Junius Unmasked. Joel Moody

Junius Unmasked - Joel Moody


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       Joel Moody

      Junius Unmasked

      Or, Thomas Paine the author of the Letters of Junius and the Declaration of Independence

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066130367

       PREFACE.

       PART I.

       INTRODUCTION.

       METHOD.

       MYSTERY.

       STATEMENT.

       LETTER

       COMMENTS ON THE DOCTOR'S NOTES.

       ESTIMATE OF JUNIUS, BY MR. BURKE. [A]

       SOCIAL POSITION.

       JUNIUS NOT A PARTISAN.

       A REVOLUTIONIST.

       REVIEW OF JUNIUS.

       COMMON SENSE.

       STYLE.

       MENTAL CHARACTERISTICS.

       REVIEW.

       PART II.

       AN EXAMINATION OF THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE.

       ANALYSIS.

       ARGUMENT.

       STYLE.

       SPECIAL CHARACTERISTICS.

       Note A.

       Note B.

       GRAND OUTLINES OF THOMAS PAINE'S LIFE.

       CONCLUSION.

       APPENDIX.

       Table of Contents

      One hundred years ago to-day, Junius wrote as follows:

      "The man who fairly and completely answers this argument, shall have my thanks and my applause. … Grateful as I am to the good Being whose bounty has imparted to me this reasoning intellect, whatever it is, I hold myself proportionably indebted to him from whose enlightened understanding another ray of knowledge communicates to mine. But neither should I think the most exalted faculties of the human mind a gift worthy of the Divinity, nor any assistance in the improvement of them a subject of gratitude to my fellow-creatures, if I were not satisfied that really to inform the understanding corrects and enlarges the heart."

      These were the concluding words of his last Letter. So say I now, and I make them the preface to an argument which now sets the great apostle of liberty right before the world. They serve, like a literary hyphen, to connect the two ages—his own with this; and the two lives—the masked with the open one; in both of which ages and lives he did good to mankind, and that mightily.

      Washington, D.C., January 21, 1872.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      The literary work which survives a century has uncommon merit. Time has set the seal of approval upon it. It has passed its probation and entered the ages. A century has just closed upon the work of Junius. The causes which produced it, either in act or person, have long since passed away. The foolish king, the corrupt minister, and the prostituted legislature are forgotten, or only recalled to be despised; but the work of Junius, startling in thought, daring in design, bristling with satire, a consuming fire to those he attacked, remains to be admired for its principles, and to be studied for its beauty and strength.

      The times in which Junius wrote were big with events. The Seven Years' War had just closed with shining victories to Prussia and England. Frederic, with an unimpaired nation and a permanent peace, it left with a good heart and much personal glory; but George III., with India and America in his hands, with the plunder of a great conquest to distribute to a greedy and licentious court, it left pious, but simple.

      Great wars disturb the masses. They awaken them from the plodding, dull routine of physical labor, and, thrusting great questions of conquest and defense, of justice and honor, before them, agitate them into thought. Conditions change; new ideas take the place of old ones, and a revolution in thought and action follows. But a war of ideas, starting from principles of peace, brings the enslaved again to the sword, and this crisis is termed a revolution.

      Junius wrote at the dawn of the age of revolutions. The war of ideas was waged against priestcraft, and skepticism was the result. Voltaire had struck fable from history with the pen of criticism, and a scientific method here dawned upon history. Rousseau's democracy had entered the hearts of the down-trodden in France, and, a wandering exile, he had spread the contagion in England. George Berkeley, the Irish idealist, had just died, and the Scotch Thomas Reid arose with the weapon of common sense to test the metaphysician's ideas. Common


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