The Revolution Continues (June 1976 | Volume: 27, Issue: 4)

The Revolution Continues

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Authors: Bruce Catton

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June 1976 | Volume 27, Issue 4

The bell is old and it is badly cracked and it has not been rung for years, nor will it ever be rung again. But although it is quite useless from a practical standpoint, it is perhaps the most prized possession we have. It carries words about proclaiming liberty to all the people, and when it spoke it set off long echoes that have never stopped reverberating. The Liberty Bell announced that the American people were in fact making a revolution and not just demonstrating for a redress of grievances, and few announcements in the history of the human race have been more momentous.

This year we who own the bell are celebrating the two hundredth anniversary of the independence which that bell proclaimed: the Bicentennial of the American Revolution, which is being observed in an infinite number of ways, some of them impressive, others rather regrettable, but all of them testifying to our belief that the occasion which is being celebrated was extremely important, to ourselves and to others. This belief is of course entirely justified, but the American revolution has dimensions that ought to get a great deal more consideration than we ordinarily give them. To name just two of them: it changed everything—and it is still going on.

At Yorktown, where a British army laid down its arms and surrendered its flags to confirm the reality of the assertion the Liberty Bell had made, a fife and drum corps played the British soldiers out to the surrender field, tootling a sprightly little tune called “The World Turned Upside Down.” Whether that particular song was chosen simply because it happened to be popular at the moment or because someone on the committee of arrangements had an inspiration, it was in the highest degree suitable. The world had indeed been turned upside down, not merely because certain restless colonies had broken away from the British Empire but because a new idea, of infinite scope, had been let loose in the world. A new idea, or a new possibility; say it as you choose, it makes no difference so long as the true nature of the change is understood. The men who proclaimed their freedom, and made it good by force of arms, had been fighting for a great deal more than simple political independence. They wanted no more of King George, of course, but they also wanted the kind of freedom that came into the front yard and the parlor and the kitchen of the ordinary human being. Men and women did not propose to be bossed around any longer, and at the same time they did not propose to go hungry or live in want or feel the restraints of a tightly ordered society whose classes and customs were fixed beyond change. They saw liberty not as a glorious abstraction but as something that began with what the citizen had for breakfast and went on to affect all of the homely concerns of everyday life.