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To the Publisher of do. on the Utility of
Magazines, no place, no date, Phila-
delphia, 1775, (supposed)
Useful and entertaining Hints on the in-
ternal Riches of the Colonies, Pennsyl-
vania Magazine, Philadelphia, 1775.
Reflections on the Death of Lord Clive,

Pennsylvania Magazine, (not seen)
New Anecdotes of Alexander the Great
Penn. Mag. 1775

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Common Sense, Philadelphia, Jan. 1776 The Crisis, thirteen Numbers, besides several pieces under the title of "Supernumerary" and "Extraordinary Crisis," from Dec. 19, 1776, to Dec. 9, 1783, total pages

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Public Good, being an Examination of
the Claim of Virginia to the vacant
Western Territory, &c. Phil. 1780
Letter to the Abbe Raynal, Phil. 1782 ...
Dissertations on Government, the Affairs

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of the Bank, and Paper Money, Philadelphia, 1786

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......

Prospects on the Rubicon, London, 1787

34 do.

Letter to Sir George Staunton, on Iron
Bridges

14 do.

Letter to the Authors of the Republican,

Paris, 1791 .....

4 do.

98 do.

Rights of Man, Part I. London, 1791 ...
Address and Declaration of the Friends
of Universal Peace and Liberty, at the
Thatched House Tavern, London,
August 20, 1791

....

7 do.

...

Letter to the Sheriff of the County of
Sussex, June 30, 1792 ....................... .............
Rights of Man, Part II. London, 1792
Letter to the Abbe Syeyes, 1792 .............
Letter to Henry Dundas, London, June
6, 1792

.........

Letter to Onslow Cranley, commonly

called Lord Onslow, London, June 17, 1792

4 octavo 122 do. 2 do.

13 do.

4 do.

Letter to Lord Onslow, London, June 21, 1792 ...

3 do.

Address to the Addressers, London, Sept. 1792

46 do.

Letter to Secretary Dundas, on his De-
tention at Dover, Calais, Sept. 15, 1792
Letter to the People of France, (on his
Election to the Convention,) Paris,
Sept. 25, 1792

3 do.

3 do.

Letter to the Attorney-General of Eng-
land, on the Prosecution against him,
Paris, Nov. 11, 1792
Speech in the Convention on the Trial

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3 do.

of Louis XVI. Paris, Nov. 20, 1792

6 do.

Reasons for preserving the Life of Louis

XVI. Paris, Jan. 1793.

6 do.

Prospect on the War and Paper Currency,
London, 1793

Age of Reason, Part I. Paris, Jan. 1794 Dissertation on first Principles of Government, Paris, 1794 ...

52 do.

.......

22 do.

6 do.

18 do.

Speech delivered in the Convention against the Constitution of 1795

Agrarian Justice, Paris, 1796

Decline and Fall of the English System

26 octavo

43 do.

96 do.

of Finance, Paris, 1796 ......
Letter to Geo. Washington, Paris, 1796
Age of Reason, Part II. Paris, 1796 ...
Letter to the Hon. T. Erskine, on the
Prosecution of Williams, Paris, 1797 29 do.

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Letter to the People and Armies of

France, on the Events of the 18th
Fructidor, Paris, 1797 .....

Discourse to the Theophilanthropists,
Paris, 1797

......

.......

Letter to Camille Jourdan, occasioned
by his Report on the Priests, Public
Worship, and Bells, Paris, 1797.....
Letters to the Citizens of the United
States, Washington, 1802
Letter to the English People, on the
Invasion of England, 1804
The Cause of the Yellow Fever, and the
Means of preventing it, addressed to
the Board of Health, in America, 1805
Observations on the comparative Powers
and Expense of Ships of War, Gun
Boats, & Fortifications (supposed) 1806
* Examination of the Prophecies, Essay
on Dream, &c. New York, 1807 . ....
An Essay on the Origin of Freemasonry,
no date

52 do.

8 do.

34 do,

11 do.

7 do.

6 do.

61 do.

12 do.

He wrote in addition to the foregoing, a number of essays for the American newspapers, which I have

* This has been erroneously entitled the third part of the Age of Reason.

hitherto been unable to obtain. He had likewise by him at the time of his death the third part of the Age of Reason, and a Reply to the Bishop of Llandaff's Apology for the Bible in manuscript. An extract, consisting of about fifteen pages, has already made its appearance, and it is understood the whole will ere long be published. His productions in poetry are numerous, but very few have appeared. Those which have been published are as follows:

The Farmer's Dog.-Song on the Death of General Wolfe. The Snow-drop and Critic.-Account of the burning of Bachelor's Hall.-Liberty Tree.-Verses on War. Song to the Tune of Rule Britannia.-Lines occasioned by the Question, "What is Love?"-Epigram on a Long-nosed Friend.-On the British Constitution. Story of Korah, Dathan, and Abiram.—A Commentary on the Eastern Wise Men.-Lines from "The Castle in the Air," to "The Little Corner of the World."

It is said upon good authority (see the extract from Mr. Yorke's Letters from France in the former part of the Life) that Mr. Paine had likewise composed a couple of volumes containing Memoirs, &c. of his own Life. Whoever may be possessed of these they are an invaluable treasure, and it is an act of injustice to the author to withhold them from the public.

THE END.

W. T. Sherwin, Printer, Lower Smith Street, Northampton Square.

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