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- THE AGE OF REASON.
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
-
-
- WITH SOME RESULTS OF RECENT RESEARCHES.
-
- IN the opening year, 1793, when revolutionary France had
- beheaded its king, the wrath turned next upon the King of kings, by
- whose grace every tyrant claimed to reign. But eventualities had
- brought among them a great English and American heart -- Thomas
- Paine. He had pleaded for Louis Caper -- "Kill the king but spare
- the man." Now he pleaded, -- "Disbelieve in the King of kings, but
- do not confuse with that idol the Father of Mankind!"
-
- In Paine's Preface to the Second Part of "The Age of Reason"
- he describes himself as writing the First Part near the close of
- the year 1793. "I had not finished it more than six hours, in the
- state it has since appeared, before a guard came about three in the
- morning, with an order signed by the two Committees of Public
- Safety and Surety General, for putting me in arrestation." This was
- on the morning of December 28. But it is necessary to weigh the
- words just quoted -- "in the state it has since appeared." For on
- August 5, 1794, Francois Lanthenas, in an appeal for Paine's
- liberation, wrote as follows: "I deliver to Merlin de Thionville a
- copy of the last work of T. Payne [The Age of Reason], formerly our
- colleague, and in custody since the decree excluding foreigners
- from the national representation. This book was written by the
- author in the beginning of the year '93 (old style). I undertook
- its translation before the revolution against priests, and it was
- published in French about the same time. Couthon, to whom I sent
- it, seemed offended with me for having translated this work."
-
- Under the frown of Couthon, one of the most atrocious
- colleagues of Robespierre, this early publication seems to have
- been so effectually suppressed that no copy bearing that date,
- 1793, can be found in France or elsewhere. In Paine's letter to
- Samuel Adams, printed in the present volume, he says that he had it
- translated into French, to stay the progress of atheism, and that
- he endangered his life "by opposing atheism." The time indicated by
- Lanthenas as that in which he submitted the work to Couthon would
- appear to be the latter part of March, 1793, the fury against the
- priesthood having reached its climax in the decrees against them of
- March 19 and 26. If the moral deformity of Couthon, even greater
- than that of his body, be remembered, and the readiness with which
- death was inflicted for the most theoretical opinion not approved
- by the "Mountain," it will appear probable that the offence given
- Couthon by Paine's book involved danger to him and his translator.
- On May 31, when the Girondins were accused, the name of Lanthenas
- was included, and he barely escaped; and on the same day Danton
- persuaded Paine not to appear in the Convention, as his life might
- be in danger. Whether this was because of the "Age of Reason," with
- its fling at the "Goddess Nature" or not, the statements of author
- and translator are harmonized by the fact that Paine prepared the
- manuscript, with considerable additions and changes, for
- publication in English, as he has stated in the Preface to Part II.
-
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 1
- THE AGE OF REASON.
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
-
- A comparison of the French and English versions, sentence by
- sentence, proved to me that the translation sent by Lanthenas to
- Merlin de Thionville in 1794 is the same as that he sent to Couthon
- in 1793. This discovery was the means of recovering several
- interesting sentences of the original work. I have given as
- footnotes translations of such clauses and phrases of the French
- work as appeared to be important. Those familiar with the
- translations of Lanthenas need not be reminded that he was too much
- of a literalist to depart from the manuscript before him, and
- indeed he did not even venture to alter it in an instance
- (presently considered) where it was obviously needed. Nor would
- Lanthenas have omitted any of the paragraphs lacking in his
- translation. This original work was divided into seventeen
- chapters, and these I have restored, translating their headings
- into English. The "Age of Reason" is thus for the first time given
- to the world with nearly its original completeness.
-
- It should be remembered that Paine could not have read the
- proof of his "Age of Reason" (Part I.) which went through the press
- while he was in prison. To this must be ascribed the permanence of
- some sentences as abbreviated in the haste he has described. A
- notable instance is the dropping out of his estimate of Jesus the
- words rendered by Lanthenas "trop peu imite, trop oublie, trop
- meconnu." The addition of these words to Paine's tribute makes it
- the more notable that almost the only recognition of the human
- character and life of Jesus by any theological writer of that
- generation came from one long branded as an infidel.
