Dissertation on the Canon and Feudal Law (1765)
John Adams
Adams speaks in a moment when the American colonies were wrestling with their identity and the burdens of self-governance were becoming clear. His insistence that liberty is a right earned by the sacrifices of past generations challenges any complacency among his contemporaries. It is a call to recognize the debt owed to those who have already paid in blood, and a warning against taking freedom for granted. The underlying argument is that liberty is not merely a gift from the divine or a natural state, but a hard-won inheritance requiring vigilance and effort to maintain.