What did mercy o warren want out of her life?
Mercy Warren received no formal education during her childhood in Barnstable, Massachusetts, and she learned to read and write by occasionally sitting in on her brothers' lessons and browsing through her uncle's library. she married James Warren in 1754 , with whom she remained in Massachusetts and had five sons. As revolutionary sentiment intensified throughout New England, Mercy Warren's family and home grew involved in public affairs. Her father, husband, and brother all held civil service positions with which they were becoming increasingly frustrated, and leading opponents of royal policy, Sam and John Adams among them, gathered in the Warrens' house in Plymouth to debate politics. Mercy Warren composed political poetry and, though she had most likely never seen a staged performance, she wrote dramas which satirized Massachusetts's royal government. A Jeffersonian believer in the potential for self-rule, Mercy Warren provoked controversy with the publication of her Observations on the New Constitution, in which she argued against ratification of the federalist constitution. Her Jeffersonian perspective also infuses her three-volume History of the Rise, Progress, and Termination of the American Revolution (in response to which John Adams, believing he had been slighted, remarked that "History is not the Providence of Ladies"). At the age of eighty-six, she died in Plymouth .