About This Book
The speaker celebrates Thomas Paine as a self-made radical whose plain, forceful pamphlets and essays—most notably Common Sense and the Crisis—aroused popular opinion, helped bring about American independence, and sustained revolutionary forces. Born in poverty and scorned by establishment institutions, Paine is presented as resisting church and state authority, arguing for republican government, and maintaining unflagging courage through hardship. The oration traces his transatlantic influence, his work among soldiers and revolutionaries, and his later engagement with French reformers, emphasizing his uncompromising commitment to reason, liberty, and the rights of ordinary people.
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