521 lines
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521 lines
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VI.
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WORSHIP AND CHURCH BELLS.
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A LETTER TO CAMILLE JORDAN.
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[NOTE: This pamphlet has never been published fully in
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English. It was printed in Paris in the summer of 1797 with the
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title: "Lettre de Thomas Paine sur les Cultes. A Paris, Imprimerie-
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Librairie du Cercle-Social, rue du Theatre-Fran-caise No. 4. 1797."
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The inner beading is: "A Jordan de Lyon, Membre du Conseil des Cinq
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Cents, sur les Cultes et sur les Cloches." It begins, "Citoyen,
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Jordan." The received English version presents so many serious
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divergencies from the original French Letter as to raise a doubt
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whether it might not be wiser to print here a translation of the
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whole. The first mention of it in English that I find is by Sherwin
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("Life of Paine," London, 1819, p. 181), who says, "I have only
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seen a mutilated copy of this production." This was probably the
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fragment afterwards included in a small collection of Paine's
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"Theological Works" (Baldwin, Chatham-st., New York, 1821,) with a
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note: "The following is taken from the Courier (an Evening Paper)
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of July 13, 1797, the editor of which observes, 'as the
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commencement of this letter relates to Mr. Paine's opinions on the
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Bible, we are under the necessity, for obvious reasons, of omitting
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it."' The fragment begins with the words, "It is a want of feeling
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to talk of priests, etc." As Jordan read his Report on June 17,
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Paine must have written his Letter (pp. 23 in French) at a heat to
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have a copy (MS.) in the hands of the London editor of The Courier
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so early as July 13. The manuscript was among the papers bequeathed
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by Paine to Madame Bonneville, whose return towards her former
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Catholic faith caused her to mutilate the manuscripts and suppress
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some altogether. In 1818 when she and Cobbett were preparing the
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outline of a memoir of Paine (published in the Appendix to my "Life
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of Paine") this Letter to Jordan is refarred to and Cobbett added,
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"which will find a place in the Appendix,' but this Madame
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Bonneville struck out. Though she afterwards sold the MS. of the
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Letter, which Appeared IIX an American edition of 1824, it was no
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doubt with many erasures, some of them irrecoverable. This is my
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conjecture as to the alterations referred to. But so many passages
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in the English version are clearly Paine's own writing that I can
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not venture to discard it, and conclude to insert as footnotes
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translations of the more important sentences and clauses of the
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French omitted from the English version.
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Camille Jordan (b. at Lyons, 1771, d. at Paris, 1821,) was a
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royalist who in 1793 took refuge in Switzerland, and in England.
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Returning to Lyons in 1796 he was elected for the Department of the
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Rhone to the Council of Five Hundred, and, on July 17, 1797,
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brought in his Report for restoration of certain Catholic
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privileges, especially the Church Bells, which was received with
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ridicule by the Convention, where he was called "jordan-Cloches."
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Nevertheless, he succeeded in securing relief for the unsworn
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priests. Although at this time professing loyalty to the Directory
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he united with those who attempted its overthrow, and on the 18th
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Fructidor (4 September, 1797) fled from a prosecution, finding a
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refuge in Welmar. Recalled to France in 1800 he was for some time
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under 'surveillance.' He opposed the proposed Consular Government,
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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1
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WORSHIP AND CHURCH BELLS.
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and in 1814 was one of the deputation sent from Lyons to ask the
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Emperor of Austria to establish the Bourbons in France. Soon after
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he was sent to welcome Louis XVIII. in Paris, and received from him
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the award of nobility. -- Editor. (Conway)]
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CITIZEN RFPRESENTATIVE.
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As everything in your Report, relating to what you call
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worship, connects itself with the books called the Scriptures, I
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begin with a quotation therefrom. It may serve to give us some idea
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of the fanciful origin and fabrication of those books. 2 Chronicles
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xxxiv. 14, etc. "Hilkiah, the priest, found the book of the law of
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the Lord given by Moses. And Hilkiah, the priest, said to Shaphan,
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the scribe, I have found the book of the law in the house of the
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Lord, and Hilkiah delivered the book to Shaphan. And Shaphan, the
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scribe, told the king, (Josiah,) saying, Hilkiah, the priest, hath
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given me a book."
