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have given us the Report, but not it will become stale and nasty by the Evidence on which it is having been mumbled about by founded; and with this our faith-the noisy foaming cur of the Times ful Representatives appear to be news-paper and his like; and, satisfied; for, they have separated that I shall not be able to draw without getting the Evidence! attention to the exposure? Vain

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Suppose that a Judge were to go supposition! The thing is of too and examine witnesses in private, vital a nature. Besides, we have and then come and give his charge the Report; and I can relate, with to the Jury; and that the Jury regard to the Evidence, what my were to say, we will hear the little bird has told me. So that, "Evidence at a future time." whether the Evidence be publishBut, suppose what you will, you ed, or not, I shall, as soon as the will never suppose any thing to noise of the Coronation is over;

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as soon as "the wine is gone out

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come up to this.-Now, what can be the reason for not getting of Nabal," dissect this pretty out this Evidence? Surely it

cannot have been kept back on account of my notifying that I meant to re-publish it and comment on it and on the Report! Oh,

no! And yet, I could have got the whole of this Evidence printed

in 48 hours! The House of

Commons, or, rather, the people,

pay dearly enough for their printing.-Is it supposed, that the

thing will cool; that it will die

away; that the people will forget

thing, and lay all its parts bare to public view.-Mind, brother Reformers, this, this is the matter, to which we are to look. Here you will see, that the question must come to issue between the landlords and the fund-lords; and, when that question comes to issue, it will be for us to put ourselves on the side of that party which we find to be for a Reform of the Commons' House of ParliuFor years I have been telling you, that this is what we have to look to ; and I now see it

ment.

it; that it will become old; that approaching: I see that at hand,

which will give the people their and the king for it, with all my rights and surround the king's heart. No more acts can be throne with real Glory.

PARLIAMENT IS PROROGUED!

passed, at any rate, till it meet again.

CORONATION.

The king (God bless him) is, seems, to be crowned next Thursday. Some people are saying, that he might do very

Well; I thank God! It has been sitting almost three years; for there has been very little inter- it mission since the opening of that famous parliament that passed the Bill, known by the name of that well without it.

No; hang it;

for a king

fine lofty young 'Squire, Mr. I don't think so; PEEL. We have the Peel Bill without a Crown and Robes, is Parliament, the Six-Acts Parlia-like a Peacock without top-knot ment, and the Bill of Pains and and tail.

Penalties Parliament, all running,

as it were, into one. Gad! I

began to think, that it was Seance

NOTICE.

The present Number closes the

Permanente, as the French used 39th Volume, and an Index to it to call it. However, it is over will be attached to the next numfor a while; and I thank God ber.

THE HE Times Newspaper, in character of that celebrated man, and reporting a late speech of the its compactness is owing to the comAttorney-General, made him to say piler having abstained from making falsely, that he had continued prose-quotations from the writings of Mr. cuting the persons in the employ of Paine, and from inserting his corresR. CARLILE, until he had occasioned pondences, which serve unnecessarily the shutting up of the shop, 55, Fleet- to swell the memoirs written by other Street; to counteract this malicious persons, as they form but a repetition statement, the following CATA- of matter, which might be found in LOGUE of R. CARLILE'S PUBLICA-the collection of his works.

TIONS, NOW on sale at 55, Fleet-Street, is submitted to public notice :—

Works of THOMAS PAINE.

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S. d.

This sixpenny memoir of that NoBLE OF NATURE, is earnestly recommended to the public, as a true portrait, by the Copiler.

N. B. The Report of the Trials of 04 Richard Carlile for publishing the O Theological Works of Thomas Paine, and Palmer's Principles of Nature, 9 will be completed in the course of the present year in twopenny sheets. In Four Volumes, edited by R. Carlile. Price £1 11s. 6d.

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Letter to the Abbe Raynal
Dissertations on Government, &c.1
Prospects on the Rubicon

* Rights of Man, Part 1
Do.
Do.

Part 2

Letter to Addressers

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Dissertations on first Principles of

Government

Agrarian Justice

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THE REPUBLICAN.-A few sets of this work still remain for sale, and persons wishing to complete their sets, have still an opportunity. The only numbers out of print at present are I and 3 of vol. I. and 13 of vol. 4. Of which a few of each will be reprinted, in the course of the present year, to o accommodate all subscribers who may Miscellaneous Letters and Essays 5 0 have sets incomplete for the want of them. 09

Decline and Fall of the English
System of Finance

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Letter to George Washington 1
Letters to the Citizens of America 1

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Theological Works, Part 4
Appendix to Theological Works 0
Letter to Camille Jordan on
Priests, Bells, and Public Wor-
ship

A superior Edition of the above Political and Miscellaneous Works may be had in bds. in 2 vols. at £2, with a Memoir and Portrait prefixed.