-
- To the inability of the prisoner to give his work any revision
- must be attributed the preservation in it of the singular error
- already alluded to, as one that Lanthenas, but for his extreme
- fidelity, would have corrected. This is Paine's repeated mention of
- six planets, and enumeration of them, twelve years after the
- discovery of Uranus. Paine was a devoted student of astronomy, and
- it cannot for a moment be supposed that he had not participated in
- the universal welcome of Herschel's discovery. The omission of any
- allusion to it convinces me that the astronomical episode was
- printed from a manuscript written before 1781, when Uranus was
- discovered. Unfamiliar with French in 1793, Paine might not have
- discovered the erratum in Lanthenas' translation, and, having no
- time for copying, he would naturally use as much as possible of the
- same manuscript in preparing his work for English readers. But he
- had no opportunity of revision, and there remains an erratum which,
- if my conjecture be correct, casts a significant light on the
- paragraphs in which he alludes to the preparation of the work. He
- states that soon after his publication of "Common Sense" (1776), he
- "saw the exceeding probability that a revolution in the system of
- government would be followed by a revolution in the system of
- religion," and that "man would return to the pure, unmixed, and
- unadulterated belief of one God and no more." He tells Samuel Adams
- that it had long been his intention to publish his thoughts upon
- religion, and he had made a similar remark to John Adams in 1776.
- Like the Quakers among whom he was reared Paine could then readily
- use the phrase "word of God" for anything in the Bible which
- approved itself to his "inner light," and as he had drawn from the
- first Book of Samuel a divine condemnation of monarchy, John Adams,
- a Unitarian, asked him if he believed in the inspiration of the Old
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 2
- THE AGE OF REASON.
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
-
- Testament. Paine replied that he did not, and at a later period
- meant to publish his views on the subject. There is little doubt
- that he wrote from time to time on religious points, during the
- American war, without publishing his thoughts, just as he worked on
- the problem of steam navigation, in which he had invented a
- practicable method (ten years before John Fitch made his discovery)
- without publishing it. At any rate it appears to me certain that
- the part of "The Age of Reason" connected with Paine's favorite
- science, astronomy, was written before 1781, when Uranus was
- discovered.
-
- Paine's theism, however invested with biblical and Christian
- phraseology, was a birthright. It appears clear from several
- allusions in "The Age of Reason" to the Quakers that in his early
- life, or before the middle of the eighteenth century, the people so
- called were substantially Deists. An interesting confirmation of
- Paine's statements concerning them appears as I write in an account
- sent by Count Leo Tolstoi to the London 'Times' of the Russian sect
- called Dukhobortsy (The Times, October 23, 1895). This sect sprang
- up in the last century, and the narrative says:
-
- "The first seeds of the teaching called afterwards
- 'Dukhoborcheskaya' were sown by a foreigner, a Quaker, who came to
- Russia. The fundamental idea of his Quaker teaching was that in the
- soul of man dwells God himself, and that He himself guides man by
- His inner word. God lives in nature physically and in man's soul
- spiritually. To Christ, as to an historical personage, the
- Dukhobortsy do not ascribe great importance ... Christ was God's
- son, but only in the sense in which we call, ourselves 'sons of
- God.' The purpose of Christ's sufferings was no other than to show
- us an example of suffering for truth. The Quakers who, in 1818,
- visited the Dukhobortsy, could not agree with them upon these
- religious subjects; and when they heard from them their opinion
- about Jesus Christ (that he was a man), exclaimed 'Darkness!' From
- the Old and New Testaments,' they say, 'we take only what is
- useful,' mostly the moral teaching. ... The moral ideas of the
- Dukhobortsy are the following: -- All men are, by nature, equal;
- external distinctions, whatsoever they may be, are worth nothing.
- This idea of men's equality the Dukhoborts have directed further,
- against the State authority. ... Amongst themselves they hold
- subordination, and much more, a monarchical Government, to be
- contrary to their ideas."
-
- Here is an early Hicksite Quakerism carried to Russia long
- before the birth of Elias Hicks, who recovered it from Paine, to
- whom the American Quakers refused burial among them. Although Paine
- arraigned the union of Church and State, his ideal Republic was
- religious; it was based on a conception of equality based on the
- divine son-ship of every man. This faith underlay equally his
- burden against claims to divine partiality by a "Chosen People," a
- Priesthood, a Monarch "by the grace of God," or an Aristocracy.
- Paine's "Reason" is only an expansion of the Quaker's "inner
- light"; and the greater impression, as compared with previous
- republican and deistic writings made by his "Rights of Man" and
- "Age of Reason" (really volumes of one work), is partly explained
- by the apostolic fervor which made him a spiritual, successor of
- George Fox.
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 3
- THE AGE OF REASON.
