TPUK 2001 Number 3 Volume 5

vote protest

BOOK REVIEW: Revolutionary Britannia? Reflections On The Threat Of Revolution In Britain

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2001 Number 3 Volume 5

Royle attempts to answer the question why there was no revolution? He looks at the nature of the popular movements arguing that their leaders knew both their own limits and those of their followers. He further argues that the revolutionaries were always in the minority.

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“No Grumbling” a 1795 political cartoon by Isaac Cruikshank shows John Bull (a British equivalent of Uncle Sam) under a heavy load of blocks. The king, in a red coat, helps add another block onto Bull’s head. From his pocket hangs a paper: ‘Age of Reason’ – © The Trustees of the British Museum

Thomas Paine, The Age Of Reason And P. O’brien

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2001 Number 3 Volume 5

Am I being harsh? Well I certainly hope that I’m not being the only one finding errors in Mr. O’Brien’s little piece. If so I’m sure to be tarred and feathered very soon; the Christians are so very “open minded” about every man having the right to his own opinion.

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Portrait of George Chalmers (Francis Oldys) in 1824

A Small Addition To The Writings On Thomas Paine (1), Quakers,

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2001 Number 3 Volume 5

From the time that his first biographer, Francis Oldys, adopted Thomas Paine, the son of a Thetford stay-maker, as a subject, all others have accepted the fact that he fathered no children. Recent examination of records, from a long time past, suggest that he might have done. 

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Portrait of Alexander Radishchev

Thomas Paine’s Common Sense As An Inspiration For Alexander Radishchev’s “A Voyage From St Petersburg To Moscow”

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2001 Number 3 Volume 5

Alexander Radishchev (1749-1802) the first Russian radical and Thomas Paine’s contemporary, was the first to understand Paine’s momentous significance for modern history. Radishchev expressed this view already in the 1870s.

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“Imitation bank note” published in 1819 by James Gillray. Along the left margin, at right angles to the text, is a strip-design: ‘Pain exemplified, Or The Age Of Reason’ – © The Trustees of the British Museum

The Enlightenment And The Age Of Reason

Thomas Paine Society UK, TPUK 2001 Number 3 Volume 5

Jesus, Paine maintains, was a man not a god and had no intention of starting a new religion. It is worth noting that in Judaism, as the distinguished Jewish scholar, Hyam Maccoby pointed out, for anyone “to claim to be the Messiah was simply to claim the throne of Israel”.

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