This is a new release of the original 1938 edition.
This major collection demonstrates the extent to which Thomas Paine (1737-1809) was an inspiration to the Americans in their struggle for independence, a passionate supporter of the French Revolution and perhaps the outstanding English ...
Thomas PAINE (1737-1809), son of a Quaker staymaker of Thetford; being dismissed as an excisemen in 1774, for agitating for an increase in excisement s pay, at the suggestion of his friend Benjamin Franklin, he sailed for America, where ...
Thomas Paine was a hugely influential revolutionary pamphleteer, whose writings were instrumental in bringing about some of the greatest political changes the world has seen.
Thomas Paine (or Pain; February 9, 1737 [O.S. January 29, 1736] - June 8, 1809) was an English-American political activist, philosopher, political theorist, and revolutionary.
The author of Why Orwell Matters demonstrates how Thomas Paine's Declaration of the Rights of Man, first published in 1791, a passionate defense of the inalienable rights of humankind, forms the philosophical cornerstone of the United ...
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Musaicum Books presents to you this carefully created volume of "The Greatest Works of Thomas Paine: 39 Books in One Edition".
From New York Times bestselling author and Founding Fathers' biographer Harlow Giles Unger comes the astonishing biography of the man whose pen set America ablaze, inspiring its revolution, and whose ideas about reason and religion continue ...
... U.S. collection is perhaps the Colonel Richard Gimbel Collection at the American Philosophical Society Library in Philadelphia. However, this collection is mostly secondary sources related to Paine; the original documents related to Paine ...
Common Sense and Rights of Man (1791– 92), Paine's most well-known pamphlets, sold tens of thousands of copies at a time when the typical circulation of such publications rarely reached more than a few thousand. Paine's many enemies ...