After reading “The Crisis, No. 1,” what do you think Paine means by the line, "These are the times that try men’s souls"? Cite evidence from the text to support your analysis.

Respuesta :

When Paine says that, he means that the british, who were going to invade America, were living at a time that was forcing them to show their true characters. In every part of Crisis No 1 Paine is talking about britain as the ones who enslave america with sentences like: What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly; 'tis dearness only that gives everything its value," He contradicts the capability of britain to conquer America by saying that the powr to subdue belongs "only to God". He encourages to be bold and not coward by saying:  the harder the conflict, the more glorious the triumph. stating like this that the british will have no easy enemy to defeat

Thomas Paine was a British thinker and philosopher who supported the cause of the American Revolution, being one of the main ideological supporters of it.

Thus, his liberal ideology and his support for his cause led him to write different pamphlets such as Common Sense or The Crisis, in which he urged the colonial population to support the independence will.

In these writings, Paine said, among other things, that it was a crucial moment in American history, "the times that try men’s souls." This implied that Paine viewed the Revolution as a hin.ge for colonial society, which would test each individual and his will both to remain British and to become independent and form a new great nation.

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