Volume I: 1774–1779 |
I. |
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African Slavery in America |
II. |
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A Dialogue between General Wolfe and General Gage in a Wood near Boston |
III. |
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The Magazine in America |
IV. |
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Useful and Entertaining Hints |
V. |
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New Anecdotes of Alexander the Great |
VI. |
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Reflections on the Life and Death of Lord Clive |
VII. |
|
Cupid and Hymen |
VIII. |
|
Duelling |
IX. |
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Reflections on Titles |
X. |
|
The Dream Interpreted |
XI. |
|
Reflections on Unhappy Marriages |
XII. |
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Thoughts on Defensive War |
XIII. |
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An Occasional Letter on the Female Sex |
XIV. |
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A Serious Thought |
XV. |
|
Common Sense |
XVI. |
|
Epistle to Quakers |
XVII. |
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The Forester’s Letters |
XVIII. |
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A Dialogue |
XIX. |
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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 Gérard |
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Volume II: 1779–1792 |
I. |
|
Peace, and the Newfoundland Fisheries |
II. |
|
The American Philosophical Society |
III. |
|
Emancipation of Slaves |
IV. |
|
Public Good |
V. |
|
Letter to the Abbe Raynal |
VI. |
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Dissertations on Government; the Affairs of the Bank; and Paper Money |
VII. |
|
The Society for Political Inquiries |
VIII. |
|
Prospects on the Rubicon |
IX. |
|
Specification of Thomas Paine |
X. |
|
Letter to Jefferson in Paris |
XI. |
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Thomas Paine’s Answer to Four Questions on the Legislative and Executive Powers |
XII. |
|
Address and Declaration |
XIII. |
|
Rights of Man |
XIV. |
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Rights of Man, Part Second |