"THE CLEAREST OF ALL EXPOSITIONS OF THE BASIC PRINCIPLES OF DEMOCRACY" (PMM): PAINE'S RIGHTS OF MAN, PARTS I & II, 1791-1792, EXCEPTIONALLY RARE FIRST JORDAN EDITION, SECOND ISSUE OF PART I (1791), ISSUED LESS THAN MONTH AFTER THE SUPPRESSED AND VIRTUALLY UNOBTAINABLE JOHNSON EDITION—TOGETHER IN ONE VOLUME WITH THE RARE THIRD EDITION, FIRST ISSUE OF PART II (1792), WHERE PAINE "FULLY DEVELOPED HIS GREAT POLITICAL PHILOSOPHY"
PAINE, Thomas. Rights of Man: Being an Answer to Mr. Burke's Attack on the French Revolution. By Thomas Paine, Secretary for Foreign Affairs to Congress in the American War, And Author of the Work Intitled "Common Sense." BOUND WITH: Rights of Man. Part the Second. Combining Principle and Practice. London: Printed for J.S. Jordan, 1791, 1792. Octavo, early Nineteenth-Century speckled calf boards rebacked in speckled calf gilt, red morocco spine label; pp.[iii-vii], viii-x, [5], 6-162; [i-v], vi, [vii], viii-xv, [xvi], [1], 2-174, [175], 176-178. $42,000.
Extremely rare editions of both parts of Paine's revolutionary classic Rights of Man. The exceptionally rare and desirable first edition, second issue of Part I, consisting of the text sheets from the famous suppressed and virtually unobtainable first issue printed by Paine's original publisher, Joseph Johnson (withdrawn by him on the day of publication because of British government intimidation), which were rescued by Paine and his friends, and the new title page and preface printed by Paine's new publisher, J.S. Jordan; bound together with the third edition of Part II. Rights of Man, one of Paine's most important, influential, and best-selling works, is "the clearest of all expositions on the basic principles of democracy" (PMM) and "one of the most ardent and clear defenses of human rights, liberty, and equality in any language" (Fructman). Paine hoped the work "would do for England what his Common Sense had done for America" (Gimbel), but it resulted in the prosecution of Paine, his publishers, and booksellers, and forced Paine to flee to France.
Edmund Burke's Reflections on the Revolution in France "appeared November 1, 1790. Paine read the book the day after it was published, and a few days later he began work on his refutation–destined to become the most important essay on political democracy of that era" (Fast). "The publishing history of the [first part of Rights of Man] is of interest…. as showing how fragile the right to dissent actually was in those years. Having completed Part One on his 54th birthday, 29 January 1791, Paine made haste to take the manuscript to a printer named Joseph Johnson. The proposed publication deadline, of 22 February, was intended to coincide with the opening of Parliament and the birthday of George Washington [to whom Paine dedicated the work]. Johnson was a man of some nerve and principle, as he had demonstrated by printing several radical replies to Burke (including the one by Mary Wollstonecraft) but he took fright after several heavy-footed visits from William Pitt's political police" (Hitchens, 51-52). "Johnson was visited repeatedly by government agents… Fearing the book police, and unnerved by the prospect of arrest and bankruptcy, Johnson suppressed the book on the very day of its scheduled publication. Alarmed by the prospect that the work would be stillborn, Paine reacted fast. He agreed to a deal with another publisher, J.S. Jordan on Fleet Street, and with the help of friends and a horse and cart delivered to him Johnson's printed, unbound sheets. Paine scurried around for money to pay for the work… [and] managed to borrow 40 pounds… He then packed his trunk for Paris, where he planned to arrange a French translation, and entrusted final arrangements with the London publisher to three good friends, William Godwin, Thomas Brand Hollis, and Thomas Holcroft. Prior to leaving, Paine passed on several bound copies of the original Johnson edition into private hands, but only a few of these have survived" (Keane, 304-5).
Jordan took Johnson's unbound sheets of the text and added a new title page with Jordan's imprint and a preface that Paine sent him from Paris. Jordan published his edition (this first edition, second issue) on March 13, 1791, and it sold out in hours. It's not known how many copies of this issue Jordan published using Johnson's sheets, but it was likely only in the hundreds of copies, as "the print run of most of Johnson's publications was 750 copies… [and] many of his political and religious tracts were printed in runs of 250 copies, the minimum print run, with successive printings as needed" (Chard, 144). "Curiosity and word-of-mouth advertising kept sales brisk. Jordan had set a new edition in type [his stated "second edition," with different pagination] during Paine's absence from London and had it on the market [on March 16] three days after the first appeared. It sold out within a few hours" (Hawke, 223-4). "Not even Paine could have imagined… that Rights of Man was destined to become one of the best-selling books in the history of publishing… Rights of Man broke every extant publishing record. To put the figures in perspective, at this time the average printing of an edition was about 1,250 copies for a novel, and around 750 for more general works such as pamphlets, sermons, and calendars…. Rights of Man sold over 50,000 copies in under three months. While Paine's claim that sales of the complete edition in Britain reached 'between four and five hundred thousand' copies within ten years of publication might well be exaggerated, as perhaps is E.P. Thompson's claim that it was the most widely read book of all time, in any language, its impact was indisputably phenomenal" (Grogan, 18).
