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CONTENTS

OP

THE SECOND VOLUME.

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Prospects on the Rubicon .

6 Rights of Man, Part I. Being an answer to Mr. Burke's attack on The French Revolution

41 Rights of Man, Part II. Combining principles and practice

145 Letter to the authors of the Republican

263 to the Abbe Sieyes

267 Address to the Addressers

269 Letters to Lord Onslow

317 Dissertation on First Principles of Government .

325 Speech delivered in the French national convention

345 Letter to Mr. Secretary Dundas, letter the first

353 The decline and fall of the English system of Finance

365 Leiter to the people of France

389 Reasons for preserving the life of Louis Capet, as delivered to the national convention

393 Agrarian Justice, opposed to Agrarian Law, and to Agrarian Mo nopoly

399 Letter to the People of France, and the French armies, on the event

of the 18th Fructidor--(Sep. 4, 1797), and its consequences 417 Letter to Mr. Secretary Dundas, letter the second

437 to the sheriff of the county of Sussex

441 to Sir Archibald Macdonald, Attorney General, letter the first 445

to the Attorney General, on the prosecution against the second part of Rights of Man

449 Letter on the propriety of bringing Louis XVI. to trial

452 Speech in the national convention on the question, "shall or shall not a respite of the sentence of Louis XVI. take place"

456 On Louisiana and emissaries ...

457 A challenge to the federalists to declare their principles

460 Liberty of the press

463 The einissary Cullen, otherwise Carpenter

466 Communication on Cullen

469 Federalists beginning w reform

472

474 Notifications respecting the impostor Cullen, alias M'Cullen, alius

Carpenter, the associate of the Federalists of New York . 478

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To a friend of peace

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PREFACE,

An expression in the British parliament respecting the American war, alluding to Julius Cæsar having passed the Rubicon, has on several occasions introduced that river as the figurative river of war.

Fortunately for England, she is yet on the peaceable side of the Rubicon ; but as the flames once kindled are not always easily extinguished, the hopes of peace are not so clear as before the late mysterious dispute began.

But while the calm lasts, it may answer a very good purpose to take a view of the prospects, consistent with the maxim, that he that goeth to war should first sit down and count the cost.

The nation has a young and ambitious minister at its head, fond of himself, and deficient in experience: and instances have often shown that judgment is a different thing from genius, and that the affairs of a nation are but unsafely trusted where the benefit of experience is wanting.

Illustrations have been drawn from the circumstances of the war before last, to decorate the character of the present minister, and, perhaps, they may have been greatly over-drawn ; for the management must have been bad to have done less than what was then done, when we impartially consider the means, the force, and the quantity of money employed,

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