A group, dressed in tattered clothes, listens to their chairman who is reading from a broadside. The setting is a dark cellar and portraits of Tooke and "Tom Payne", wearing French tricolor cockade hats, hang on the wall. ; George: 9202 Gimbel: 253
Paine sleeps on a bed of straw, surrounded by parodies of his works, watched over by Fox and Priestley as guardian angels, and dreams of his trial. A demon holding a fiddle and sheet music inscribed "Ca ira" flees through the window.; George: 8137
Bust-length profile portrait of Paine.; Gimbel: 215. 5 copies, sheet sizes vary, 3 without top inscription, 1 with MS annotation. "Engraved by James Godby from an Original Drawing done from the Life in America 1803. London. Published as the act directs, May 21 1805."
Letters reporting on the November 1792 activities of the Edinburgh Society of the Friends of the People and an extract from a 1792 speech by Parisian mayor Petion regarding the September Massacres.
Two illustrated broadsides attached to blue paper: "Death of Thomas Paine" and "Death of the Earl of Rochester". ; Clippings of literary biographies attached to verso. From an edition of: Percy, Sholto, and Reuben Percy. The Percy anecdotes: original and select.
The English Society for Constitutional Information's endorsement of Paine's Rights of Man, contrasted with Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France.; D. Adams, secretary to the Society
Paine sees the sign of the Association for Preserving Liberty and Property against Levellers and Republicans while attempting to cut off the sign of a crown with the assistance of Frenchmen. In his pocket are works by Priestley and his own Rights of Man. ; George: 8138 Gimbel: 241 Two copies
Among his insights in this document, Jonathan Plummer claims that a "vile book" written by "the infamous drunkard" Thomas Paine insulted God and was therefore responsible for outbreaks of fever in Philadelphia and an earthquake in South America.; Paine 73 P73d. Oversized box 2.
Numbered key identifying officials and members of the French National Assembly, including Thomas Paine, listening to Louis XVI making his final statement.; Designed to accompany a print of the same name.
Religious arguments against ideas of Thomas Paine and his followers, Richard Price and the French Revolution.; Bookseller's advertisement on verso includes other broadsides, responses to Paine's Rights of Man and the George Chalmers-Francis Oldys biography of Paine.
Adams, the secretary of the Society, is depicted as an ass braying: "Rights of Man" and carrying panniers filled with Paine's works. To the side, the British Lion holds open a book by Burke.; George: 7859 Gimbel: 230