The Stylistic Artistry of the Declaration of
Independence
by Stephen E. Lucas
The Declaration of Independence is perhaps the most masterfully written state
paper of Western civilization. As Moses Coit Tyler noted almost a century ago,
no assessment of it can be complete without taking into account its
extraordinary merits as a work of political prose style. Although many scholars
have recognized those merits, there are surprisingly few sustained studies of
the stylistic artistry of the Declaration.(1) This essay seeks to illuminate
that artistry by probing the discourse microscopically--at the level of the
sentence, phrase, word, and syllable. By approaching the Declaration in this
way, we can shed light both on its literary qualities and on its rhetorical
power as a work designed to convince a "candid world" that the American colonies
were justified in seeking to establish themselves as an independent nation.(2)
The text of the Declaration can be divided into five sections--the introduction,
the preamble, the indictment of George III, the denunciation of the British
people, and the conclusion. Because space does not permit us to explicate each
section in full detail, we shall select features from each that illustrate the
stylistic artistry of the Declaration as a whole.(3)
The introduction consists of the first paragraph--a single, lengthy, periodic
sentence:
When in the Course of human events, it becomes necessary for one people to
dissolve the political bands which have connected them with another, and to
assume among the powers of the earth, the separate and equal station to which
the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent respect to the
opinions of mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel
them to the separation.(4)
Taken out of context, this sentence is so general it could be used as the
introduction to a declaration by any "oppressed" people. Seen within its
original context, however, it is a model of subtlety, nuance, and implication
that works on several levels of meaning and allusion to orient readers toward a
favorable view of America and to prepare them for the rest of the Declaration.
From its magisterial opening phrase, which sets the American Revolution within
the whole "course of human events," to its assertion that "the Laws of Nature
and of Nature's God" entitle America to a "separate and equal station among the
powers of the earth," to its quest for sanction from "the opinions of mankind,"
the introduction elevates the quarrel with England from a petty political
dispute to a major event in the grand sweep of history. It dignifies the
Revolution as a contest of principle and implies that the American cause has a
special claim to moral legitimacy--all without mentioning England or America by
name.
Rather than defining the Declaration's task as one of persuasion, which would
doubtless raise the defenses of readers as well as imply that there was more
than one publicly credible view of the British-American conflict, the
introduction identifies the purpose of the Declaration as simply to
"declare"--to announce publicly in explicit terms--the "causes" impelling
America to leave the British empire. This gives the Declaration, at the outset,
an aura of philosophical (in the eighteenth-century sense of the term)
objectivity that it will seek to maintain throughout. Rather than presenting one
side in a public controversy on which good and decent people could differ, the
Declaration purports to do no more than a natural philosopher would do in
reporting the causes of any physical event. The issue, it implies, is not one of
interpretation but of observation.
The most important word in the introduction is "necessary," which in the
eighteenth century carried strongly deterministic overtones. To say an act was
necessary implied that it was impelled by fate or determined by the operation of
inextricable natural laws and was beyond the control of human agents. Thus
Chambers's Cyclopediadefined "necessary" as "that which cannot but be, or
cannot be otherwise." "The common notion of necessity and impossibility,"
Jonathan Edwards wrote in Freedom of the Will, "implies something that
frustrates endeavor or desire. . . . That is necessary in the original and
proper sense of the word, which is, or will be, notwithstanding all supposable
opposition." Characterizing the Revolution as necessary suggested that it
resulted from constraints that operated with lawlike force throughout the
material universe and within the sphere of human action. The Revolution was not
merely preferable, defensible, or justifiable. It was as inescapable, as
inevitable, as unavoidable within the course of human events as the motions of
the tides or the changing of the seasons within the course of natural events.(5)
Investing the Revolution with connotations of necessity was particularly
important because, according to the law of nations, recourse to war was lawful
only when it became "necessary"--only when amicable negotiation had failed and
all other alternatives for settling the differences between two states had been
exhausted. Nor was the burden of necessity limited to monarchs and established
nations. At the start of the English Civil War in 1642, Parliament defended its
recourse to military action against Charles I in a lengthy declaration
demonstrating the "Necessity to take up Arms." Following this tradition, in July
1775 the Continental Congress issued its own Declaration Setting Forth the
Causes and Necessity of Their Taking Up Arms. When, a year later, Congress
decided the colonies could no longer retain their liberty within the British
empire, it adhered to long-established rhetorical convention by describing
independence as a matter of absolute and inescapable necessity.(6) Indeed, the
notion of necessity was so important that in addition to appearing in the
introduction of the Declaration, it was invoked twice more at crucial junctures
in the rest of the text and appeared frequently in other congressional papers
after July 4, 1776.(7)
Labeling the Americans "one people" and the British "another" was also laden
with implication and performed several important strategic functions within the
Declaration. First, because two alien peoples cannot be made one, it reinforced
the notion that breaking the "political bands" with England was a necessary step
in the course of human events. America and England were already separated by the
more basic fact that they had become two different peoples. The gulf between
them was much more than political; it was intellectual, social, moral, cultural
and, according to the principles of nature, could no more be repaired, as Thomas
Paine said, than one could "restore to us the time that is past" or "give to
prostitution its former innocence." To try to perpetuate a purely political
connection would be "forced and unnatural," "repugnant to reason, to the
universal order of things."(8)
Second, once it is granted that Americans and Englishmen are two distinct
peoples, the conflict between them is less likely to be seen as a civil war. The
Continental Congress knew America could not withstand Britain's military might
without foreign assistance. But they also knew America could not receive
assistance as long as the colonies were fighting a civil war as part of the
British empire. To help the colonies would constitute interference in Great
Britain's internal affairs. As Samuel Adams explained, "no foreign Power can
consistently yield Comfort to Rebels, or enter into any kind of Treaty with
these Colonies till they declare themselves free and independent." The crucial
factor in opening the way for foreign aid was the act of declaring independence.