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
-
- Paine's mind was by no means skeptical, it was eminently
- instructive. That he should have waited until his fifty-seventh
- year before publishing his religious convictions was due to a
- desire to work out some positive and practicable system to take the
- place of that which he believed was crumbling. The English engineer
- Hall, who assisted Paine in making the model of his iron bridge,
- wrote to his friends in England, in 1786: "My employer has Common
- Sense enough to disbelieve most of the common systematic theories
- of Divinity, but does not seem to establish any for himself." But
- five years later Paine was able to lay the corner-stone of his
- temple: "With respect to religion itself, without regard to names,
- and as directing itself from the universal family of mankind to the
- 'Divine object of all adoration, it is man bringing to his Maker
- the fruits of his heart; and though those fruits may differ from
- each other like the fruits of the earth, the grateful tribute of
- every one, is accepted." ("Rights of Man." See my edition of
- Paine's Writings, ii., p. 326.) Here we have a reappearance of
- George Fox confuting the doctor in America who "denied the light
- and Spirit of God to be in every one; and affirmed that it was not
- in the Indians. Whereupon I called an Indian to us, and asked him
- 'whether or not, when he lied, or did wrong to anyone, there was
- not something in him that reproved him for it?' He said, 'There was
- such a thing in him that did so reprove him; and he was ashamed
- when he had done wrong, or spoken wrong.' So we shamed the doctor
- before the governor and the people." (Journal of George Fox,
- September 1672.)
-
- Paine, who coined the phrase "Religion of Humanity (The
- Crisis, vii., 1778), did but logically defend it in "The Age of
- Reason," by denying a special revelation to any particular tribe,
- or divine authority in any particular creed of church; and the
- centenary of this much-abused publication has been celebrated by a
- great conservative champion of Church and State, Mr. Balfour, who,
- in his "Foundations of Belief," affirms that "inspiration" cannot
- be denied to the great Oriental teachers, unless grapes may be
- gathered from thorns.
-
- The centenary of the complete publication of "The Age of
- Reason," (October 25, 1795), was also celebrated at the Church
- Congress, Norwich, on October 10, 1895, when Professor Bonney,
- F.R.S., Canon of Manchester, read a paper in which he said: "I
- cannot deny that the increase of scientific knowledge has deprived
- parts of the earlier books of the Bible of the historical value
- which was generally attributed to them by our forefathers. The
- story of Creation in the Book of Genesis, unless we play fast and
- loose either with words or with science, cannot be brought into
- harmony with what we have learnt from geology. Its ethnological
- statements are imperfect, if not sometimes inaccurate. The stories
- of the Fall, of the Flood, and of the Tower of Babel, are
- incredible in their present form. Some historical element may
- underlie many of the traditions in the first eleven chapters in
- that book, but this we cannot hope to recover." Canon Bonney
- proceeded to say of the New Testament also, that the Gospels are
- not so far as we know, strictly contemporaneous records, so we must
- admit the possibility of variations and even inaccuracies in
- details being introduced by oral tradition." The Canon thinks the
- interval too short for these importations to be serious, but that
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 4
- THE AGE OF REASON.
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
-
- any question of this kind is left open proves the Age of Reason
- fully upon us. Reason alone can determine how many texts are as
- spurious as the three heavenly witnesses (i John v. 7), and like it
- "serious" enough to have cost good men their lives, and persecutors
- their charities. When men interpolate, it is because they believe
- their interpolation seriously needed. It will be seen by a note in
- Part II. of the work, that Paine calls attention to an
- interpolation introduced into the first American edition without
- indication of its being an editorial footnote. This footnote was:
- "The book of Luke was carried by a majority of one only. Vide
- Moshelm's Ecc. History." Dr. Priestley, then in America, answered
- Paine's work, and in quoting less than a page from the "Age of
- Reason" he made three alterations, -- one of which changed "church
- mythologists" into "Christian mythologists," -- and also raised the
- editorial footnote into the text, omitting the reference to
- Mosheim. Having done this, Priestley writes: "As to the gospel of
- Luke being carried by a majority of one only, it is a legend, if
- not of Mr. Paine's own invention, of no better authority whatever."
- And so on with further castigation of the author for what he never
- wrote, and which he himself (Priestley) was the unconscious means
- of introducing into the text within the year of Paine's
- publication.
-
- If this could be done, unintentionally by a conscientious and
- exact man, and one not unfriendly to Paine, if such a writer as
- Priestley could make four mistakes in citing half a page, it will
- appear not very wonderful when I state that in a modern popular
- edition of "The Age of Reason," including both parts, I have noted
- about five hundred deviations from the original. These were mainly
- the accumulated efforts of friendly editors to improve Paine's
- grammar or spelling; some were misprints, or developed out of such;
- and some resulted from the sale in London of a copy of Part Second
- surreptitiously made from the manuscript. These facts add
- significance to Paine's footnote (itself altered in some
- editions!), in which he says: "If this has happened within such a
- short space of time, notwithstanding the aid of printing, which
- prevents the alteration of copies individually; what may not have
- happened in a much greater length of time, when there was no
- printing, and when any man who could write, could make a written
- copy, and call it an original, by Matthew, Mark, Luke, or John.
