THOMAS PAINE
(1737-1809)
Thomas
Paine was born in England to a Quaker father and an Anglican of the social caste
system. He was a highly intelligent boy who was largely self-taught, having
been limited by his poverty and social standing. Educated until he was thirteen,
he then apprenticed in his father's corset shop until he went to sea at nineteen.
Once back in England, Paine worked variously as a tobacconist and grocer, a
teacher, and an exciseman who taxed goods for the government and organized other
excisemen to demand a raise in salary from Parliament. At thirty-five, he came
to Philadelphia with letters of introduction from Benjamin Franklin; there he
supported himself as a journalist, speaking out against slavery and publishing
Common Sense (1776), a pamphlet in which he encouraged Americans to separate
from Britain. During the Revolution, he published a series of sixteen pamphlets
called Crisis, the first of which ("These are the times that try men's souls")
was read to and inspired Washington's troops. Although Paine was rewarded for
his stirring writing with several political appointments, he misused his privileges
and ended up losing his appointments. Returning to England in 1787, he composed
Rights of Man (1791-1792), a tract against hereditary monarchy, was consequently
accused of treason, and fled to France, where he was imprisoned for speaking
out against the execution of Louis XVI. Rescued by American ambassador James
Monroe, Paine returned to New York, where he lived out his life in poverty.
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© E-publisher LiterNet, 04.01.2009
The Sun Is but a Morning Star. Anthology of American Literature. Edited by Albena
Bakratcheva. Varna: LiterNet, 2008-2010.