Author name: Thomas Paine

The Affair of Silas Deane

To SILAS DEANE, Esq; From Pennsylvania Packet, December 15, 1778. AFTER reading a few lines of your address to the public in the Pennsylvania Packet of December 6th, I can truly say, that concern got the better of curiosity, and I felt an unwillingness to go through it. Mr. Deane must very well know that

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A Serious Address To The People Of Pennsylvania On The Present Situation Of Their Affairs

A SERIOUS ADDRESS to the PEOPLE of PENNSYLVANIA, on the present situation of their affairs. from the Pennsylvania Packet, December 1, 5, 10, 12, 1778. Unwilling as I have been to have my attention called from the great object of the Continent, I now find it necessary to pay some regard to the peace and

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The Crisis VII

The Crisis. No. VII. from the Pennsylvania Packet, November 12, 1778 To the PEOPLE of ENGLAND THERE are stages in the business of serious life in which to amuse is cruel, but to deceive is to destroy; and it is of little consequence, in the conclusion, whether men deceive themselves, or submit, by a kind

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The Crisis VI

The CRISIS. No. VI. From the Pennsylvania Packet, October 22, 1778. To the Earl of CARLISLE, General CLINTON, and WILLIAM EDEN, Esq; British Commissioners, at New-York. THERE is a dignity in the warm passions of a whig, which is never to be found in the cold malice of a tory. In the one nature is

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