-
- Nothing appears to me more striking, as an illustration of the
- far-reaching effects of traditional prejudice, than the errors into
- which some of our ablest contemporary scholars have fallen by
- reason of their not having studied Paine. Professor Huxley, for
- instance, speaking of the freethinkers of the eighteenth century,
- admires the acuteness, common sense, wit, and the broad humanity of
- the best of them, but says "there is rarely much to be said for
- their work as an example of the adequate treatment of a grave and
- difficult investigation," and that they shared with their
- adversaries "to the full the fatal weakness of a priori
- philosophizing." [NOTE: Science and Christian Tradition, p. 18
- (Lon. ed., 1894).] Professor Huxley does not name Paine, evidently
- because he knows nothing about him. Yet Paine represents the
- turning-point of the historical freethinking movement; he renounced
- the 'a priori' method, refused to pronounce anything impossible
- outside pure mathematics, rested everything on evidence, and really
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 5
- THE AGE OF REASON.
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
-
- founded the Huxleyan school. He plagiarized by anticipation many
- things from the rationalistic leaders of our time, from Strauss and
- Baur (being the first to expatiate on "Christian Mythology"), from
- Renan (being the first to attempt recovery of the human Jesus), and
- notably from Huxley, who has repeated Paine's arguments on the
- untrustworthiness of the biblical manuscripts and canon, on the
- inconsistencies of the narratives of Christ's resurrection, and
- various other points. None can be more loyal to the memory of
- Huxley than the present writer, and it is even because of my sense
- of his grand leadership that he is here mentioned as a typical
- instance of the extent to which the very elect of free-thought may
- be unconsciously victimized by the phantasm with which they are
- contending. He says that Butler overthrew freethinkers of the
- eighteenth century type, but Paine was of the nineteenth century
- type; and it was precisely because of his critical method that he
- excited more animosity than his deistical predecessors. He
- compelled the apologists to defend the biblical narratives in
- detail, and thus implicitly acknowledge the tribunal of reason and
- knowledge to which they were summoned. The ultimate answer by
- police was a confession of judgment. A hundred years ago England
- was suppressing Paine's works, and many an honest Englishman has
- gone to prison for printing and circulating his "Age of Reason."
- The same views are now freely expressed; they are heard in the
- seats of learning, and even in the Church Congress; but the
- suppression of Paine, begun by bigotry and ignorance, is continued
- in the long indifference of the representatives of our Age of
- Reason to their pioneer and founder. It is a grievous loss to them
- and to their cause. It is impossible to understand the religious
- history of England, and of America, without studying the phases of
- their evolution represented in the writings of Thomas Paine, in the
- controversies that grew out of them with such practical
- accompaniments as the foundation of the Theophilanthropist Church
- in Paris and New York, and of the great rationalist wing of
- Quakerism in America.
-
- Whatever may be the case with scholars in our time, those of
- Paine's time took the "Age of Reason" very seriously indeed.
- Beginning with the learned Dr. Richard Watson, Bishop of Llandaff,
- a large number of learned men replied to Paine's work, and it
- became a signal for the commencement of those concessions, on the
- part of theology, which have continued to our time; and indeed the
- so-called "Broad Church" is to some extent an outcome of "The Age
- of Reason." It would too much enlarge this Introduction to cite
- here the replies made to Paine (thirty-six are catalogued in the
- British Museum), but it may be remarked that they were notably
- free, as a rule, from the personalities that raged in the pulpits.
- I must venture to quote one passage from his very learned
- antagonist, the Rev. Gilbert Wakefield, B.A., "late Fellow of Jesus
- College, Cambridge." Wakefield, who had resided in London during
- all the Paine panic, and was well acquainted with the slanders
- uttered against the author of "Rights of Man," indirectly brands
- them in answering Paine's argument that the original and
- traditional unbelief of the Jews, among whom the alleged miracles
- were wrought, is an important evidence against them. The learned
- divine writes:
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 6
- THE AGE OF REASON.
