Political Ideas of the American Revolution; Britannic-American Contributions to the Problem of Imperial Organization, 1765 to 1775

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^'' Life, I. 419.
^' Diary, III. 22, 462; Novanglus, IV. 194; VI. 492. Ci. Dunning, Hist, of Pol. Theories from Luther to Montesquieu, p. 254n. Cf. Theodore Dwight, Harrington and His Influence upon American Political Institutions and Political Thought in the Pol. Sci. Quar., II. 1-44. Harrington it was from whom Adams got his "commonwealth is an empire of laws, and not of men." James Harrington, Oceana (Morley Ed.; Lond. 1887), pp. 2S-9.
CHAPTER VI SOME THINGS WHICH PARLIAMENT COULD NOT DO Les
...t it be inferred from the preceding chapters that after all the American Revolution was little more than an accident, there now appears in our story the figure of one whose crashing sentences shook Americans from their belief that their problems might be solved within the Brit- ish Empire. It is perhaps a little presumptuous to imagine that anything new can be said of Thomas Paine, for later investigation has now rescued him from the obliquity to which the orthodox conscience condemned him.^ At least he has be'en given the place in American history ^ and in the history of American politics to which he is entitled.^ That as a writer he helped to cut the Gordian knot of the British imperial problem for thousands of Americans is now a fairly well established fact.* But there is still room for doubt as to whether he has been given that place in po- litical science in which he belongs.

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