Portrait of Thomas Paine for binding with the above

Proofs for framing

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A Memoir of Thomas Paine to accompany his works, by R. Carlile

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THE DEIST.-The second Volume of this work might be still had, and several of the pamphlets which were comprised in the first volume. First volumes complete have become very scarce, and the Editor has purchased back a few at a higher price than he originally sold them for. He would recommend to the admirers of this work, to purchase the several parts that are now on sale, as he hopes by and by, to reprint those which are out of print. If not reprinted, it is not of so much consequence, as in 6 many other works, as the work itself is chiefly a reprint, and every distinct pamphlet complete of itself. It was intended to form but a collection of the best Deistical pamphlets.

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0 6 To the persons who have the writings of Thomas Paine this little memoir will be found equally satisfactory to those which form a volume. It is equally illustrative of the life and

* A common blue paper edition of Rights of Man, Part I., might be had at ls. 6d. per copy.

The following are now on sale belonging to vol I.

WATSON REFUTED.-Being n Answer to the Apology for the Bible; in a series of Letters to the Bishop of Llandaff, by Samuel Francis, M. D. stitched-Price 2s. 6d.

THE CHRISTIAN MYSTERY, a

Chinese Tale; by Voltaire. Thoughts on the Christian Religion, by an Ameriean Deist. Deism examined, with a few Ideas on miraculous Conversion. A Letter to Sir Samuel Shepherd. Knt. Attorney General, upon his prosecutions of Richard Carlile, to which is added a Letter to Mr. Carlile, and a Letter extracted from the Morning Chronicle, stitched-1s. 6d.

THE GOD OF THE JEWS, or, JEHOVAH UNVEILED; with Strictures on the lives of the Hebrew Saints, and remarks on the Jewish Theocracy; to which is prefixed, a Letter to the Bishop of Llandaff, bds. 3s.

N. B. This is an answer to Bishop Watson's Apology for the Bible. It is the work of a poor bookseller, now living at Edinburgh, and although it has been published in that City as well as in London, it has escaped prosecution.

Volume II. might be had complete at 13s. or in separate pamphlets at the following Prices.

CHRISTIANITY UNVEILED, being an Examination of the Principles and Effects of the Christian Religion; translated from the French of Boulanger, stitched, 3s.

N. B. A common paper edition of this pamphlet might be had at Is. 6d. The Important Examination of the Holy Scriptures. By M. Voltaire. Price Is. 6d.

Price 5s. bds. LETTERS TO EUGENIA. Now first translated from the French of M. Freret.

Price 2s. The LIFE of DAVID; or, the History of the Man after God's own heart.

Price 28.—A LETTER to the Rev. Dr. SAMUEL CHANDLER. From the writer of the History of the Man after God's own Heart.

N. B. This work forms the counterpart of the foregoing, and would be appropriately called a second part of the Life of David. They are two admirable and well written pamphlets of the last century

monly called Gibbon's celebrated five causes; being the fifteenth, and sixteenth chapters of the Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire. By Edward Gibbon, Esq.

SHERWIN'S Life of THOMAS PAINE. Price 7s. 6d.

Price 3s. 6d.-VOLTAIRE on RELIGIOUS TOLERATION,

Price Is. SAUL, A DRAMA, translated from the French of Voltaire.

Price 4d. each. COPIES ofthe INFORMATION, by the AttorneyGeneral and the Indictment by the Society for propagating Vice, against R. Carlile, for publishing the Theological Works of Thomas Paine.

The SPEECH of Mr. JOAN GALE JONES, at the British Forum on the question of Mr. Carlile's prosecution.

The SPEECH of Mr. JAMES MILLS, on the same Subject,

Price 1s.-A MASTERPIECE on POLITICS. By William Andrews, author of a Letter from a Tradesman in London to his Uncle in Yorkshire.

Price 6d.-REPORT of the TRIAL of Mrs. JANE CARLILE, on an exofficio Information, for publishing No. 8, vol. 3, of the Republican.