But by defining America and England as two separate peoples, the Declaration
reinforced the perception that the conflict was not a civil war, thereby, as
Congress noted in its debates on independence, making it more "consistent with
European delicacy for European powers to treat with us, or even to receive an
Ambassador."(9)
Third, defining the Americans as a separate people in the introduction eased the
task of invoking the right of revolution in the preamble. That right, according
to eighteenth-century revolutionary principles, could be invoked only in the
most dire of circumstances--when "resistance was absolutely necessary in order
to preserve the nation from slavery, misery, and ruin"--and then only by "the
Body of the People." If America and Great Britain were seen as one people,
Congress could not justify revolution against the British government for the
simple reason that the body of the people (of which the Americans would be only
one part) did not support the American cause. For America to move against the
government in such circumstances would not be a justifiable act of resistance
but "a sort of Sedition, Tumult, and War . . . aiming only at the satisfaction
of private Lust, without regard to the public Good." By defining the Americans
as a separate people, Congress could more readily satisfy the requirement for
invoking the right of revolution that "the whole Body of Subjects" rise up
against the government "to rescue themselves from the most violent and illegal
oppressions."(10)
Like the introduction, the next section of the Declaration--usually referred to
as the preamble--is universal in tone and scope. It contains no explicit
reference to the British- American conflict, but outlines a general philosophy
of government that makes revolution justifiable, even meritorious:
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that
they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among
these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness. That to secure these
rights, Governments are instituted among Men, deriving their just powers from
the consent of the governed. That whenever any Form of Government becomes
destructive of these ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish
it, and to institute new Government, laying its foundation on such principles
and organizing its powers in such form, as to them shall seem most likely to
effect their Safety and Happiness. Prudence, indeed, will dictate that
Governments long established should not be changed for light and transient
causes; and accordingly all experience hath shown that mankind are more disposed
to suffer, while evils are sufferable, than to right themselves by abolishing
the forms to which they are accustomed. But when a long train of abuses and
usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them
under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such
Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security.
Like the rest of the Declaration, the preamble is "brief, free of verbiage, a
model of clear, concise, simple statement."(11) It capsulizes in five
sentences--202--words what it took John Locke thousands of words to explain in
his Second Treatise of Government. Each word is chosen and placed to
achieve maximum impact. Each clause is indispensable to the progression of
thought. Each sentence is carefully constructed internally and in relation to
what precedes and follows. In its ability to compress complex ideas into a
brief, clear statement, the preamble is a paradigm of eighteenth-century
Enlightenment prose style, in which purity, simplicity, directness, precision,
and, above all, perspicuity were the highest rhetorical and literary virtues.
One word follows another with complete inevitability of sound and meaning. Not
one word can be moved or replaced without disrupting the balance and harmony of
the entire preamble.
The stately and dignified tone of the preamble--like that of the
introduction--comes partly from what the eighteenth century called Style
Periodique, in which, as Hugh Blair explained in his Lectures on Rhetoric and
Belles Lettres, "the sentences are composed of several members linked
together, and hanging upon one another, so that the sense of the whole is not
brought out till the close." This, Blair said, "is the most pompous, musical,
and oratorical manner of composing" and "gives an air of gravity and dignity to
composition." The gravity and dignity of the preamble were reinforced by its
conformance with the rhetorical precept that "when we aim at dignity or
elevation, the sound [of each sentence] should be made to grow to the last; the
longest members of the period, and the fullest and most sonorous words, should
be reserved to the conclusion." None of the sentences of the preamble end on a
single-syllable word; only one, the second (and least euphonious), ends on a
two-syllable word. Of the other four, one ends with a four-syllable word
("security"), while three end with three-syllable words. Moreover, in each of
the three-syllable words the closing syllable is at least a medium- length
four-letter syllable, which helps bring the sentences to "a full and harmonious
close."(12)
It is unlikely that any of this was accidental. Thoroughly versed in classical
oratory and rhetorical theory as well as in the belletristic treatises of his
own time, Thomas Jefferson, draftsman of the Declaration, was a diligent student
of rhythm, accent, timing, and cadence in discourse. This can be seen most
clearly in his "Thoughts on English Prosody," a remarkable twenty-eight-page
unpublished essay written in Paris during the fall of 1786. Prompted by a
discussion on language with the Marquis de Chastellux at Monticello four years
earlier, it was a careful inquiry designed "to find out the real circumstance
which gives harmony to English prose and laws to those who make it." Using
roughly the same system of diacritical notation he had employed in 1776 in his
reading draft of the Declaration, Jefferson systematically analyzed the patterns
of accentuation in a wide range of English writers, including Milton, Pope,
Shakespeare, Addison, Gray, and Garth. Although "Thoughts on English Prosody"
deals with poetry, it displays Jefferson's keen sense of the interplay between
sound and sense in language. There can be little doubt that, like many
accomplished writers, he consciously composed for the ear as well as for the
eye--a trait that is nowhere better illustrated than in the eloquent cadences of
the preamble in the Declaration of Independence.(13)
The preamble also has a powerful sense of structural unity. This is achieved
partly by the latent chronological progression of thought, in which the reader
is moved from the creation of mankind, to the institution of government, to the
throwing off of government when it fails to protect the people's unalienable
rights, to the creation of new government that will better secure the people's
safety and happiness. This dramatic scenario, with its first act implicitly set
in the Garden of Eden (where man was "created equal"), may, for some readers,
have contained mythic overtones of humanity's fall from divine grace. At the
very least, it gives an almost archetypal quality to the ideas of the preamble
and continues the notion, broached in the introduction, that the American
Revolution is a major development in "the course of human events."
Because of their concern with the philosophy of the Declaration, many modern
scholars have dealt with the opening sentence of the preamble out of context, as
if Jefferson and the Continental Congress intended it to stand alone. Seen in
context, however, it is part of a series of five propositions that build upon
one another through the first three sentences of the preamble to establish the
right of revolution against tyrannical authority:
Proposition 1: |
|
All men are created equal. |
Proposition 2: |
|
They [all men, from proposition 1] are endowed by their creator with
certain unalienable rights |
Proposition 3: |
|
Among these [man's unalienable rights, from proposition 2] are life,
liberty, and the pursuit of happiness |
Proposition 4: |
|
To secure these rights [man's unalienable rights, from propositions 2
and 3] governments are instituted among men |
Proposition 5: |
|
Whenever any form of government becomes destructive of these ends
[securing man's unalienable rights, from propositions 2-4], it is the
right of the people to alter or to abolish it. |
When we look at all five propositions, we see they are meant to be read together
and have been meticulously written to achieve a specific rhetorical purpose. The
first three lead into the fourth, which in turn leads into the fifth. And it is
the fifth, proclaiming the right of revolution when a government becomes
destructive of the people's unalienable rights, that is most crucial in the
overall argument of the Declaration. The first four propositions are merely
preliminary steps designed to give philosophical grounding to the fifth.
