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The Key To Exquisite Writing: Thomas Paine And His Use Of Urgency

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Term Paper TitleThe Key To Exquisite Writing: Thomas Paine And His Use Of Urgency
# of Words1006
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)4.02



















The key to exquisite writing: Thomas Paine and his use of urgency
English III
1st period





















A preacher dies, and when he goes to Heaven, he sees a New York cab driver who has a higher place than him. He says to Saint Peter, "I don’t get it. I devoted my whole life to my congregation and some taxi driver has a higher place in Heaven than I do?" Saint Peter says, "We reward results. Did your congregation always pay attention when you gave a sermon?" The preacher says, "Once in a while someone fell asleep." Saint Peter says, "Right. And when people rode in this guy’s taxi, they not only stayed awake, but they usually prayed." Perspective. Perception plays a key role in the overall chemistry of any literary composition. It is in this perspective that one discovers through the writings of Thomas Paine that there are an infinite number of ways to stir up nationalism and the willingness to rebel. One’s incorporation of the tone in urgency is used to feed the colonists’ anger and need of desire for life, liberty and the pursuit and of happiness.
     "If there must be trouble let it be in my day, that my child may have peace, and this single reflection, well applied, is sufficient to awaken every man to duty. Not a place upon earth might be so happy as America." (The Crisis, Number I) Through this selection one conceives the unfaltering passion and hunger for freedom, if not for oneself, then for one’s future generations. Paine indirectly suggest that it is a  moral imperative to do so. It’s comparable to the moral debate that was produced by a Dr. Watson. It states that if there were to be only a certain amount of food left on earth and that it could last one person a lifetime or everyone only a few days, that we should pick the moral imperative and share the food with everyone. At the point where there is progress in the morale of the people, death is even justified. Paine consolidates this into his writings by urging for an instantaneous rebellion so that their children would be able to live in peace and not have to suffer any detriment, even if it means having to sacrifice something in return. In order to do the antecedent, it is imperative that they embark on this mission contiguously, which Paine urges by stating the prior quote.
     "The heart that feels not now, is dead: the blood of his children will curse his cowardice, who shrinks back at a time when a little might have saved the whole, and made them happy." (The Crisis, Nu...

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