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This pretended finding was about a thousand years after the
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time that Moses is said to have lived. Before this pretended
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finding, there was no such thing practised or known in the world as
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that which is called the law of Moses. This being the case, there
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is every apparent evidence that the books called the books of Moses
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(and which make the first part of what are called the Scriptures)
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are forgeries contrived between a priest and a limb of the law,
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[NOTE: It happens that Camille Jordan is a limb of the law. --
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Author. (Paine's NOTE) (This note is not in the French pamphlet. --
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Editor. Conway.)] Hilkiah, and Shaphan the scribc, a thousand years
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after Moses is said to have been dead.
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Thus much for the first part of the Bible. Every other part is
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marked with circumstances equally as suspicious. We ought therefore
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to be reverentially careful how we ascribe books as his word, of
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which there is no evidence, and against which there is abundant
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evidence to the contrary, and every cause to suspect imposition.
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[NOTE: The French pamphlet has, instead of last sixteen words "And
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when, on the contrary, we have the strongest reasons for regarding
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such assertions as one of the means of error and oppression
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invented by priests, kings, and attomeys." -- Editor. (Conway)]
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In your report you speak continually of something by the name
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of worship, and you confine yourself to speak of one kind only, as
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if there were but one, and that one was unguestionably true.
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The modes of worship are as various as the sects are numerous;
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and amidst all this variety and multiplicity there is but one
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article of belief in which every religion in the world agrees. That
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article has universal sanction. It is the belief of a God, or what
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the Greeks described by the word Theism, and the Latins by that of
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Deism. Upon this one article have been erected all the different
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superstructures of creeds and ceremonies continually warring with
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each other that now exist or ever existed. [NOTE: aFrench : " in
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the thousand and one religions of the four quarters of the world."
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-- Editor. (Conway)] But the men most and best informed upon the
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subject of theology rest themselves upon this universal article,
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and hold all the various superstructures erected thereon to be at
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least doubtful, if not altogether artificial.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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2
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WORSHIP AND CHURCH BELLS.
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The intellectual part of religion is a private affair between
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every man and his Maker, and in which no third party has any right
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to interfere. The practical part consists in our doing good to each
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other. But since religion has been made into a trade, [NOTE:
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French: "since the most scandalous hypocrisy has made of Religion
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a profession and the basest trade." -- Editor.] the practical part
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has been made to consist of ceremonies performed by men called
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priests; and the people have been amused with ceremonial shows,
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processions, and bells. By devices of this kind true religion has
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been banished; and such means have been found out to extract money
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even from the pockets of the poor, instead of contributing to their
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relief. [NOTE: French adds: "du superflu de la richesse." (from
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their superfluous wealth). -- Editor.]
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No man ought to make a living by Religion. It is dishonest so
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to do. Religion is not an act that can be performed by proxy. One
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person cannot act religion for another. Every person must perform
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it for himself; and all that a priest can do is to take from him;
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he wants nothing but his money [NOTE: The ten preceding words are
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replaced in the French by: "to take from us not our vices but our
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money." -- Editor.] and then to riot in the spoil and laugh at his
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credulity.
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The only people who, as a professional sect of Christians
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provide for the poor of their society, are people known by the name
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of Quakers. Those men have no priests. They assemble quietly in
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their places of meeting, and do not disturb their neighbours with
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shows and noise of bells. Religion does not unite itself to show
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and noise. True religion is without either. Where there is both
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there is no true religion. [NOTE: "A Religion uniting the two
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[noise and show] at the expense of the poor whose misery it should
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lessen, is a curious Religion; it is the Religion of kings and
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priests conspiring against suffering humanity." -- Editor.]
