"Give me liberty, or give me death!" is a quotation attributed to Patrick Henry from a speech he made to the Second Virginia Convention on March 23, 1775,[1] at St. John's Church in Richmond, Virginia.
According to Edmund Randolph, the convention sat in silence for several minutes afterward. Thomas Marshall told his son John Marshall, who later became Chief Justice of the United States, that the speech was "one of the boldest, vehement, and animated pieces of eloquence that had ever been delivered."[4] Edward Carrington, who was listening outside a window of the church, requested to be buried on that spot. In 1810, he got his wish.
The drafter of the Virginia Declaration of Rights, George Mason, said, "Every word he says not only engages but commands the attention, and your passions are no longer your own when he addresses them."[4] More immediately, the resolution, declaring the United Colonies to be independent of the Kingdom of Great Britain, was passed, and He
According to Edmund Randolph, the convention sat in silence for several minutes afterward. Thomas Marshall told his son John Marshall, who later became Chief Justice of the United States, that the speech was "one of the boldest, vehement, and animated pieces of eloquence that had ever been delivered."[4] Edward Carrington, who was listening outside a window of the church, requested to be buried on that spot. In 1810, he got his wish.
The drafter of the Virginia Declaration of Rights, George Mason, said, "Every word he says not only engages but commands the attention, and your passions are no longer your own when
The drafter of the Virginia Declaration of Rights, George Mason, said, "Every word he says not only engages but commands the attention, and your passions are no longer your own when he addresses them."[4] More immediately, the resolution, declaring the United Colonies to be independent of the Kingdom of Great Britain, was passed, and Henry was named as chairman of the committee assigned to build a militia.
Britain's royal governor, Lord Dunmore, reacted by seizing the gunpowder in the public magazine at Williamsburg, Virginia's equivalent of the Battles of Lexington and Concord.[4]
Whatever the exact words of Henry were, "scholars, understandably, are troubled by the way Wirt brought into print Henry's classic Liberty or Death speech," wrote the historian Bernard Mayo. "Yet... its expressions... seemed to have burned themselves into men's memories. Certainly, its spirit is that of the fiery orator who in 1775 so powerfully influenced Virginians and events leading to American independence."[4]
There had been similar phrases used preceding Henry's speech. The 1713 play, Cato, a Tragedy, was popular in the American Colonies and well known by the Founding Fathers, who quoted from the play. George Washington had the play performed for the Continental Army at Valley Forge.[5] It contains the line, "It is not now time to talk of aught/But chains or conquest, liberty or death" (Act II, Scene 4). The phrase "Liberty or Death" also appears on the Culpeper Minutemen flag of 1775.[6]
The opera Artemisia (1657) has an aria called Dammi morte o libertà ("Give me death or freedom") but the context is different since in the aria, "freedom" is not meant political freedom. Oronta is asking Amo
The opera Artemisia (1657) has an aria called Dammi morte o libertà ("Give me death or freedom") but the context is different since in the aria, "freedom" is not meant political freedom. Oronta is asking Amor, the personification of love, to free her from love's bonds or to kill her since love's pains are too hard for her to suffer. That is explained in the first stanza ("Give me death or freedom / Oh blind Amor, that so much sufferings, / So much troubles, so much chains / the heart can't bear").
In Handel's 1746 oratorio Judas Maccabeus, the hero sings, "Resolve, my sons, on liberty or death."
Phrases equivalent to liberty or death have appeared in a variety of other places:
The national anthem of Uruguay, "Orientales, la Patria o la Tumba", contains the line ¡Libertad o con gloria morir! ("Liberty or with glory to die!").[7]
The national anthem of Chile, "Uruguay, "Orientales, la Patria o la Tumba", contains the line ¡Libertad o con gloria morir! ("Liberty or with glory to die!").[7]
The national anthem of Chile, "Canción Nacional", contains the line Que o la tumba serás de los libres / O el asilo contra la opresión ("That you will be either the tomb of the free or an asylum from oppression").
The 1320 Declaration of Arbroath made in the context of Scottish independence was a letter to the Pope that contained the line "It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that we are fighting, but for freedom – for that alone, which no honest man gives up but with life itself". It is commonly cited as an inspiration for the US Declaration of Independence by many, including the US Senate,[8] and it is possible that Henry knew of the Declaration when he wrote his speech.
The motto of Greece is "Liberty or Death" (Eleftheria i thanatos). It arose during the Greek War of Independence in the 1820s, when it was a war cry for Greeks who rebelled against Ottoman rule.[9]
A popular and possibly-concocted story in Brazil relates that in 1822, Emperor Pedro I uttered the famous "Cry from [the river] Ipiranga", "Independence or Death" (Independência ou Morte), when Brazil was still a colony of Portugal.[10]
During the Russian Civil War, the flag used by Nestor Makhno's anarchist Revolutionary Insurrectionary Army of Ukraine had the dual slogans "Liberty or Death" and "The Land to the Peasants, the Factories to the Workers".[11]
In March 1941, the motto of the public demonstrations in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia against the signing of a treaty with Nazi Germany was "Better grave than slave" (Bolje grob nego rob).[12]
During the Indonesian National Revolution, the Pemuda ("Youth") used the phrase Merdeka atau Mati ("Freedom or Death").[13]
In 1964, in the speech "The Ballot or the Bullet" in Cleveland, Ohio, Malcolm X said, "It'll be ballots, or it'll be bullets. It'll be liberty, or it will be death. The only difference about this kind of death -- it'll be reciprocal."[14]
In 2012, in China, Ren Jianyu, a 25-year-old former college student "village official," was given a two-year re-education through labor sentence for an online speech against the Communist Party of China. A T-shirt of Ren saying "Give me liberty or give me death!" (in Chinese) has been taken as evidence of his antisocial guilt.[15]