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
-
- "But the subject before us admits of further illustration from
- the example of Mr. Paine himself. In this country, where his
- opposition to the corruptions of government has raised him so many
- adversaries, and such a swarm of unprincipled hirelings have
- exerted themselves in blackening his character and in
- misrepresenting all the transactions and incidents of his life,
- will it not be a most difficult, nay an impossible task, for
- posterity, after a lapse of 1700 years, if such a wreck of modern
- literature as that of the ancient, should intervene, to identify
- the real circumstances, moral and civil, of the man? And will a
- true historian, such as the Evangelists, be credited at that future
- period against such a predominant incredulity, without large and
- mighty accessions of collateral attestation? And how transcendently
- extraordinary, I had almost said miraculous, will it be estimated
- by candid and reasonable minds, that a writer whose object was a
- melioration of condition to the common people, and their
- deliverance from oppression, poverty, wretchedness, to the
- numberless blessings of upright and equal government, should be
- reviled, persecuted, and burned in effigy, with every circumstance
- of insult and execration, by these very objects of his benevolent
- intentions, in every corner of the kingdom?"
-
- After the execution of Louis XVI., for whose life Paine
- pleaded so earnestly, -- while in England he was denounced as an
- accomplice in the deed, -- he devoted himself to the preparation of
- a Constitution, and also to gathering up his religious compositions
- and adding to them. This manuscript I suppose to have been prepared
- in what was variously known as White's Hotel or Philadelphia House,
- in Paris, No. 7 Passage des Petits Peres. This compilation of early
- and fresh manuscripts (if my theory be correct) was labelled, "The
- Age of Reason," and given for translation to Francois Lanthenas in
- March 1793. It is entered, in Qudrard (La France Literaire) under
- the year 1793, but with the title "L'Age de la Raison" instead of
- that which it bore in 1794, "Le Siecle de la Raison." The latter,
- printed "Au Burcau de l'imprimerie, rue du Theatre-Francais, No.
- 4," is said to be by "Thomas Paine, Citoyen et cultivateur de
- I'Amerique septentrionale, secretaire du Congres du departement des
- affaires etrangeres pendant la guerre d'Amerique, et auteur des
- ouvrages intitules: LA SENS COMMUN et LES DROITS DE L'HOMME."
-
- When the Revolution was advancing to increasing terrors,
- Paine, unwilling to participate in the decrees of a Convention
- whose sole legal function was to frame a Constitution, retired to
- an old mansion and garden in the Faubourg St. Denis, No. 63. Mr.
- J.G. Alger, whose researches in personal details connected with the
- Revolution are original and useful, recently showed me in the
- National Archives at Paris, some papers connected with the trial of
- Georgeit, Paine's landlord, by which it appears that the present
- No. 63 is not, as I had supposed, the house in which Paine resided.
- Mr. Alger accompanied me to the neighborhood, but we were not able
- to identify the house. The arrest of Georgeit is mentioned by Paine
- in his essay on "Forgetfulness" (Writings, iii., 319). When his
- trial came on one of the charges was that he had kept in his house
- "Paine and other Englishmen," -- Paine being then in prison, -- but
- he (Georgeit) was acquitted of the paltry accusations brought
- against him by his Section, the "Faubourg du Nord." This Section
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 7
- THE AGE OF REASON.
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
-
- took in the whole east side of the Faubourg St. Denis, whereas the
- present No. 63 is on the west side. After Georgeit (or Georger) had
- been arrested, Paine was left alone in the large mansion (said by
- Rickman to have been once the hotel of Madame de Pompadour), and it
- would appear, by his account, that it was after the execution
- (October 31, 1793) Of his friends the Girondins, and political
- comrades, that he felt his end at hand, and set about his last
- literary bequest to the world, -- "The Age of Reason," -- in the
- state in which it has since appeared, as he is careful to say.
- There was every probability, during the months in which he wrote
- (November and December 1793) that he would be executed. His
- religious testament was prepared with the blade of the guillotine
- suspended over him, -- a fact which did not deter pious
- mythologists from portraying his death-bed remorse for having
- written the book.
-
- In editing Part I. of "The Age of Reason," I follow closely
- the first edition, which was printed by Barrois in Paris from the
- manuscript, no doubt under the superintendence of Joel Barlow, to
- whom Paine, on his way to the Luxembourg, had confided it. Barlow
- was an American ex-clergyman, a speculator on whose career French
- archives cast an unfavorable light, and one cannot be certain that
- no liberties were taken with Paine's proofs.
-
- I may repeat here what I have stated in the outset of my
- editorial work on Paine that my rule is to correct obvious
- misprints, and also any punctuation which seems to render the sense
- less clear. And to that I will now add that in following Paine's
- quotations from the Bible I have adopted the Plan now generally
- used in place of his occasionally too extended writing out of book,
- chapter, and verse.
-
- Paine was imprisoned in the Luxembourg on December 28, 1793,
- and released on November 4, 1794. His liberation was secured by his
- old friend, James Monroe (afterwards President), who had succeeded
- his (Paine's) relentless enemy, Gouvemeur Morris, as American
- Minister in Paris. He was found by Monroe more dead than alive from
- semi-starvation, cold, and an abscess contracted in prison, and
- taken to the Minister's own residence. It was not supposed that he
- could survive, and he owed his life to the tender care of Mr. and
- Mrs. Monroe. It was while thus a prisoner in his room, with death
- still hovering over him, that Paine wrote Part Second of "The Age
- of Reason."