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The first object for inquiry in all cases, more especially in
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matters of religious concern, is TRUTH. We ought to inquire into
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the truth of whatever we are taught to believe, and it is certain
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that the books called the Scriptures stand, in this respect, in
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more than a doubtful predicament. They have been held in existence,
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and in a sort of credit among the common class of people, by art,
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terror, and persecution. They have little or no credit among the
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enlightened part, but they have been made the means of encumbering
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the world with a numerous priesthood, who have fattened on the
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labour of the people, and consumed the sustenance that ought to be
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applied to the widows and the poor.
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It is a want of feeling to talk of priests and bells whilst so
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many infants are perishing in the hospitals, and aged and infirm
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poor in the streets, from the want of necessaries. The abundance
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that France produces is sufficient for every want, if rightly
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applied; [NOTE: " were the soil well cultivated and the cultivators
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not burdened with useless taxes." -- Editor.] but priests and
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bells, like articles of luxury, ought to be the least articles of
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consideration.
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We talk of religion. Let us talk of truth; for that which is
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not truth, is not worthy of the name of religion.
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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3
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WORSHIP AND CHURCH BELLS.
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We see different parts of the world overspread with different
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books, each of which, though contradictory to the other, is said by
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its partisans to be of divine origin, and is made a rule of faith
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and practice. [NOTE: under everlasting penalties." -- Editor.] In
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countries under despotic governments, where inquiry is always
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forbidden, the people are condemned to believe as they have been
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taught by their priests. [NOTE: imposed on them, with equal
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arrogance and ignorance, by the idlers nourished by their blood and
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tears." -- Editor.] This was for many centuries the case in France:
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but this link in the chain of slavery is happily broken by the
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revolution; and, that it may never be riveted again, [NOTE: and to
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prevent their Discovering some new way of returning to us their
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absurd sermons, processions, bells, which will also restore their
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tithes, benefices, abbeys, and the rest." -- Editor.] let us employ
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a part of the liberty we enjoy in scrutinizing into the truth. Let
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us leave behind us some monument, that we have made the cause and
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honour of our Creator [NOTE: "The Supreme Being" instead of "our
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Creator." -- Editor.] an object of our care. If we have been
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imposed upon by the terrors of government and the artifice of
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priests in matters of religion, let us do justice to our Creator by
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examining into the case. His name is too sacred to be affixed to
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any thing which is fabulous; and it is our duty to inquire whether
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we believe, or encourage the people to believe, in fables or in
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facts. [NOTE: " to believe, under pain of damnation, fables that
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brutalise and impoverish them, or facts which increase their
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industry, general happiness, and the glory of their country." --
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Editor.]
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It would be a project worthy the situation we are in, to
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invite an inquiry of this kind. We Have committees for various
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objects; and, among others, a committee for bells. We have
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institutions, academies, and societies for various purposes; but we
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have none for inquiring into historical truth in matters of
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religious concern.
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They shew us certain books which they call the Holy
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Scriptures, the word of God, and other names of that kind; but we
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ought to know what evidence there is for our believing them to be
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so, and at what time they originated and in what manner. We know
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that men could make books, and we know that artifice and
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superstition could give them a name, -- could call them sacred. But
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we ought to be careful that the name of our Creator be not abused.
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Let then all the evidence with respect to those books be made a
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subject of inquiry. If there be evidence to warrant our belief of
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them, let us encourage the propagation of it; but if not, let us be
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careful not to promote the cause of delusion and falsehood.
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I have already spoken of the Quakers -- that they have no
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priests, no bells -- and that they are remarkable for their care of
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the poor of their society. They are equally as remarkable for the
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education of their children. I am a descendant of a family of that
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profession; my father was a Quaker; and I presume I may be admitted
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an evidence of what I assert. The seeds of good principles, and the
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literary means of advanceinent in the world, are laid in early
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life. [NOTE: "Principles of humanity, of sociability, and sound
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instruction for advancement in society, are the first objects of
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studies among the Quakers." -- Editer.] Instead, therefore, of
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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4
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WORSHIP AND CHURCH BELLS.
