freedom, must, like men, undergo the fatigues of
supporting it."....[Crisis IV, 1777].....
Is it hard to remember mat patriotism used to mean putting a
collective good before private profit? That it meant refusing to leave
the burden to those who served in arms, or to other states, or to
those who were most defenseless hi hard times?
Today, some Americans call themselves patriots even as they offer a
paltry unity, declining a connection with any they deem unqualified as
"real Americans." Some spread disinformation to divide the
nation, believing that their partisan purposes outweigh the goal of
solving our country's actual, substantial problems. With America at
war, private interests again grow wealthy on the taxpayers' dime. And,
white many Americans are without jobs, homes, or health insurance, the
richest are excused the burdens of even trivial patriotic sacrifice.
Paine's Crisis papers echoed the vision of 1776, urging
Americans to make the sustained commitment called patriotism. "I
call upon not a few, but upon all; not on this state or that state,
but on every state; up and help us, lay your shoulders to the wheel...
Let it be told to the future world, that in the depth of winter, when
nothing but hope and virtue could survive, that the city and the
country, alarmed at one common danger, came forth to meet and repulse
it" [Crisis I, December 1776] Paine's generation rose to
that challenge. Will ours?
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