Thomas Paine Common Sense Rhetorical Analysis

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“Common sense will tell us, that the power which hath endeavored to subdue us, is of all others, the most improper to defend us.” Such words scribed by the Revolutionary radical Thomas Paine epitomized the drive behind the American Revolution of the 18th century. For nearly two hundred years, the citizens of the American Colonies had been fastened securely to the wrist of the mother country, England. They had tolerated the tyrannous rule, but not without the simmer of rebellious thoughts. As England piled tax after tax onto their colonies, thoughts of revolution and revolt sprung up in the minds of the colonists and brewed there, waiting for a catalyst to drive them into action. The catalyst ignited on January 10th, 1776 when Thomas Paine published his fiery pamphlet ‘Common Sense’. The 48-page pamphlet presented before the colonists a vision for independence that had never been conceived before. It radically altered the course of the Revolution and would later find itself molding the foundation of America’s government indefinitely. Before …show more content…

For the first time, someone had sat down and written out the thoughts that the colonists had been brewing all throughout the past century. Paine themed his message around what became the mantra for the Revolution: Taxation without representation was despotic. Paine explored the wrongs committed by England, taking note to include why issues were counted as wrong and how they could be resolved. This listing of the grievances committed by England and the king was later mirrored by Thomas Jefferson in the drafting of the Declaration. In addition to nearly every colonist, nearly every Revolutionary radical leader read a copy. It became the most widely-read pamphlet of the Revolution and one of the most influential. Men and boys of all ages streamed to enlist in the Continental army, their hearts burning with lust for

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