N. B. The defence on this trial, of which a full report is given, will be found to comprise the pith of that excellent pamphlet published during the usurpation of Oliver Cromwell, entitled Killing no Murder.

A SERMON on TITHES. By a Sussex Freeholder, 2d.

The WREATH of FREEDOM. Being a collection of Songs in the cause of Universal Liberty. Price Is. 6d.

Price 4d.The Accusation, Condemnation, and Abjuration of GALILEO, the famous Astronomer, for asserting that the Earth was round, and revolved round the Sun, contrary to the doctrines of the Holy Bible.

N. B. This pamphlet ought to be preserved by every lover of truth, as TWO CURIOUS ENGRAVINGS. a specimen of the ignorunce imposed To bind up with the Deist as frontis-upon mankind by Priestcraft. pieces, emblematical of the triumph of Reason and Justice over Superstition. -Price 6d. each. Proofs in quarto for a frame, 'rice 1s.

Price 3s.-An ENQUIRY into the Cause of the Progress and Establishment of the Christian Religion, com

Price coloured 5s. plain 3s.-MANCHESTER MASSACRE. A full description of the bloody attack made upon the inhabitants of Manchester and its vicinity, assembled on St. Peter's Plain, to discuss the best means for obtaining a Reform of the Parlia

ment, by the Yeomanry Cavalry of Manchester and Cheshire, on the 16th of August, 1819.

N. B. This is a large print got up under the directions of R. Carlile, and by all the information he can get has not been equalled by any hitherto published on the same subject.

Price Is. AN ADDRESS TO MEN OF SCIENCE, Calling upon them to stand forward and vindicate

the Truth, from the foul grasp and persecution of Superstition, and obtain for the Island of Great Britain the noble appellation of the Focus of Truth, whence mankind shall be illuminated, and the black and pestiferous clouds of Price 2d. each. The following Persecution and Superstition be baPamphlets written and edited by R.nished from the face of the Earth, as Carlile have been published in the present year.

A New Year's Address to the Reformers of Great Britain.

Second Address and Correspondence. Third Address and Correspondence. Fourth Address and Correspondence, with Notices of the Vice and Constitu

tional Associations, and a Pamphlet lately published in the name of Mr. Robert Wedderburn, entitled " High heeled Shoes for Dwarfs in Holiness," containing an imperfect Statement of Subscriptions for Mr. W.

N. B. Those Addresses and Corres

pondences will be continued as occasion might require.

The following Subscriptions have been received towards the Fine and Expences of Mr. R. CARLILE :—

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the only sure prelude to universal
peace and harmony among the human
race. In which a ske ch of a proper
system for the education of youth, is
also submitted to their judgment.

Shortly will be published.
ON
SERVATIONS

OB

DR. GRE

GORY'S LETTERS on the Evi-
dences of the Christian Religion, in a
Letter to the Rev. William Wait,
A. B. of King's Square, Bristol.

Just Published, price 4s.
TOCK EXCHANGE. The

closed Market in Contumacy of the error of tolerating this as an En

Statute Law. Its Interest described and shewn to be adverse to the Capitalist and Stockholder, and to have caused the ruin or secession of all the Loan Contractors, from Boyd to Goldsmidt, to the aggrandisement of Stock Exchange Milords: the extraordinary Profit and Advantage that would enOsue to the Banker, Stockholder, and 9 Sinking Fund, by making the daily O purchases for that Fund, as also for O the Saving Banks publickly in the Ro6 tunda of the Bank, instead of as hitherto Oin the inclosed Stock Exchange. Stock 1 Exchange Hoaxes superior to the O Simple Cochrane Experiment as shewn 11 2 6 in the Stock Exchange Telegraph.. The Old Palace-yard Pop Gun Plot, 7.13 4 the 4th May; and the ruin of BuckOwood's Banking-house, with the Set1 14 0 tling day described; and the Ticket 00 Pocketing Trick to accomplish the 113 0 Stock Exchange Bear Account against the Public Bull; the Banker's Clearing 550 House, as a financial operation shewn; 044 the Error of the Restriction Bill is not participated in the immense profit it 2 14 6 levied to the Bank from the Public138 89 and the greater error in Lord Castlereagh not superseding it by a Treaty of Commerce; Lotteries, with a Tax submitted on Time Bargains to supersede them; produces Gobling and the iniqui

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£197 6 6 Subscriptions are received at 55, Fleet Street, London.

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