Attack on the publications and activities of reformist organizations in Great Britain and their attitudes towards events and ideas of the French Revolution.
Religious arguments against ideas of Thomas Paine, his followers, and the French Revolution, including an oblique reference to Richard Price's "Discourse on the Love of Our Country".
Attack on the publications and activities of reformist organizations in Great Britain and their attitudes towards events and ideas of the American and French revolutions.
A fable in verse likening British radical reformers to French Revolutionaries. The characters are various types of ceramic ware, Paine is an "ill condition'd jug", and their symbolism is interpreted below.
Sheet music for Benjamin Carr's keyboard arrangements of the French Revolution anthem "C̦a Ira" printed alongside "The President's March", written for George Washington's inauguration and later used as a national anthem known as "Hail Columbia",; Inscribed on verso" This opportunity George Rose".
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.
Campbell's response to ideas and activities of Scottish reformers and their "spirit of sedition".; Was published in: Association for preserving liberty and property against Republicans and Levellers (London, England). 1793. Association papers. Part I. Publications printed by special order of the Society for preserving Liberty and Property against Republicans and Levellers, ... Part II. A collection of tracts, ... To which are prefixed, a preface, and the proceedings of the Society. Addressed to all the loyal associations. London: printed for J. Sewell; J. Debrett; J. Downes; Hookham and Carpenter; T. N. Longman; and W. Lane.
Bust-length portrait of Thomas Paine, after Peale.; Gimbel: 194. "Peint par Peel à Philadelphie, Dessiné par F. Bonneville, Gravé par Sandoz.". Earlier versions appeared without the subtitle. Published in La Chronique du mois, 1792.
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.