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consuming the substance of the nation upon priests, whose life at
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best is a life of idleness, let us think of providing for the
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education of those who have not the means of doing it themselves.
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One good schoolmaster is of more use than a hundred priests.
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If we look back at what was the condition of France under the
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ancien regime, we cannot acquit the priests of corrupting the
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morals of the nation. Their pretended celibacy led them to carry
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debauchery and domestic infidelity into every family where they
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could gain admission; and their blasphemous pretensions to forgive
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sins encouraged the commission of them. Why has the Revolution of
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France been stained with crimes, which the Revolution of the United
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States of America was not? Men are physically the same in all
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countries; it is education that makes them different. Accustom a
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people to believe that priests or any other class of men can
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forgive sins, and you will have sins in abundance.
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I come now to speak more particularly to the object of your
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report.
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You claim a privilege incompatible with the constitution and
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with rights. The constitution protects equally, as it ought to do,
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every profession of religion; it gives no exclusive privilege to
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any. The churches are the common property of all the people; they
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are national goods, and cannot be given exclusively to any one
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profession, because the right does not exist of giving to any one
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that which appertains to all. [NOTE: Added: "that which is destined
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for needs of the state." -- Editor.] It would be consistent with
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right that the churches be sold, and the money arising therefrom be
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invested as a fund for the education of children of poor parents of
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every profession, and, if more than sufficient for this purpose,
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that the surplus be appropriated to the support of the aged poor.
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After this, every profession can erect its own place of worship, if
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it choose -- support its own priests, if it choose to have any --
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or perform its worship without priests, as the Quakers do.
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As to bells, they are a public nuisance. If one profession is
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to have bells, and another has the right to use the instruments of
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the same kind, or any other noisy instrument, some may choose to
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meet at the sound of cannon, another at the beat of drum, another
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at the sound of trumpets, and so on, until the whole becomes a
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scene of general confusion. But if we permit ourselves to think of
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the state of the sick, and the many sleepless nights and days they
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undergo, we shall feel the impropriety of increasing their distress
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by the noise of bells, or any other noisy instruments.
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Quiet and private domestic devotion neither offends nor
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incommodes any body; and the Constitution has wisely guarded
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against the use of externals. Bells come under this description,
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and public processions still more so. Streets and highways are for
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the accommodation of persons following their several occupations,
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and no sectary has a right to incommode them. If any one has, every
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other has the same; and the meeting of various and contradictory
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processions would be tumultuous. Those who formed the Constitution
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had wisely reflected upon these cases; and, whilst they were
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careful to reserve the equal right of every one, they restrained
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every one from giving offence, or incommoding another. [NOTE: "All
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Bank of Wisdom
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Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
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5
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WORSHIP AND CHURCH BELLS.
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such parades of vindictive and jealous priests may kindle the
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beginings of intestine troubles; they bave been happily provided
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against." -- Editor.]
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Men who, through a long and tumultuous scene, have lived in
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retirement as you have done, may think, when they arrive at power,
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that nothing is more easy than to put the world to rights in an
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instant; they form to themselves gay ideas at the success of their
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projects; but they forget to contemplate the difficulties that
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attend them, and the dangers with which they are pregnant. Alas!
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nothing is so easy as to deceive one's self. Did all men think as
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you think, or as you say, your plan would need no advocate, because
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it would have no opposer; but there are millions who think
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differently to you, and who are determined to be neither the dupes
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nor the slaves of error or design.
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It is your good fortune to arrive at power, when the sunshine
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of prosperity is breaking forth after along and stormy night.