At first glance, these propositions appear to comprise what was known in the
eighteenth century as a sorites--"a Way of Argument in which a great
Number of Propositions are so linked together, that the Predicate of one becomes
continually the Subject of the next following, until at last a Conclusion is
formed by bringing together the Subject of the First Proposition and the
Predicate of the last." In his Elements of Logick, William Duncan
provided the following example of a sorites:
God is omnipotent.
An omnipotent Being can do every thing possible.
He that can do every thing possible, can do whatever
involves not a Contradiction.
Therefore God can do whatever involves not a
Contradiction.(14)
Although the section of the preamble we have been considering is not a sorites (because
it does not bring together the subject of the first proposition and the
predicate of the last), its propositions are written in such a way as to take on
the appearance of a logical demonstration. They are so tightly interwoven
linguistically that they seem to make up a sequence in which the final
proposition--asserting the right of revolution--is logically derived from the
first four propositions. This is accomplished partly by the mimicry of the form
of a sorites and partly by the sheer number of propositions, the
accumulation of which is reinforced by the slow, deliberate pace of the text and
by the use of "that" to introduce each proposition. There is also a steplike
progression from proposition to proposition, a progression that is accentuated
by the skillful use of demonstrative pronouns to make each succeeding
proposition appear to be an inevitable consequence of the preceding proposition.
Although the preamble is the best known part of the Declaration today, it
attracted considerably less attention in its own time. For most
eighteenth-century readers, it was an unobjectionable statement of commonplace
political principles. As Jefferson explained years later, the purpose of the
Declaration was "not to find out new principles, or new arguments, never before
thought of . . . but to place before mankind the common sense of the subject, in
terms so plain and firm as to command their assent, and to justify ourselves in
the independent stand we are compelled to take."(15)
Far from being a weakness of the preamble, the lack of new ideas was perhaps its
greatest strength. If one overlooks the introductory first paragraph, the
Declaration as a whole is structured along the lines of a deductive argument
that can easily be put in syllogistic form:
Major premise: |
|
When government deliberately seeks to reduce the people under absolute
despotism, the people have a right, indeed a duty, to alter or abolish
that form of government and to create new guards for their future
security. |
Minor premise: |
|
The government of Great Britain has deliberately sought to reduce the
American people under absolute despotism. |
Conclusion: |
|
Therefore the American people have a right, indeed a duty, to abolish
their present form of government and to create new guards for their
future security. |
As the major premise in this argument, the preamble allowed Jefferson and the
Congress to reason from self-evident principles of government accepted by almost
all eighteenth-century readers of the Declaration.(16)
The key premise, however, was the minor premise. Since virtually everyone agreed
the people had a right to overthrow a tyrannical ruler when all other remedies
had failed, the crucial question in July 1776 was whether the necessary
conditions for revolution existed in the colonies. Congress answered this
question with a sustained attack on George III, an attack that makes up almost
exactly two-thirds of the text.
The indictment of George III begins with a transitional sentence immediately
following the preamble:
Such has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the
necessity which constrains them to alter their former Systems of Government.
Now, 273 words into the Declaration, appears the first explicit reference to the
British-American conflict. The parallel structure of the sentence reinforces the
parallel movement of ideas from the preamble to the indictment of the king,
while the next sentence states that indictment with the force of a legal
accusation:
The history of the present King of Great Britain is a history of repeated
injuries and usurpations, all having in direct object the establishment of an
absolute Tyranny over these states.
Unlike the preamble, however, which most eighteenth-century readers could
readily accept as self-evident, the indictment of the king required proof. In
keeping with the rhetorical conventions Englishmen had followed for centuries
when dethroning a "tyrannical" monarch, the Declaration contains a bill of
particulars documenting the king's "repeated injuries and usurpations" of the
Americans' rights and liberties. The bill of particulars lists twenty-eight
specific grievances and is introduced with the shortest sentence of the
Declaration:
To prove this [the king's tyranny], let Facts be submitted to a candid world.
This sentence is so innocuous one can easily overlook its artistry and
importance. The opening phrase--"To prove this"--indicates the "facts" to follow
will indeed prove that George III is a tyrant. But prove to whom? To a "candid
world"--that is, to readers who are free from bias or malice, who are fair,
impartial, and just. The implication is that any such reader will see the
"facts" as demonstrating beyond doubt that the king has sought to establish an
absolute tyranny in America. If a reader is not convinced, it is not because the
"facts" are untrue or are insufficient to prove the king's villainy; it is
because the reader is not "candid."
The pivotal word in the sentence, though, is "facts." As a term in
eighteenth-century jurisprudence (Jefferson, like many of his colleagues in
Congress, was a lawyer), it meant the circumstances and incidents of a legal
case, looked at apart from their legal meaning. This usage fits with the
Declaration's similarity to a legal declaration, the plaintiff's written
statement of charges showing a "plain and certain" indictment against a
defendant. If the Declaration were considered as analogous to a legal
declaration or a bill of impeachment, the issue of dispute would not be the
status of the law (the right of revolution as expressed in the preamble) but the
facts of the specific case at hand (the king's actions to erect a "tyranny" in
America).(17)
In ordinary usage "fact" had by 1776 taken on its current meaning of something
that had actually occurred, a truth known by observation, reality rather than
supposition or speculation.18 By characterizing the colonists' grievances
against George III as "facts," the Declaration implies that they are unmediated
representations of empirical reality rather than interpretations of reality.
They are the objective constraints that make the Revolution "necessary." This is
reinforced by the passive voice in "let Facts be submitted to a candid world."
Who is submitting the facts? No one. They have not been gathered, structured,
rendered, or in any way contaminated by human agents--least of all by the
Continental Congress. They are just being "submitted," direct from experience
without the corrupting intervention of any observer or interpreter.
