I canāt let the Palin controversy pass without urging everyone interested in this wonderful episode in American history to read David Hackett Fischerās Paul Revereās Ride. One of my favorite passages is when Fischer recounts Revereās spirited response to the British when they captured him. When a British officer clapped a pistol to his head and said heād better answer their questions truthfully, Revere responded, āI call myself a man of truth, and you have stopped me on the highway, and made me a prisoner I knew not by what right. I will tell the truth, for I am not afraid.ā Later, when the British warned him he better not try to bolt or theyād blow his brains out, he said, coolly, āYou may do as you please.ā (It was around this time, by the way, that the Brits realized Revere had been telling the truth when he āwarnedā them, as Palin put it, that the alarm had been raised in the countryside. Fischer: āAt last the officers began to feel the full import of what Paul Revere had been telling them. His words of warning took on stronger meaning when punctuated by gunfire. The sound of a single shot had suggested to them that surprise was lost. The crash of a volley appeared evidence that the country was rising against them. As they came closer to the Common they began to hear Lexingtonās town bell clanging rapidly. The captive [Jonathan] Loring, picking up Revereās spirit, turned to the officers and said, āThe bellās aāringing! The townās alarmed, and youāre all dead men!āā)National Review |