Page [unnumbered]
LETTER FROM THOMAS PAINE &c. &c.
Paris, August, 3, 1796.
AS censure is but awkwardly softened by apology, I shall offer you no apology for this letter. The eventful crisis, to which your double politics have conducted the affairs of your country, requires an investigation uncramped by ceremony.
There was a time when the fame of America, moral and po∣litical, stood fair and high in the world. The lustre of her revolution extended itself to every individual, and to be a ci∣tizen of America, gave a title to respect in Europe. Neither meanness nor ingratitude had then mingled in the composition of her character. Her resistances to the attempted tyranny of England left her unsuspected of the one, and her open ac∣knowledgment of the aid she received from France precluded all suspicion of the other. The politics of Washington had not then appeared.
At the time I left America (April 1787) the continental Convention, that formed the federal constitution, was on the point of meeting. Since that time new schemes of politics, and new distinctions of parties, have arisen. The term An∣tifederalist has been applied to all those who combated the de∣fects of that constitution, or opposed the measures of your administration. It was only to the absolute necessity of estab∣lishing some federal authority, extending equally over all the States, that an instrument so inconsistent as the present federal constitution is, obtained a suffrage. I would have voted for it myself, had I been in America, or even for a worse, rather than have had none; provided it contained the means of re∣medying its defects by the same appeal to the people, by which it was to be established. It is always better policy to leave removable errors to expose themselves, than to hazard too much in contending against them theoretically.