But "fact" had yet another connotation in the eighteenth century. The word
derived from the Latin facere, to do. Its earliest meaning in English was
"a thing done or performed"--an action or deed. In the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries it was used most frequently to denote an evil deed or a crime, a usage
still in evidence at the time of the Revolution. In 1769, for example,
Blackstone, in his Commentaries on the Laws of England, noted that
"accessories after the fact" were "allowed the benefit of clergy in all cases."
The Annual Register for 1772 wrote of a thief who was committed to prison
for the "fact" of horse stealing. There is no way to know whether Jefferson and
the Congress had this sense of "fact" in mind when they adopted the Declaration.
Yet regardless of their intentions, for some eighteenth-century readers "facts"
many have had a powerful double-edged meaning when applied to George III's
actions toward America.(19)
Although one English critic assailed the Declaration for its "studied confusion
in the arrangement" of the grievances against George III, they are not listed in
random order but fall into four distinct groups.(20) The first group, consisting
of charges 1-12, refers to such abuses of the king's executive power as
suspending colonial laws, dissolving colonial legislatures, obstructing the
administration of justice, and maintaining a standing army during peacetime. The
second group, consisting of charges 13-22, attacks the king for combining with
"others" (Parliament) to subject America to a variety of unconstitutional
measures, including taxing the colonists without consent, cutting off their
trade with the rest of the world, curtailing their right to trial by jury, and
altering their charters.
The third set of charges, numbers 23-27, assails the king's violence and cruelty
in waging war against his American subjects. They burden him with a litany of
venal deeds that is worth quoting in full:
He has abdicated Government here, by declaring us out of his Protection and
waging War against us.
He has plundered our seas, ravaged our Coasts, burnt our towns, and destroyed
the Lives of our people.
He is at this time transporting large Armies of foreign Mercenaries to complete
the works of death, desolation and tyranny, already begun with circumstances of
Cruelty and perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages, and totally
unworthy the Head of a civilized nation.
He has constrained our fellow Citizens taken Captive on the high Seas to bear
Arms against their Country, to become the executioners of their friends and
Brethren, or to fall themselves by their Hands.
He has excited domestic insurrections amongst us, and has endeavored to bring on
the inhabitants of our frontiers, the merciless Indian Savages, whose known rule
of warfare, is an undistinguished destruction of all ages, sexes and conditions.
The war grievances are followed by the final charge against the king--that the
colonists' "repeated Petitions" for redress of their grievances have produced
only "repeated injury."
The presentation of what Samuel Adams called George III's "Catalogue of Crimes"
is among the Declaration's most skillful features. First, the grievances could
have been arranged chronologically, as Congress had done in all but one of its
former state papers. Instead they are arranged topically and are listed
seriatim, in sixteen successive sentences beginning "He has" or, in the case of
one grievance, "He is." Throughout this section of the Declaration, form and
content reinforce one another to magnify the perfidy of the king. The steady,
laborious piling up of "facts" without comment takes on the character of a legal
indictment, while the repetition of "He has" slows the movement of the text,
draws attention to the accumulation of grievances, and accentuates George III's
role as the prime conspirator against American liberty.(21)
Second, as Thomas Hutchinson complained, the charges were "most wickedly
presented to cast reproach upon the King." Consider, for example, grievance 10:
"He has erected a multitude of New Offices, and sent hither swarms of Officers
to harass our people, and eat out their substance." The language is Biblical and
conjures up Old Testament images of "swarms" of flies and locusts covering the
face of the earth, "so that the land was darkened," and devouring all they found
until "there remained not any green thing in the trees, or in the herbs of the
field" (Exodus 10:14-15). It also recalls the denunciation, in Psalms 53:4, of
"the workers of iniquity . . . who eat up my people as they eat bread," and the
prophecy of Deuteronomy 28:51 that an enemy nation "shall eat the fruit of thy
cattle, and the fruit of thy land until thou be destroyed: which also shall not
leave thee either corn, wine, or oil, or the increase of thy kine, or flocks of
thy sheep, until he have destroyed thee." For some readers the religious
connotations may have been enhanced by "substance," which was used in
theological discourse to signify "the Essence or Substance of the Godhead" and
to describe the Holy Eucharist, in which Christ had "coupled the substance of
his flesh and the substance of bread together, so we should receive both."(22)
From the revolutionaries' view, however, the primary advantage of the wording of
charge 10 was probably its purposeful ambiguity. The "multitude of New Offices"
referred to the customs posts that had been created in the 1760s to control
colonial smuggling. The "swarms of Officers" that were purportedly eating out
the substance of the colonies' three million people numbered about fifty in the
entire continent. But Congress could hardly assail George III as a tyrant for
appointing a few dozen men to enforce the laws against smuggling, so it clothed
the charge in vague, evocative imagery that gave significance and emotional
resonance to what otherwise might have seemed a rather paltry grievance.(23)
Third, although scholars often downplay the war grievances as "the weakest part
of the Declaration," they were vital to its rhetorical strategy. They came last
partly because they were the most recent of George III's "abuses and
usurpations," but also because they constituted the ultimate proof of his plan
to reduce the colonies under "absolute despotism." Whereas the first twenty-two
grievances describe the king's acts with such temperate verbs as "refused,"
"called together," "dissolved," "endeavored," "made," "erected," "kept," and
"affected," the war grievances use emotionally charged verbs such as
"plundered," "ravaged," "burnt," and "destroyed." With the exception of
grievance 10, there is nothing in the earlier charges to compare with the
evocative accusation that George III was spreading "death, desolation and
tyranny . . . with circumstances of Cruelty and perfidy scarcely paralleled in
the most barbarous ages," or with the characterization of "the merciless Indian
Savages, whose known mode of warfare is an undistinguished destruction of all
ages, sexes and conditions." Coming on the heels of the previous twenty-two
charges, the war grievances make George III out as little better than the
notorious Richard III, who had forfeited his crown in 1485 for "unnatural,
mischievous, and great Perjuries, Treasons, Homicides and Murders, in shedding
of Infants' blood, with many other Wrongs, odious Offences, and abominations
against God and Man."(24)
To some extent, of course, the emotional intensity of the war grievances was a
natural outgrowth of their subject. It is hard to write about warfare without
using strong language. Moreover, as Jefferson explained a decade later in his
famous "Head and Heart" letter to Maria Cosway, for many of the revolutionaries
independence was, at bottom, an emotional--or sentimental--issue. But the
emotional pitch of the war grievances was also part of a rhetorical strategy
designed to solidify support for independence in those parts of America that had
yet to suffer the physical and economic hardships of war. As late as May 1776
John Adams lamented that while independence had strong support in New England
and the South, it was less secure in the middle colonies, which "have never
tasted the bitter Cup; they have never Smarted--and are therefore a little
cooler." As Thomas Paine recognized, "the evil" of British domination was not
yet "sufficiently brought to their doors to make them feel the precariousness
with which all American property is possessed." Paine sought to bring the evil
home to readers of Common Sense by inducing them to identify with the "horror"
inflicted on other Americans by the British forces "that hath carried fire and
sword" into the land. In similar fashion, the Declaration of Independence used
images of terror to magnify the wickedness of George III, to arouse "the
passions and feelings" of readers, and to awaken "from fatal and unmanly
slumbers" those Americans who had yet to be directly touched by the ravages of
war.(25)
Fourth, all of the charges against George III contain a substantial amount of
strategic ambiguity. While they have a certain specificity in that they refer to
actual historical events, they do not identify names, dates, or places. This
magnified the seriousness of the grievances by making it seem as if each charge
referred not to a particular piece of legislation or to an isolated act in a
single colony, but to a violation of the constitution that had been repeated on
many occasions throughout America.
