Author:Thomas Paine

Major Works

 * Common Sense (1776)
 * Additions to Common sense, 1776
 * The American Crisis (1776-1783)
 * Rights of Man (1791/1792)
 * The Age of Reason (1794/1795)
 * The decline and fall of the English system of finance, 1796
 * Agrarian Justice (1796)
 * Edition in The Pioneers of land reform: Thomas Spence, William Ogilvie, Thomas Paine, 1920
 * The Works of Thomas Paine, Secretary for Foreign Affairs, to the Congress of the United States in the late war (1797)
 * Examination of the passages in the New Testament, 1807
 * On the origin of free-masonry. 1810
 * The theological works of Thomas Paine, 1818
 * Appendix to the Theological works of Thomas Paine, 1820
 * Political and miscellaneous works, 1819
 * The theological, miscellaneous, and poetical works of Thomas Paine: also, a letter to George Washington, and letters to the citizens of the United States, after an absence of fifteen years; to which is added the will of Thomas Paine, 1844
 * The Writings of Thomas Paine (1894–96). Conway, Moncure Daniel (ed.). 4 vols.
 * Volume 1:
 * Volume 2:
 * Volume 3:
 * Volume 4:

Articles

 * African Slavery in America (1775)
 * Reflections on Unhappy Marriages (1775)
 * An Occasional Letter on the Female Sex (1775)
 * Dissertation on First-principles of Government (1795)
 * The Existence of God (1797)
 * Of the Religion of Deism Compared with the Christian Religion and the Superiority of the Former over the Latter (1804)

Poems

 * Liberty Tree (1775)

Letters

 * A letter addressed to the Abbe Raynal on the affairs of North-America: in which the mistakes in the Abbe's account of the revolution of America are corrected and cleared up, 1782
 * A letter to the Earl of Shelburne, on his speech, July 10th, 1782, respecting the acknowledgement of American independence, 1791
 * Letter addressed to the addressers, on the late proclamation, 1792 (short work)
 * A letter to the Hon. Thomas Erskine, on the prosecution of Thomas Williams, for publishing The age of reason, 1797
 * Two letters : being a correspondence between Andrew A. Dean of New-Rochelle, and Thomas Paine, 1823

On his works

 * Considerations on Mr Paine's pamphlet on the rights of man, 1791
 * A rod in brine, or, A tickler for Tom Paine, 1792