TPUK 1996 Number 1 Volume 3

everywhere in chains

Thomas Paine: His Decision To Publish The Age Of Reason

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 1996 Number 1 Volume 3

Thomas Paine was not by nature a revolutionary; he was a reformer. His early attitude towards both government and religion was benign, and when his early history is finally presented to the public it will at last become apparent that he was originally a conformist.

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Edmund Burke portrait by Sir Joshua Reynolds - link

BOOK REVIEW: Debate Aborted. Burke, Priestley. Paine And The Revolution In France

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 1996 Number 1 Volume 3

The author acknowledges Burke to have been a ‘great man’ but one who was ‘scarcely rational about human rights’, who resorts to sneering when he fails to have better of an argument. ‘This man’ concludes the author, ‘must have had a large mental block’.

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David Rivers’ Little – Known Memoir Of Thomas Paine

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 1996 Number 1 Volume 3

Rivers had issued several anonymous pamphlets, including a sermon on ‘The Gospel a Perfect Law of Liberty’ and a sermon against Popery. He was a frequent contributor to the World newspaper and the Sunday Recorder To this day, other details of his life remain an unsolved mystery. 

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