The ambiguity of the grievances also made them more difficult to refute. In
order to build a convincing case against the grievances, defenders of the king
had to clarify each charge and what specific act or events it referred to, and
then explain why the charge was not true. Thus it took John Lind, who composed
the most sustained British response to the Declaration, 110 pages to answer the
charges set forth by the Continental Congress in fewer than two dozen sentences.
Although Lind deftly exposed many of the charges to be flimsy at best, his
detailed and complex rebuttal did not stand a chance against the Declaration as
a propaganda document. Nor has Lind's work fared much better since 1776. While
the Declaration continues to command an international audience and has created
an indelible popular image of George III as a tyrant, Lind's tract remains a
piece of arcana, buried in the dustheap of history.(26)
In addition to petitioning Parliament and George III, Whig leaders had also
worked hard to cultivate friends of the American cause in England. But the
British people had proved no more receptive to the Whigs than had the
government, and so the Declaration follows the attack on George III by noting
that the colonies had also appealed in vain to the people of Great Britain:
Nor have we been wanting in attentions to our British brethren. We have warned
them from time to time of attempts by their legislature to extend an
unwarrantable jurisdiction over us. We have reminded them of the circumstances
of our emigration and settlement here. We have appealed to their native justice
and magnanimity, and we have conjured them by the ties of our common kindred to
disavow these usurpations, which, would inevitably interrupt our connections and
correspondence. They too have been deaf to the voice of justice and of
consanguinity. We must, therefore, acquiesce in the necessity, which denounces
our Separation, and hold them, as we hold the rest of mankind, Enemies in War,
in Peace Friends.
This is one of the most artfully written sections of the Declaration. The first
sentence, beginning "Nor . . . ," shifts attention quickly and cleanly away from
George III to the colonists' "British brethren." The "have we" of the first
sentence is neatly reversed in the "We have" at the start of the second.
Sentences two through four, containing four successive clauses beginning "We
Have . . . ," give a pronounced sense of momentum to the paragraph while
underlining the colonists' active efforts to reach the British people. The
repetition of "We have" here also parallels the repetition of "He has" in the
grievances against George III.
The fifth sentence--"They too have been deaf to the voice of justice and of
consanguinity"--contains one of the few metaphors in the Declaration and
acquires added force by its simplicity and brevity, which contrast with the
greater length and complexity of the preceding sentence. The final sentence
unifies the paragraph by returning to the pattern of beginning with "We," and
its intricate periodic structure plays off the simple structure of the fifth
sentence so as to strengthen the cadence of the entire paragraph. The closing
words--"Enemies in War, in Peace Friends"--employ chiasmus, a favorite
rhetorical device of eighteenth-century writers. How effective the device is in
this case can be gauged by rearranging the final words to read, "Enemies in War,
Friends in Peace," which weakens both the force and harmony of the Declaration's
phrasing.
It is worth noting, as well, that this is the only part of the Declaration to
employ much alliteration: "British brethren," "time to time," "common kindred,"
"which would," "connections and correspondence." The euphony gained by these
phrases is fortified by the heavy repetition of medial and terminal consonants
in adjoining words: "been wanting in attentions to," "them from time to time,"
"to their native justice," "disavow these usurpations," "have been deaf to the
voice of." Finally, this paragraph, like the rest of the Declaration, contains a
high proportion of one- and two-syllable words (82 percent). Of those words, an
overwhelming number (eighty-one of ninety-six) contain only one syllable. The
rest of the paragraph contains nine three- syllable words, eight four-syllable
words, and four five-syllable words. This felicitous blend of a large number of
very short words with a few very long ones is reminiscent of Lincoln's
Gettysburg Address and contributes greatly to the harmony, cadence, and
eloquence of the Declaration, much as it contributes to the same features in
Lincoln's immortal speech.
The British brethren section essentially finished the case for independence.
Congress had set forth the conditions that justified revolution and had shown,
as best it could, that those conditions existed in Great Britain's thirteen
North American colonies. All that remained was for Congress to conclude the
Declaration:
We, therefore, the Representatives of the united States of America, in General
Congress, Assembled, appealing to the Supreme Judge of the world for the
rectitude of our intentions, do, in the Name, and by Authority of the good
People of these Colonies, solemnly publish and declare, That these United
Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States; that they
are Absolved from all Allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political
connection between them and the State of Great Britain, is and ought to be
totally dissolved; and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power
to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do
all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do. And for the
support of this Declaration, with a firm reliance on the protection of divine
Providence, we mutually pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our
sacred Honor.
