It is well enough here, to recall to mind that the Rich never head a movement against tyranny, or risk any thing in defence of a principle; and among cultivated men and scholars, the expression of sympathy with Right is commonly in words rather than deeds.This is from Elliott’s chapter on the Stamp Act.
No generous man can fail to give his heartfelt thanks to the Poor, who have always begun and fought the Revolutions against tyranny and usurpation, and in fighting for liberty have nobly sacrificed what they had—their Lives. Nor will any one be surprised if they should be led away by the heat of their hatreds, nor shall we be harsh and cruel in our judgment of them, when they have been betrayed into unwarrantable excesses; a sound public opinion will see to it, that when the excitement is passed the reaction against them does not bring about a like or greater excess in punishments, thus sustaining force and wrong.
It was by the poor, the day laborers in Boston and elsewhere, that the struggle was begun against Aristocratic oppression; and by them that the Work of the fight was done.
History, analysis, and unabashed gossip about the start of the American Revolution in Massachusetts.
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Tuesday, November 08, 2016
“The Rich never head a movement against tyranny”
From The New England History (1857), by the horticulturalist, industrialist, and author Charles Wyllys Elliott (1817-1883):
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