-
- The work was published in London by H.D. Symonds on October
- 25, 1795, and claimed to be "from the Author's manuscript." It is
- marked as "Entered at Stationers Hall," and prefaced by an
- apologetic note of "The Bookseller to the Public," whose
- commonplaces about avoiding both prejudice and partiality, and
- considering "both sides," need not be quoted. While his volume was
- going through the press in Paris, Paine heard of the publication in
- London, which drew from him the following hurried note to a London
- publisher, no doubt Daniel Isaacs Eaton:
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 8
- THE AGE OF REASON.
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
-
- "SIR, -- I have seen advertised in the London papers the
- second Edition [part] of the Age of Reason, printed, the
- advertisement says, from the Author's Manuscript, and entered at
- Stationers Hall. I have never sent any manuscript to any person. It
- is therefore a forgery to say it is printed from the author's
- manuscript; and I suppose is done to give the Publisher a pretence
- of Copy Right, which he has no title to.
-
- "I send you a printed copy, which is the only one I have sent
- to London. I wish you to make a cheap edition of it. I know not by
- what means any copy has got over to London. If any person has made
- a manuscript copy I have no doubt but it is full of errors. I wish
- you would talk to Mr. ----- upon this subject as I wish to know by
- what means this trick has been played, and from whom the publisher
- has got possession of any copy.
-
- T. PAINE.
- "PARIS, December 4, 1795,"
-
- Eaton's cheap edition appeared January 1, 1796, with the above
- letter on the reverse of the title. The blank in the note was
- probably "Symonds" in the original, and possibly that publisher was
- imposed upon. Eaton, already in trouble for printing one of Paine's
- political pamphlets, fled to America, and an edition of the "Age of
- Reason" was issued under a new title; no publisher appears; it is
- said to be "printed for, and sold by all the Booksellers in Great
- Britain and Ireland." It is also said to be "By Thomas Paine,
- author of several remarkable performances." I have never found any
- copy of this anonymous edition except the one in my possession. It
- is evidently the edition which was suppressed by the prosecution of
- Williams for selling a copy of it.
-
- A comparison with Paine's revised edition reveals a good many
- clerical and verbal errors in Symonds, though few that affect the
- sense. The worst are in the preface, where, instead of "1793," the
- misleading date "1790" is given as the year at whose close Paine
- completed Part First, -- an error that spread far and wide and was
- fastened on by his calumnious American "biographer," Cheetham, to
- prove his inconsistency. The editors have been fairly demoralized
- by, and have altered in different ways, the following sentence of
- the preface in Symonds: "The intolerant spirit of religious
- persecution had transferred itself into politics; the tribunals,
- styled Revolutionary, supplied the place of the Inquisition; and
- the Guillotine of the State outdid the Fire and Faggot of the
- Church." The rogue who copied this little knew the care with which
- Paine weighed words, and that he would never call persecution
- "religious," nor connect the guillotine with the "State," nor
- concede that with all its horrors it had outdone the history of
- fire and faggot. What Paine wrote was: "The intolerant spirit of
- church persecution had transferred itself into politics; the
- tribunals, styled Revolutionary, supplied the place of an
- Inquisition and the Guillotine, of the Stake."
-
- An original letter of Paine, in the possession of Joseph
- Cowen, ex-M.P., which that gentleman permits me to bring to light,
- besides being one of general interest makes clear the circumstances
- of the original publication. Although the name of the correspondent
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 9
- THE AGE OF REASON.
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
-
- does not appear on the letter, it was certainly written to Col.
- John Fellows of New York, who copyrighted Part I. of the "Age of
- Reason." He published the pamphlets of Joel Barlow, to whom Paine
- confided his manuscript on his way to prison. Fellows was
- afterwards Paine's intimate friend in New York, and it was chiefly
- due to him that some portions of the author's writings, left in
- manuscript to Madame Bonneville while she was a freethinker were
- rescued from her devout destructiveness after her return to
- Catholicism. The letter which Mr. Cowen sends me, is dated at
- Paris, January 20, 1797.
-
- "SIR, -- Your friend Mr. Caritat being on the point of his
- departure for America, I make it the opportunity of writing to you.
- I received two letters from you with some pamphlets a considerable
- time past, in which you inform me of your entering a copyright of
- the first part of the Age of Reason: when I return to America we
- will settle for that matter.