This final section of the Declaration is highly formulaic and has attracted
attention primarily because of its closing sentence. Carl Becker deemed this
sentence "perfection itself":
It is true (assuming that men value life more than property, which is doubtful)
that the statement violates the rhetorical rule of climax; but it was a sure
sense that made Jefferson place "lives" first and "fortunes" second. How much
weaker if he had written "our fortunes, our lives, and our sacred honor"! Or
suppose him to have used the word "property" instead of "fortunes"! Or suppose
him to have omitted "sacred"! Consider the effect of omitting any of the words,
such as the last two "ours"--"our lives, fortunes, and sacred honor." No, the
sentence can hardly be improved.(27)
Becker is correct in his judgment about the wording and rhythm of the sentence,
but he errs in attributing high marks to Jefferson for his "sure sense" in
placing "lives" before "fortunes." "Lives and fortunes" was one of the most
hackneyed phrases of eighteenth-century Anglo-American political discourse.
Colonial writers had used it with numbing regularity throughout the dispute with
England (along with other stock phrases such as "liberties and estates" and
"life, liberty, and property"). Its appearance in the Declaration can hardly be
taken as a measure of Jefferson's felicity of expression.
What marks Jefferson's "happy talent for composition" in this case is the
coupling of "our sacred Honor" with "our Lives" and "our Fortunes" to create the
eloquent trilogy that closes the Declaration. The concept of honor (and its
cognates fame and glory) exerted a powerful hold on the eighteenth-century mind.
Writers of all kinds--philosophers, preachers, politicians, playwrights,
poets--repeatedly speculated about the sources of honor and how to achieve it.
Virtually every educated man in England or America was schooled in the classical
maxim, "What is left when honor is lost?" Or as Joseph Addison wrote in his
Cato, whose sentiments were widely admired throughout the eighteenth century on
both sides of the Atlantic: "Better to die ten thousand deaths/Than wound my
honour." The cult of honor was so strong that in English judicial proceedings a
peer of the realm did not answer to bills in chancery or give a verdict "upon
oath, like an ordinary juryman, but upon his honor."(28)
By pledging "our sacred Honor" in support of the Declaration, Congress made a
particularly solemn vow. The pledge also carried a latent message that the
revolutionaries, contrary to the claims of their detractors, were men of honor
whose motives and actions could not only withstand the closest scrutiny by
contemporary persons of quality and merit but would also deserve the approbation
of posterity. If the Revolution succeeded, its leaders stood to achieve lasting
honor as what Francis Bacon called "Liberatores or Salvatores"--
men who "compound the long Miseries of Civil Wars, or deliver their Countries
from Servitude of Strangers or Tyrants." Historical examples included Augustus
Caesar, Henry VII of England, and Henry IV of France. On Bacon's five-point
scale of supreme honor, such heroes ranked below only "Conditores Imperiorum,
Founders of States and Commonwealths," such as Romulus, Caesar, and Ottoman, and
"Lawgivers" such as Solon, Lycurgus, and Justinian, "also called Second
Founders, orPerpetui Principes, because they Govern by their Ordinances
after they are gone." Seen in this way, "our sacred Honor" lifts the motives of
Congress above the more immediate concerns of "our Lives" and "our Fortunes" and
places the revolutionaries in the footsteps of history's most honorable figures.
As a result it also unifies the whole text by subtly playing out the notion that
the Revolution is a major turn in the broad "course of human events."(29)
At the same time, the final sentence completes a crucial metamorphosis in the
text. Although the Declaration begins in an impersonal, even philosophical
voice, it gradually becomes a kind of drama, with its tensions expressed more
and more in personal terms. This transformation begins with the appearance of
the villain, "the present King of Great Britain," who dominates the stage
through the first nine grievances, all of which note what "He has" done without
identifying the victim of his evil deeds. Beginning with grievance 10 the king
is joined on stage by the American colonists, who are identified as the victim
by some form of first person plural reference: The king has sent "swarms of
officers to harass our people," has quartered "armed troops among us,"
has imposed "taxes on us without ourconsent," "has taken away our charters,
abolished our most valuable laws," and altered "the Forms of ourGovernments."
He has "plundered our seas, ravaged our coasts, burnt our towns,
. . . destroyed the lives of ourpeople," and "excited domestic
insurrections amongst us." The word "our" is used twenty-six times from its
first appearance in grievance 10 through the last sentence of the Declaration,
while "us" occurs eleven times from its first appearance in grievance 11 through
the rest of the grievances.(30)
Throughout the grievances action is instigated by the king, as the colonists
passively accept blow after blow without wavering in their loyalty. His villainy
complete, George III leaves the stage and it is occupied next by the colonists
and their "British brethren." The heavy use of personal pronouns continues, but
by now the colonists have become the instigators of action as they actively seek
redress of their grievances. This is marked by a shift in idiom from "He has" to
"We have": "We have petitioned for redress . . . ," "We have
reminded them . . . ," "We have appealed to their . . . ,"
and "We have conjured them." But "they have been deaf" to all pleas, so
"We must . . . hold them" as enemies. By the conclusion, only the
colonists remain on stage to pronounce their dramatic closing lines: "We .
. . solemnly publish and declare . . ." And to support this declaration, "we mutually
pledge to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred
Honor."
The persistent use of "he" and "them," "us" and "our," "we" and "they"
personalizes the British-American conflict and transfigures it from a complex
struggle of multifarious origins and diverse motives to a simple moral drama in
which a patiently suffering people courageously defend their liberty against a
cruel and vicious tyrant. It also reduces the psychic distance between the
reader and the text and coaxes the reader into seeing the dispute with Great
Britain through the eyes of the revolutionaries. As the drama of the Declaration
unfolds, the reader is increasingly solicited to identify with Congress and "the
good People of these Colonies," to share their sense of victimage, to
participate vicariously in their struggle, and ultimately to act with them in
their heroic quest for freedom. In this respect, as in others, the Declaration
is a work of consummate artistry. From its eloquent introduction to its
aphoristic maxims of government, to its relentless accumulation of charges
against George III, to its elegiac denunciation of the British people, to its
heroic closing sentence, it sustains an almost perfect synthesis of style, form,
and content. Its solemn and dignified tone, its graceful and unhurried cadence,
its symmetry, energy, and confidence, its combination of logical structure and
dramatic appeal, its adroit use of nuance and implication all contribute to its
rhetorical power. And all help to explain why the Declaration remains one of the
handful of American political documents that, in addition to meeting the
immediate needs of the moment, continues to enjoy a lustrous literary
reputation.
