CONTENTS. INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD VOLUME I. THE REPUBLICAN PROCLAMATION II. TO THE AUTHORS OF "LE RÉPUBLICAIN' III. TO THE ABBÉ SIEYES . IV. TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL V. TO MR. SECRETARY DUNDAS PAGE V 4 9 II 15 30 VI. LETTERS TO ONSLOW CRANLEY. VII.-TO THE SHERIFF OF THE COUNTY OF SUSSEX XII. TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL, ON THE PROSE- XIII. ON THE PROPRIETY OF BRINGING LOUIS XVI. XIV. REASONS FOR PRESERVING THE LIFE OF LOUIS XV.-SHALL LOUIS XVI. HAVE RESPITE ?. XVI.-DECLARATION OF RIGHTS XVII-PRIVATE LETTERS TO JEFFERSON XVIII. LETTERS TO DANTON . PAGE XXII.-LETTER TO GEORGE WASHINGTON XIX.-A CITIZEN OF AMERICA TO THE CITIZENS OF 278 XXIII.-OBSERVATIONS XXIV.-DISSERTATION ON FIRST PRINCIPLES OF Gov- XXV. THE CONSTITUTION OF 1795 XXVI. THE DECLINE AND FALL OF THE ENGLISH SYS- TEM OF FINANCE . XXVII.-FORGETFULNESS XXVIII.-AGRARIAN JUSTICE. XXIX.-THE EIGHTEENTH FRUCTIDOR XXX.-THE RECALL OF MONROE XXXI.-PRIVATE LETTER TO PRESIDENT JEFFERSON XXXII-PROPOSAL THAT LOUISIANA BE PURCHASED UNITED STATES THE INTRODUCTION TO THE THIRD VOLUME. WITH HISTORICAL NOTES AND DOCUMENTS. IN a letter of Lafayette to Washington ("Paris, 12 Jan., 1790") he writes: "Common Sense is writing for you a brochure where you will see a part of my adventures." It thus appears that the narrative embodied in the reply to Burke ("Rights of Man," Part I.), dedicated to Washington, was begun with Lafayette's collaboration fourteen months before its publication (March 13, 1791). In another letter of Lafayette to Washington (March 17, 1790) he writes: "To Mr. Paine, who leaves for London, I entrust the care of sending you my news. Permit me, my dear General, to offer you a picture representing the Bastille as it was some days after I gave the order for its demolition. I also pay you the homage of sending you the principal Key of that fortress of despotism. It is a tribute I owe as a son to my adoptive father, as aide-de-camp to my General, as a missionary of liberty to his Patriarch." The Key was entrusted to Paine, and by him to J. Rutledge, Jr., who sailed from London in May. I have found in the manuscript despatches of Louis Otto, Chargé d' Affaires, several amusing paragraphs, addressed to his government at Paris, about this Key. August 4, 1790. In attending yesterday the public audience of the President, I was surprised by a question from the Chief Magistrate, 'whether I would like to see the Key of the Bastille ?' One of his secretaries showed me at the same moment a large Key, which had been sent to the President by desire of the Marquis de la Fayette. I dissembled my surprise in observing to the President that the time had not yet come in America to do iron work equal to that before him.' The Americans present looked at the key with indifference, and as if wondering why it had been sent. But the serene face of the President showed that he regarded it as an homage from the French nation." "December 13, 1790. The Key of the Bastille, regularly shown at the President's audiences, is now also on exhibition in Mrs. Washington's salon, where it satisfies the curiosity of the Philadelphians. I am persuaded, Monseigneur, that it is only their vanity that finds pleasure in the exhibition of this trophy, but Frenchmen here are not the less piqued, and many will not enter the President's house on this account." In sending the Key Paine, who saw farther than these distant Frenchmen, wrote to Washington: "That the principles of America opened the Bastille is not to be doubted, and therefore the Key comes to the right place." Early in May, 1791 (the exact date is not given), Lafayette writes Washington: "I send you the rather indifferent translation of Mr. Paine as a kind of preservative and to keep me near you." This was a hasty translation of "Rights of Man," Part I., by F. Soules, presently superseded by that of Lanthenas. The first convert of Paine to pure republicanism in France was Achille Duchâtelet, son of the Duke, and grandson of the authoress,-the friend of Voltaire. It was he and Paine who, after the flight of Louis XVI., placarded Paris with the Proclamation of a Republic, given as the first chapter of this volume. An account of this incident is here quoted from Étienne Dumont's "Recollections of Mirabeau": "The celebrated Paine was at this time in Paris, and intimate in Condorcet's family. Thinking that he had effected the American Revolution, he fancied himself called upon to bring about one in France. Duchâtelet called on me, and after a little preface placed in my hand an English manuscript-a Proclamation to the French People. It was nothing less than an anti-royalist Manifesto, and summoned the nation to seize the opportunity and establish a Republic. Paine was its author. Duchâtelet had adopted and was resolved to sign, placard the walls of Paris with it, and take the consequences. He had come to request me to |