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[NOTE: which seemed to bode for all Europe an eternal night." --
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Editor.] The firmness of your colleagues, and of those you have
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succeeded -- the unabated energy of the Directory, and the
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|||
|
unsqualled bravery of the armies of the Republic, -- have made the
|
|||
|
way smooth and easy to you. If you look back at the difficulties
|
|||
|
that existed when the Constitution commenced, you cannot but be
|
|||
|
confounded with admiration at the difference between that time and
|
|||
|
now. At that moment the Directory were placed like the forlorn hope
|
|||
|
of an army, [NOTE: the lost children of Liberty " instead of " the
|
|||
|
forlorn hope of an army." -- Editor.] but you were in safe
|
|||
|
retirement. They occupied the post of honourable danger, and they
|
|||
|
have merited well of their country.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You talk of justice and benevolence, but you begin at the
|
|||
|
wrong end. The defenders of your country, and the deplorable state
|
|||
|
of the poor, are objects of prior consideration to priests and
|
|||
|
bells and gaudy processions.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You talk of peace, but your manner of talking of it
|
|||
|
embarrasses the Directory in making it, and serves to prevent it.
|
|||
|
Had you been an actor in all the scenes of government from its
|
|||
|
commencement, you would have been too well informed to have brought
|
|||
|
forward projects that operate to encourage the enemy. When you
|
|||
|
arrived at a share in the government, you found every thing tending
|
|||
|
to a prosperous issue. A series of victories unequalled in the
|
|||
|
world, and in the obtaining of which you had no share, preceded
|
|||
|
your arrival. Every enemy but one was subdued; and that one, (the
|
|||
|
Hanoverian government of England,) deprived of every hope, and a
|
|||
|
bankrupt in all its resources, was sueing for peace. In such a
|
|||
|
state of things, no new question that might tend to agitate and
|
|||
|
anarchize the interior ought to have had place; and the project you
|
|||
|
propose tends directly to that end.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Whilst France was a monarchy, and under the government of
|
|||
|
those things called kings and priests, England could always defeat
|
|||
|
her; but since France has RISEN TO BE A REPUBLIC, the GOVERNMENT OF
|
|||
|
ENGLAND crouches beneath her, so great is the difference between a
|
|||
|
government of kings and priests, and that which is founded on the
|
|||
|
system of representation. But, could the government of England find
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
6
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WORSHIP AND CHURCH BELLS.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
a way, under the sanction of your report, to inundate France with
|
|||
|
a flood of emigrant priests, she would find also the way to
|
|||
|
domineer as before; she would retrieve her shattered finances at
|
|||
|
your expence, and the ringing of bells would be the tocsin of your
|
|||
|
downfall. [NOTE: After tocsin, which would announce to Europe your
|
|||
|
ruin." -- Editar.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Did peace consist in nothing but the cessation of war, it
|
|||
|
would not be difficult; but the terms are yet to be arranged and
|
|||
|
those terms will be better or worse, in proportion as France and
|
|||
|
her counsels be united or divided. That the government of England
|
|||
|
counts much upon your report, and upon others of a similar
|
|||
|
tendency, is what the writer of this letter, who knows that
|
|||
|
government well, has no doubt. You are but new on the theatre of
|
|||
|
government, and you ought to suspect yourself of misjudging; the
|
|||
|
experience of those who have gone before you, should be of some
|
|||
|
service to you. But if, in consequence of such measures as you
|
|||
|
propose, you put it out of the power of the Directory to make a
|
|||
|
good peace, and force them to accept of terms you would afterwards
|
|||
|
reprobate, it is yourself that must bear the censure.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
You conclude your report by the following address to your
|
|||
|
colleagues: --
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Let us hasten, representatives of the people! to affix
|
|||
|
to these tutelary laws the seal of our unanimous approbation.