NOTES
c 1989 by Stephen E. Lucas
Stephen E. Lucas is professor of communication arts at the University of
Wisconsin, Madison, WI. The present essay is derived from a more comprehensive
study, "Justifying America: The Declaration of Independence as a Rhetorical
Document," in Thomas W. Benson, ed., American Rhetoric: Context and Criticism (1989).
(1) Moses Coit Tyler, The Literary History of the American Revolution (1897),
vol. 1, p. 520. The best known study of the style of the Declaration is Carl
Becker's "The Literary Qualities of the Declaration," in his The Declaration
of Independence: A Study in the History of Political Ideas (1922), pp.
194-223. Useful also are Robert Ginsberg, "The Declaration as Rhetoric," in
Robert Ginsberg, ed., A Casebook on the Declaration of Independence (1967),
pp. 219-244; Edwin Gittleman, "Jefferson's 'Slave Narrative': The Declaration of
Independence as a Literary Text," Early American Literature 8 (1974): 239-256;
and James Boyd White, When Words Lose Their Meaning: Constitutions and
Reconstitutions of Language, Character, and Community (1984), 231 240.
Although most books on the Declaration contain a chapter on the "style" of the
document, those chapters are typically historical accounts of the evolution of
the text from its drafting by Thomas Jefferson through its approval by the
Continental Congress or philosophical speculations about the meaning of its
famous passages.
(2) As Garry Wills demonstrates in Inventing America: Jefferson's Declaration
of Independence (1978), there are two Declarations of Independence the
version drafted by Thomas Jefferson and that revised and adopted on July 4,
1776, by the Continental Congress sitting as a committee of the whole.
Altogether Congress deleted 630 words from Jefferson's draft and added 146,
producing a final text of 1,322 words (excluding the title). Although Jefferson
complained that Congress "mangled" his manuscript and altered it "much for the
worse," the judgment of posterity, stated well by Becker, is that "Congress left
the Declaration better than it found it" (Declaration of Independence, p.
209). In any event, for better or worse, it was Congress's text that presented
America's case to the world, and it is that text with which we are concerned in
this essay.
(3) Nothing in this essay should be interpreted to mean that a firm line can be
drawn between style and substance in the Declaration or in any other work of
political or literary discourse. As Peter Gay has noted, style is "form and
content woven into the texture of every art and craft. . . . Apart from a few
mechanical tricks of rhetoric, manner is indissolubly linked to matter; style
shapes and is in turn shaped by, substance" (Style in History [1974], p. 3).
(4) All quotations from the Declaration follow the text as presented in Julian
P. Boyd et al., eds., The Papers of Thomas Jefferson (1950 ), vol. 1, pp.
429-432.
(5) Ephraim Chambers, Cyclopedia: Or, An Universal Dictionary of Arts and
Sciences (1728), vol. 2, p. 621; Jonathan Edwards, Freedom of the Will, ed.
Paul Ramsey (1957), p. 149.
(6) Declaration of the Lords and Commons to Justify Their Taking Up Arms, August
1642, in John Rushworth, ed.,Historical Collections of Private Passages of
State, Weighty Matters in Law, Remarkable Proceedings in Five Parliaments (1680-1722),
vol. 4, pp. 761-768; Declaration of the Continental Congress Setting Forth the
Causes and Necessity of Their Taking Up Arms, July 1775, in James H. Hutson,
ed., A Decent Respect to the Opinions of Mankind: Congressional State Papers,
1774-1776 (1975), pp. 89-98. The importance of necessity as a justification for
war among nations is evident in the many declarations of war issued by European
monarchs throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and is discussed in
Tavers Twiss, The Law of Nations Considered as Independent Political
Communities (1863), pp. 54-55.
(7) The first additional invocation of the doctrine of necessity in the
Declaration comes immediately after the preamble, when Congress states, "Such
has been the patient sufferance of these Colonies; and such is now the necessity
which constrains them to alter their former systems of Government." The second
is at the end of the penultimate section, in which Congress ends its
denunciation of the British people by announcing, "We must, therefore, acquiesce
in the necessity, which denounces our Separation, and hold them, as we hold the
rest of mankind, Enemies in War, in Peace Friends."
(8) [Thomas Paine], Common Sense: Addressed to the Inhabitants of America . .
. (1776), pp. 41, 43.
(9) Samuel Adams to Joseph Hawley, Apr. 15, 1776, Letters of Delegates to
Congress, 1774 1789, ed. Paul H. Smith (1976 ), vol. 3, p. 528; Thomas
Jefferson, Notes of Proceedings in the Continental Congress, Jefferson Papers 1:
312.
(10) Jonathan Mayhew, A Discourse Concerning Unlimited Submission and
Nonresistance to the Higher Powers . . .(1750), p. 45; [John, Lord Somers], The
Judgment of Whole Kingdoms and Nations, Concerning the Rights, Power and
Prerogative of Kings, and the Rights, Privileges and Properties of the People (1710),
par. 186; Algernon Sidney, Discourses Concerning Government (1693), p. 181; John
Hoadly, ed., The Works of Benjamin Hoadly(1773), vol. 2, p. 36;
"Pacificus," Pennsylvania Gazette, Sept. 14, 1774.
(11) Becker, Declaration of Independence, p. 201. (12) Hugh Blair, Lectures
on Rhetoric and Belles Lettres (1783), vol. 1, pp. 206-207, 259.
(13) "Thoughts on English Prosody" was enclosed in an undated letter of ca.
October 1786 to the Marquis de Chastellux. The letter is printed in Jefferson
Papers 10: 498; the draft of Jefferson's essay, which has not been printed, is
with the letter to Chastellux in the Thomas Jefferson Papers, Library of
Congress, Washington, DC. Julian P. Boyd, "The Declaration of Independence: The
Mystery of the Lost Original," Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography 100
(1976): 455-462, discusses "Thoughts on English Prosody" and its relation to
Jefferson's reading text of the Declaration. Given the changes made by Congress
in some sections of the Declaration, it should be noted that the style of the
preamble is distinctly Jeffersonian and was approved by Congress with only two
minor changes in wording from Jefferson's fair copy as reported by the Committee
of Five.
