Maryssa Walker > Maryssa's Quotes

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  • #1
    Thomas Paine
    “It is not in numbers, but in unity, that our great strength lies; yet our present numbers are sufficient to repel the force of all the world”
    Thomas Paine, Common Sense

  • #2
    Patrick  Henry
    “Give me liberty or give me death."

    [From a speech given at Saint John's Church in Richmond, Virginia on March 23, 1775 to the Virginia House of Burgesses; as first published in print in 1817 in William Wirt's Life and Character of Patrick Henry.]”
    Patrick Henry, Give Me Liberty Or Give Me Death

  • #3
    Thomas Paine
    “Small islands, not capable of protecting themselves, are the proper objects for kingdoms to take under their care; but there is something absurd, in supposing a continent to be perpetually governed by an island.”
    Thomas Paine, Common Sense

  • #4
    Thomas Paine
    “There is something exceedingly ridiculous in the composition of monarchy; it first excludes a man from the means of information, yet empowers him to act in cases where the highest judgment is required. The state of a king shuts him from the world, yet the business of a king requires him to know it thoroughly; wherefore the different parts, by unnaturally opposing and destroying each other, prove the whole character to be absurd and useless.”
    Thomas Paine, Common Sense

  • #5
    David McCullough
    “The sun never shined on a cause of greater worth,” Paine had written. “Everything that is right or reasonable pleads for separation.”
    David McCullough, 1776

  • #6
    David McCullough
    “And if his youth was obvious, the Glorious Cause was to a large degree a young man’s cause. The commander in chief of the army, George Washington, was himself only forty-three. John Hancock, the President of the Continental Congress, was thirty-nine, John Adams, forty, Thomas Jefferson, thirty-two, younger even than the young Rhode Island general. In such times many were being cast in roles seemingly beyond their experience or capacities, and Washington had quickly judged Nathanael Greene to be “an object of confidence.”
    David McCullough, 1776

  • #7
    David McCullough
    “determined, America must raise an empire of permanent duration, supported upon the grand pillars of Truth, Freedom, and Religion, encouraged by the smiles of Justice and defended by her own patriotic sons. . . . Permit me then to recommend from the sincerity of my heart, ready at all times to bleed in my country’s cause, a Declaration of Independence, and call upon the world and the great God who governs it to witness the necessity, propriety and rectitude thereof. The”
    David McCullough, 1776

  • #8
    David McCullough
    “The year 1776, celebrated as the birth year of the nation and for the signing of the Declaration of Independence, was for those who carried the fight for independence forward a year of all-too-few victories, of sustained suffering, disease, hunger, desertion, cowardice, disillusionment, defeat, terrible discouragement, and fear, as they would never forget, but also of phenomenal courage and bedrock devotion to country, and that, too they would never forget.”
    David McCullough, 1776



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