-
- "As Doctor Franklin has been my intimate friend for thirty
- years past you will naturally see the reason of my continuing the
- connection with his grandson. I printed here (Paris) about fifteen
- thousand of the second part of the Age of Reason, which I sent to
- Mr. F[ranklin] Bache. I gave him notice of it in September 1795 and
- the copy-right by my own direction was entered by him. The books
- did not arrive till April following, but he had advertised it long
- before.
-
- "I sent to him in August last a manuscript letter of about 70
- pages, from me to Mr. Washington to be printed in a pamphlet. Mr.
- Barnes of Philadelphia carried the letter from me over to London to
- be forwarded to America. It went by the ship Hope, Cap: Harley, who
- since his return from America told me that he put it into the post
- office at New York for Bache. I have yet no certain account of its
- publication. I mention this that the letter may be enquired after,
- in case it has not been published or has not arrived to Mr. Bache.
- Barnes wrote to me, from London 29 August informing me that he was
- offered three hundred pounds sterling for the manuscript. The offer
- was refused because it was my intention it should not appear till
- it appeared in America, as that, and not England was the place for
- its operation.
-
- "You ask me by your letter to Mr. Caritat for a list of my
- several works, in order to publish a collection of them. This is an
- undertaking I have always reserved for myself. It not only belongs
- to me of right, but nobody but myself can do it; and as every
- author is accountable (at least in reputation) for his works, he
- only is the person to do it. If he neglects it in his life-time the
- case is altered. It is my intention to return to America in the
- course of the present year. I shall then [do] it by subscription,
- with historical notes. As this work will employ many persons in
- different parts of the Union, I will confer with you upon the
- subject, and such part of it as will suit you to undertake, will be
- at your choice. I have sustained so much loss, by disinterestedness
- and inattention to money matters, and by accidents, that I am
- obliged to look closer to my affairs than I have done. The printer
-
-
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 10
- THE AGE OF REASON.
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
-
- (an Englishman) whom I employed here to print the second part of
- 'the Age of Reason' made a manuscript copy of the work while he was
- printing it, which he sent to London and sold. It was by this means
- that an edition of it came out in London.
-
- "We are waiting here for news from America of the state of the
- federal elections. You will have heard long before this reaches you
- that the French government has refused to receive Mr. Pinckney as
- minister. While Mr. Monroe was minister he had the opportunity of
- softening matters with this government, for he was in good credit
- with them tho' they were in high indignation at the infidelity of
- the Washington Administration. It is time that Mr. Washington
- retire, for he has played off so much prudent hypocrisy between
- France and England that neither government believes anything he
- says.
-
- "Your friend, etc.,
-
- "THOMAS PAINE."
-
- It would appear that Symonds' stolen edition must have got
- ahead of that sent by Paine to Franklin Bache, for some of its
- errors continue in all modern American editions to the present day,
- as well as in those of England. For in England it was only the
- shilling edition -- that revised by Paine -- which was suppressed.
- Symonds, who ministered to the half-crown folk, and who was also
- publisher of replies to Paine, was left undisturbed about his
- pirated edition, and the new Society for the suppression of Vice
- and Immorality fastened on one Thomas Williams, who sold pious
- tracts but was also convicted (June 24, 1797) of having sold one
- copy of the "Age of Reason." Erskine, who had defended Paine at his
- trial for the "Rights of Man," conducted the prosecution of
- Williams. He gained the victory from a packed jury, but was not
- much elated by it, especially after a certain adventure on his way
- to Lincoln's Inn. He felt his coat clutched and beheld at his feet
- a woman bathed in tears. She led him into the small book-shop of
- Thomas Williams, not yet called up for judgment, and there he
- beheld his victim stitching tracts in a wretched little room, where
- there were three children, two suffering with Smallpox. He saw that
- it would be ruin and even a sort of murder to take away to prison
- the husband, who was not a freethinker, and lamented his
- publication of the book, and a meeting of the Society which had
- retained him was summoned. There was a full meeting, the Bishop of
- London (Porteus) in the chair. Erskine reminded them that Williams
- was yet to be brought up for sentence, described the scene he had
- witnessed, and Williams' penitence, and, as the book was now
- suppressed, asked permission to move for a nominal sentence. Mercy,
- he urged, was a part of the Christianity they were defending. Not
- one of the Society took his side, -- not even "philanthropic"
- Wilberforce -- and Erskine threw up his brief. This action of
- Erskine led the Judge to give Williams only a year in prison
- instead of the three he said had been intended.
-
- While Williams was in prison the orthodox colporteurs were
- circulating Erskine's speech on Christianity, but also an anonymous
- sermon "On the Existence and Attributes of the Deity," all of which
- was from Paine's "Age of Reason," except a brief "Address to the
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 11
- THE AGE OF REASON.