(14) William Duncan, The Elements of Logick (1748), p. 242. See also
Isaac Watts, Logick: or, The Right Use of Reason in the Enquiry After Truth,
8th ed. (1745), p. 304; [Henry Aldrich], A Compendium of Logic, 3d ed.
(1790), p. 23.
(15) Jefferson to Henry Lee, May 5, 1825, The Writings of Thomas Jefferson,
ed. Paul Leicester Ford (1892-1899), vol. 10, p. 343.
(16) Wilbur Samuel Howell, "The Declaration of Independence and
Eighteenth-Century Logic," William and Mary Quarterly, 3d Ser. 18 (1961):
463-484, claims Jefferson consciously structured the Declaration as a syllogism
with a self-evident major premise to fit the standards for scientific proof
advanced in William Duncan's Elements of Logick, a leading logical treatise of
the eighteenth century. As I argue in a forthcoming essay, however, there is no
hard evidence to connect Duncan's book with the Declaration. Jefferson may have
read Elements of Logick while he was a student at the College of William
and Mary, but we are not certain that he did. He owned a copy of it, but we
cannot establish whether the edition he owned was purchased before or after
1776. We cannot even say with complete confidence that Jefferson inserted the
words "self-evident" in the Declaration; if he did, it was only as an
afterthought in the process of polishing his original draft. Moreover, upon
close examination it becomes clear that the Declaration does not fit the method
of scientific reasoning recommended in Duncan's Logick. Its "self-
evident" truths are not self-evident in the rigorous technical sense used by
Duncan; it does not provide the definitions of terms that Duncan regards as the
crucial first step in syllogistic demonstration; and it does not follow Duncan's
injunction that both the minor premise and the major premise must be
self-evident if a conclusion is to be demonstrated in a single act of reasoning.
The syllogism had been part of the intellectual baggage of Western civilization
for two thousand years, and the notion of self-evident truth was central to
eighteenth-century philosophy. Jefferson could readily have used both without
turning to Duncan's Logick for instruction.
(17) "Declaration" in John Cowell, Nomothetes. The Interpreter, Concerning
the Genuine Signification of Such Obscure Words and Terms Used Either in the
Common or Statute Laws of This Realm . . . (1684). For the requirements of
legal declarations in various kinds of civil suits during the eighteenth
century, see William Selwyn,An Abridgement of the Law of Nisi Prius, 4th
ed. (1817).
(18) "Fact" in Samuel Johnson, A Dictionary of the English Language: In Which
the Words are Deduced from Their Origins and Illustrated in Their Different
Significations by Examples from the Best Writers (1755).
(19) Oxford English Dictionary (1933), vol. 4, pp. 11-12; Sir William
Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (1771), vol. 4, p. 39; The
Annual Register, Or a View of the History, Politics, and Literature for the Year
1772 (1773), p. 57.
(20) John Lind, Answer to the Declaration of the American Congress . . .
, 5th ed. (1776), p. 123. Because the grievances are not numbered in the
Declaration, there has been disagreement over how many there are and how they
should be numbered. I have followed Sidney George Fisher, "The Twenty-Eight
Charges against the King in the Declaration of Independence," Pennsylvania
Magazine of History and Biography 31 (1907): 257-303. An alternative
numbering system is used by Wills, Inventing America, pp. 68-75.
(21) Samuel Adams to John Pitts, ca. July 9, 1776, Letters of Delegates 4:
417. The sole congressional paper before the Declaration of Independence to list
grievances topically was the 1774 Bill of Rights (Hutson, Decent Respect,
pp. 49-57).
(22) [Thomas Hutchinson], Strictures upon the Declaration of the Congress at
Philadelphia . . . (1776), p. 16; Ralph Cudworth, The True Intellectual
System of the Universe (1678), p. 601; Richard Hooker, Of the Laws of
Ecclesiasticall Politie (1594 1596), vol. 5, sec. 67, p. 178.
(23) Between 1764 and 1766 England added twenty-five comptrollers, four
surveyors general, and one plantation clerk to its customs service in America.
It added seventeen more officials in 1767 with the creation of a Board of
Customs Commissioners to reside in Boston. These appointments may also have
generated a mild ripple effect, resulting in the hiring of a few lesser
employees to help with office chores and customs searches, but there is no way
to know, since the records are now lost. See Thomas C. Barrow, Trade and
Empire: The British Customs Service in Colonial America, 1660 1775 (1967),
pp. 186-187, 220-221.
(24) Howard Mumford Jones, "The Declaration of Independence: A Critique," in The
Declaration of Independence: Two Essays (1976), p. 7; sentence against
Richard III in Rotuli Parliamentorum; ut et petitiones placita in Parliamento (1783
1832), vol. 6, p. 276.
(25) Thomas Jefferson to Maria Cosway, Oct. 12, 1786, Jefferson Papers 10:
451; John Adams to Benjamin Hichborn, May 29, 1776, Letters of Delegates 4:
96; Paine, Common Sense, pp. 40-42.
(26) See note 20 for bibliographic information on Lind's pamphlet.
(27) Becker, Declaration of Independence, p. 197.
(28) For the importance of fame and honor to the revolutionaries, see Douglass
Adair, "Fame and the Founding Fathers," in Fame and the Founding Fathers,
ed. Trevor Colbourn (1974), pp. 3-26; Garry Wills, Cincinnatus: George
Washington and the Enlightenment (1984), pp. 109 148; Bruce Miroff, "John
Adams: Merit, Fame, and Political Leadership," Journal of Politics 48
(1986): 116-132. The quotation about Jefferson's "happy talent for composition"
is from John Adams to Timothy Pickering, Aug. 6, 1822, The Works of John
Adams, ed. Charles Francis Adams (1850), vol. 2, p. 511. The statement about
peers of the realm is from Blackstone, Commentaries 1: 40
(29) Francis Bacon, The Essayes or Counsels, Civill and Morall . . .
(1625), pp. 313-314. See Adair, "Fame and the Founding Fathers," pp. 114-115,
for the importance of Bacon's essay on honor among the revolutionaries.
(30) Cf. Ginsberg, "The Declaration as Rhetoric," p. 228.