30VS SJ^[v^^IAV A"aNHH AS 1^8 1 Ni NHAio anna. XJS[ai^M.ociNa aovs anx ko awoDNi anx hxim XHonoa AXis'aaAiMn 'V'«-flHia31.MIHcess, ftew J^orli G. P. Putnam's Sons CONTENTS. PACB Introduction v Prefatory Note to Paine's First Essay . . i I. — Afric an SxAYERY/iN America .... 4 II. — A Dialogue between- General Wolfe and General Gage in a Wood near Boston . 10 III. — The Magazine in America 14 IV. — Useful and Entertaining Hints ... 20 V. — New Anecdotes of Alexander the Great . 26 VI. — Reflections on the Life and Death of Lord Clive 29 VII. — Cupid and Hymen 36 VIII. — I lUELL ING 40 IX. — Reflections on Titles 46 X. — The Dream Interpreted 48 XL — Reflections ON Unhappy Marriages . . 51 XII. — Thoughts on Defensive War .... 55 XIII. — An Occasional Letter on the Female Sex . 59 XIV.— A Serious Thought -r ' . :*"'"?w.r-- - _ g^ ^ XV. — Common Sense 67 XVI. — Epistle to Quakers 121 XVII. — The Forester's Letters 127 IV CONTENTS. XVIII.— A Dialogue XIX. — The American Crisis . XX. — Retreat across the Delaware XXI. — Letter to Franklin, in Paris . XXII. — The Affair of Silas Deane XXIII. — To the Public on Mr. Deane's Affair XXIV. — Messrs. Deane, Jay, and Gerard i6i i68 381 384 395 409 438 -<^ ?|5^=^^ -^^^^ft ^^^® f!C^M. M^^^^ ^^?^*:?^Ji^^ L^^f§3 )^^S ^^R ^^m ^m ^^ ^r^ ^'^ifi^ y^^d^J ^y^^ ^^^ INTRODUCTION. No apology is needed for an edition of Thomas Paind's , writings, but rather for the tardiness of its appearance. For although there have been laborious and useful collections of his more famous works, none of them can be fairly described as adequate. The compilers have failed to discover many characteristic essays, they printed from imperfect texts, and were unable to find competent publishers cotirageous enough to issue in suitable form the Works of Paine. It is not credit- able that the world has had to wait so long for a complete edition of writings which excited the gratitude and admira- tion of the founders of republican liberty in America and Europe ; nevertheless those writings, so far as accessible, have been read and pondered by multitudes, and are to-day in large and increasing demand. This indeed is not wonderful. Time, which destroys much literature, more slowly overtakes that which was inspired by any great human cause. " It was the cause of America that made me an author," wrote Paine at the close of the Ameri- can Revolution ; and in the preface to his first pamphlet he had said : " The cause of America is in a great measure the cause of all mankind." In the presence of such great argu- ment he made no account of the poems and magazine essays published before the appearance of his first pamphlet, " Com- mon Sense," — the eatliest plea for an independent American Republic. The magazine essays, which are printed in this volume, and the poems, reserved for the last, while they prove Paine's literary ability, also reveal in him an over- powering moral sentiment and human sympathy which must necessarily make his literary art their organ. Paine knew Vi INTRODUCTION. the secret of good writing. In criticising a passage from the Abb6 Raynal's " Revolution of America " he writes : " In this paragraph the conception is lofty, and the expression elegant ; but the colouring is too high for the original, and the likeness fails through an excess of graces. To fit the powers of thinking and the turn of language to the subject, so as to bring out a clear conclusion that shall hit the point in question, and nothing else, is the true criterion of writing. But the greater part of the Abba's writings (if he will pardon me the remark) appear to me uncentral, and burthened with variety. They represent a beautiful wilderness without paths ; in which the eye is diverted by every thing, without being particularly directed to any thing ; and in which it is agreeable to be lost, and difScult to find the way out." One cannot but wonder how Paine acquired his literary equipment, almost as complete in his first work as in his last. In his thirty-second year, when exciseman at Lewes, he made on the intelligent gentlemen of the White Hart Club an im- pression which led one of them, Mr. Lee, to apostrophize him in such lines as these : ' ' Thy logic vanquish'd error, and thy mind No bounds but those of right and truth confined. Thy soul of fire must sure ascend the sky. Immortal Paine, thy fame can never die." This was written of a man who had never published a word, and who, outside his club, was one of the poorest and most obscure men in England. He must in some way have .presently gained reputation for superior intelligence among his fellow-excisemen, who appointed him to write their plea to Parliament for an increase of salary. This document, ,prijited_but not published-u3^772 (reserved for an appendix to our last volume), is written itt-the lucid and simple style characteristic of all^Paine's works, — " hitting the point in question atift nothing else," Byt jvith all of this power he would appear toTiave been withCut literary ambition, and X INTRODUCTION. vii I writes to Goldsmith : " It is my first and only attempt, and even now I should not have undertaken it had I not been particularly applied to by some of my superiors in office." Such, when nearly thirty-six, was the man who three years later published in America the book which made as much history as any ever written. These facts suggest some explanation of the effectiveness of Paine's work. Possessed of a style which, as Edmund Randolph said, insinuated itself into the hearts of learned and unlearned, he wrote not for the sake of writing, penned no word for personal fame, cared not for the morrow of his own reputation. His Quaker forerunner, George Fox, was ' never more surrendered to the moving spirit of the moment. Absorbed in the point to be carried, discarding all rhetoric that did not feather his arrow, dealing with every detail as well as largest events and principles, his works are now in- valuable to the student of American history. In them the course of political events from 1774 to 1787 may be followed almost from hour to hour, and even his military narratives are of great importance. Previous editors of Paine's works, concerned mainly with his theories, have overlooked many of these occasional writings ; but the historian, for whom such occasions are never past, will find in these recovered writings testimony all the more valuable because not meant for any day beyond that which elicited it. Chief-Justice Jay confided to a friend his belief that the history of the American Revolution would never be written, on account of the reputations that would be affected were the truth fully told. That the history has riot been really written is known to those who have critically examined the Stevens " Fac- similes," the Letters of George III. and of Georg ton. To these actual materials, awaiting th^^apetent and ' courageous historian, are now added tJMgtvritin^^pi^^onias Paine, second to none in imporlag^^FF^gipi!fjp^the|^*ti|>iS" no witness with better ogpomW^^ f