Called a “real genius” and “the most accomplished woman in America” by her good friend John Adams, Mercy Otis Warren was born into an intellectual, political family in West Barnstable, Massachusetts in 1728. As an adult, she moved to Plymouth, raised five sons, and was by all accounts an elegant, genteel woman of impeccable manners and taste.
But Warren was also a radical revolutionary. She called her home “One Liberty Square” and headed a salon of patriots fed up with oppressive British rule. She wrote hugely influential, pointed political plays and poems which were printed in Boston papers.
“She cast her patriot friends as heroes and her Loyalist enemies as villains,” her biographer Gretchen Woelfle writes, “with names like Rapatio, Simple-Sapling, Crusty Crowbar, Hector Mushroom and Hum Humbug.” In The Squabble of the Sea Nymphs, Warren’s meditation on the Boston Tea Party, she wrote: “The fair Salacia, victory, sings, in spite of heroes, demigods, or kings; She bids defiance to the servile train, the pimps and sycophants of George’s reign.”
“The elective franchise is in their own hands; that it ought not to be abused, either for personal gratifications, or the indulgence of partisan acrimony…The principles of revolution ought ever be the pole-star of the statesman, respected by the rising generation.”
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