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
-
- Deity" appended. This picturesque anomaly was repeated in the
- circulation of Paine's "Discourse to the Theophilanthropists"
- (their and the author's names removed) under the title of "Atheism
- Refuted." Both of these pamphlets are now before me, and beside
- them a London tract of one page just sent for my spiritual benefit.
- This is headed "A Word of Caution." It begins by mentioning the
- "pernicious doctrines of Paine," the first being "that there is No
- GOD" (sic,) then proceeds to adduce evidences of divine existence
- taken from Paine's works. It should be added that this one dingy
- page is the only "survival" of the ancient Paine effigy in the
- tract form which I have been able to find in recent years, and to
- this no Society or Publisher's name is attached.
-
- The imprisonment of Williams was the beginning of a thirty
- years' war for religious liberty in England, in the course of which
- occurred many notable events, such as Eaton receiving homage in his
- pillory at Choring Cross, and the whole Carlile family imprisoned,
- -- its head imprisoned more than nine years for publishing the "Age
- of Reason." This last victory of persecution was suicidal.
- Gentlemen of wealth, not adherents of Paine, helped in setting
- Carlile up in business in Fleet Street, where free-thinking
- publications have since been sold without interruption. But though
- Liberty triumphed in one sense, the "Age of Reason." remained to
- some extent suppressed among those whose attention it especially
- merited. Its original prosecution by a Society for the Suppression
- of Vice (a device to, relieve the Crown) amounted to a libel upon
- a morally clean book, restricting its perusal in families; and the
- fact that the shilling book sold by and among humble people was
- alone prosecuted, diffused among the educated an equally false
- notion that the "Age of Reason" was vulgar and illiterate. The
- theologians, as we have seen, estimated more justly the ability of
- their antagonist, the collaborator of Franklin, Rittenhouse, and
- Clymer, on whom the University of Pennsylvania had conferred the
- degree of Master of Arts, -- but the gentry confused Paine with the
- class described by Burke as "the swinish multitude." Skepticism, or
- its free utterance, was temporarily driven out of polite circles by
- its complication with the out-lawed vindicator of the "Rights of
- Man." But that long combat has now passed away. Time has reduced
- the "Age of Reason" from a flag of popular radicalism to a
- comparatively conservative treatise, so far as its negations are
- concerned. An old friend tells me that in his youth he heard a
- sermon in which the preacher declared that "Tom Paine was so wicked
- that he could not be buried; his bones were thrown into a box which
- was bandied about the world till it came to a button-manufacturer;
- "and now Paine is travelling round the world in the form of
- buttons!" This variant of the Wandering Jew myth may now be
- regarded as unconscious homage to the author whose metaphorical
- bones may be recognized in buttons now fashionable, and some even
- found useful in holding clerical vestments together.
-
- But the careful reader will find in Paine's "Age of Reason"
- something beyond negations, and in conclusion I will especially
- call attention to the new departure in Theism indicated in a
- passage corresponding to a famous aphorism of Kant, indicated by a
- note in Part II. The discovery already mentioned, that Part I. was
- written at least fourteen years before Part II., led me to compare
- the two; and it is plain that while the earlier work is an
-
-
- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 12
- THE AGE OF REASON.
- EDITOR'S INTRODUCTION.
-
- amplification of Newtonian Deism, based on the phenomena of
- planetary motion, the work of 1795 bases belief in God on "the
- universal display of himself in the works of the creation and by
- that repugnance we feel in ourselves to bad actions, and
- disposition to do good ones." This exaltation of the moral nature
- of man to be the foundation of theistic religion, though now
- familiar, was a hundred years ago a new affirmation; it has led on
- a conception of deity subversive of last-century deism, it has
- steadily humanized religion, and its ultimate philosophical and
- ethical results have not yet been reached.
-
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-
- Reproducible Electronic Publishing can defeat censorship.
-
- The Bank of Wisdom is a collection of the most thoughtful,
- scholarly and factual books. These computer books are reprints of
- suppressed books and will cover American and world history; the
- Biographies and writings of famous persons, and especially of our
- nations Founding Fathers. They will include philosophy and
- religion. all these subjects, and more, will be made available to
- the public in electronic form, easily copied and distributed, so
- that America can again become what its Founders intended --
-
- The Free Market-Place of Ideas.
-
- The Bank of Wisdom is always looking for more of these old,
- hidden, suppressed and forgotten books that contain needed facts
- and information for today. If you have such books please contact
- us, we need to give them back to America.
-
- **** ****
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- Bank of Wisdom
- Box 926, Louisville, KY 40201
- 13