|
|||
|
All our fellow-citizens will learn to cherish political
|
|||
|
liberty from the enjoyment of religious liberty you will have
|
|||
|
broken the most powerful arm of your enemies you will have
|
|||
|
surrounded this assembly with the most impregnable rampart --
|
|||
|
confidence, and the people's love. O my colleagues, how
|
|||
|
desirable is that popularity which is the offspring of good
|
|||
|
laws! What a consolation it will be to us hereafter, when
|
|||
|
returned to our own firesides, to hear from the mouths of our
|
|||
|
fellow-citizens these simple expressions -- 'Blessings rewardy
|
|||
|
you, men of peace! you have restored to us our temples, our
|
|||
|
ministers, the liberty of adoring the God of our fathers. you
|
|||
|
have recalled harmony to our families -- morality to our
|
|||
|
hearts. You have made us adore the legislature and respect all
|
|||
|
its laws!" ["Extract from the 'Moniteur,' No. 275, 5 Messidor
|
|||
|
(June 23.)." -- Editor.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Is it possible, citizen representative, that you can be
|
|||
|
serious in this address? Were the lives of the priests under the
|
|||
|
'ancien regime' such as to justify any thing you say of them? Were
|
|||
|
not all France convinced of their immorality? Were they not
|
|||
|
considered as the patrons of debauchery and domestic infidelity,
|
|||
|
and not as the patrons of morals? What was their pretended celibacy
|
|||
|
but perpetual adultery? What was their blasphemous pretention to
|
|||
|
forgive sins but an encouragement to the commission of them, and a
|
|||
|
love for their own? Do you want to lead again into France all the
|
|||
|
vices of which they have been the patrons, and to overspread the
|
|||
|
republic with English pensioners? ["pensioners of a hostile
|
|||
|
government which has already sought to plunge you into all the
|
|||
|
horrors of religious wars" instead of "English pensioners." --
|
|||
|
Editor.] It is cheaper to corrupt than to conquer; and the English
|
|||
|
government, unable to conquer, will stoop to corrupt. Arrogance and
|
|||
|
meanness, though in appearance opposite, are vices of the same
|
|||
|
heart.
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
7
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
WORSHIP AND CHURCH BELLS.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Instead of concluding in the manner you have done, you ought
|
|||
|
rather to have said:
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"O my colleagues! we are arrived at a glorious period -- a
|
|||
|
period that promises more than we could have expected, and [if not]
|
|||
|
all that we could have wished. Let us hasten to take into
|
|||
|
consideration the honours and rewards due to our brave defenders.
|
|||
|
Let us hasten to give encouragement to agriculture and
|
|||
|
manufactures, that commerce may reinstate itself, and our people
|
|||
|
have employment. Let us review the condition of the suffering poor,
|
|||
|
and wipe from our country the reproach of forgetting them. Let us
|
|||
|
devise means to establish schools of instruction, that we may
|
|||
|
banish the ignorance that the ancien regime of kings and priests
|
|||
|
had spread among the people. Let us propagate morality, unfettered
|
|||
|
by superstition. Let us cultivate justice and benevolence, that the
|
|||
|
God of our fathers may bless us. The helpless infant and the aged
|
|||
|
poor cry to us to remember them. Let not wretchedness be seen in
|
|||
|
our streets. Let [republican] France exhibit to the world the
|
|||
|
glorious example of expelling ignorance and misery together.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
"Let these, my virtuous colleagues, be the subject of our care
|
|||
|
that, when we return among our fellow-citizens they may say, Worthy
|
|||
|
representatives! you have done well. You have done justice and
|
|||
|
honour to our brave defenders. You have encouraged agriculture,
|
|||
|
cherished our decayed manufactures, given new life to commerce, and
|
|||
|
employment to our people. You have removed from our country
|
|||
|
[republican government.] the reproach of forgetting the poor -- You
|
|||
|
have caused the cry of the orphan to cease -- You have wiped the
|
|||
|
tear from the eye of the suffering mother -- You have given comfort
|
|||
|
to the aged and infirm -- You have penetrated into the gloomy
|
|||
|
recesses of wretchedness, and have banished it. Welcome among us,
|
|||
|
ye brave and virtuous representatives, and may your example be
|
|||
|
followed by your successors!"
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
THOMAS PAINE.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
PARIS, 1797 [The French pamphlet is without date. -- Editor.]
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
|
|||
|
hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
|
|||
|
and information for today. If you have such books please contact
|
|||
|
us, we need to give them back to America.
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
**** ****
|
|||
|
|
|||
|
Bank of Wisdom
|
|||
|
Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
|
|||
|
8
|
|||
|
|