In January 1792 Paine finished the second part of Rights of Man but had difficulty getting it published. Johnson and Jordan both refused to allow their names on the title page, though they agreed to sell it in their bookshops. "Johnson had been told by a friend who had read the unfinished manuscript that 'if you wish to be hanged or inured in a prison all your life, publish this book.'" Thomas Chapman agreed to print it but never finished, as when he began to read the proof pages he became frightened that the work was seditious. Within a week Paine found someone else to finish the printing. "Johnson now agreed to help underwrite publication costs in return for the right to sell part of the first printing, and Jordan, reversing his earlier stand, allowed his name to appear on the title page as publisher for a similar right. To protect both men in case the government decided to prosecute the work as seditious, Paine signed a statement that he alone was both the 'author and publisher of that work.'" The second part of Rights of Man was published by Jordan "on 16 February 1792, priced at three shillings, with a first printing of 5000 copies. Within two weeks the book had gone through four printings. The greatest best seller thus far in English history had been launched" (Hawke, 238-40). "While the first part of Rights of Man was relatively mild… Part the Second fully developed his great political philosophy" (Gimbel-Yale 66).
Written "with a force and clarity unequalled even by Burke, Paine laid down those principles of fundamental human rights which must stand, no matter what excesses are committed to obtain them… Rights of Man was an immediate success… The government tried to suppress it, but it circulated the more briskly. Those who bought it as the work of an inflamed revolutionary were surprised by its dignity and moderation: even Pitt could say that he was quite in the right—'but what am I to do? As things are, if I were to encourage Tom Paine's opinions we should have a bloody revolution'… [Rights of Man is] the textbook of radical thought and the clearest of all expositions of the basic principles of democracy" (PMM 241). "Paine's attack on the monarchy went farther than he had attempted on Common Sense or the Crisis series… Rights of Man was one of the most ardent and clear defenses of human rights, liberty and equality in any language…For Paine, human rights were part of life itself… The rights of man were inherent in all men, and they were the same in every person, regardless of economic or social status… Like Locke, Paine wrote that people have rights naturally, and as they joined together to form society and then government, they transformed a number of their natural rights into civil rights… Rights of free speech, opinion, conscience, association (in America those rights became embodied in the first amendment to the Constitution in the same year the first part of the Rights of Man appeared) were all part of the natural rights which a properly constituted government must protect" (Fruchtman, 225).
The British government considered prosecuting Paine for sedition shortly after the publication of Part I, but decided against it at the time because "Paine had tempered argument and language so skillfully that it would be hard to make a charge of sedition stick in court. To prosecute would provide free advertising. Also it could lead to embarrassment; the book was dedicated to the president of the United States, with whom the government now wanted to have good relations" (Hawke, 223-4). But in 1792, after the publication of the more incendiary Part II and the rapid spread of both parts, the British government took action against Paine, his publishers and booksellers. On May 21, 1792, Pitt's government issued a proclamation against "wicked and seditious writings," designed to suppress Paine's book. "Bookshops selling Rights of Man were visited and harassed by agents of the book police, and sometimes arrested, prosecuted, fined, or imprisoned." Jordan was arrested in May 1792 for publishing Part II and pleaded guilty, and many "booksellers were imprisoned, some for as long as for two years, for selling Rights of Man" (St. Clair, 624). On that same date, the Pitt government issued a summons for Paine "to appear in court… on charges of seditious libel. The summons… appeared to signal the government's desire to get its hands on the throat of political dissent, but in retrospect it was designed to force Paine into exile. The authorities reasoned that a midsummer show trial was too risky, in that it might antagonize the democratic opposition to the point of taking openly revolutionary action. The public execution or transportation of Paine might spark the same explosion—as would his transformation into a martyr by long-term imprisonment on English soil" (Keane 334-7). Paine at first refused to leave, but as the threats to his life increased, eventually fled to France. "Paine was in France, sitting as a member of the French National Convention, which was acting as a jury in the trial of Louis XVI, King of France, when his own trial as the author of seditious literature (Part II of Rights of Man) began in London on December 18, 1792. Despite the brilliance of Paine's attorney, Thomas Erskine, Paine was found guilty, declared an outlaw, and Rights of Man contraband" (Gimbel-Yale, 425). The first issue of Part I (with Johnson's title page imprint) is historically so rare that it has been considered virtually unacquirable; this is the earliest obtainable edition. First edition, second issue of Rights of Man (Part I), the first to contain Jordan's title page imprint and Paine's "Preface to the English Edition," with 162 pages and "Every thing in the English government" on page 60, changed in subsequent editions to "Many things…"; variant b with press figures: 38-4, 42-[none], no priority determined (Gimbel-Paine, 88). With dedication to George Washington. Third edition of Part the Second, stated on title page. With dedication to M. de La Fayette dated "London, Feb. 9, 1792." Part I bound without scarce half title, as often; Part II bound with half title but without two rear leaves of publisher's advertisements. Rights of Man: ESTC N13086. Gimbel-Paine, 88 and 97. Howes P31. Gimbel-Yale 59. Part the Second: ESTC T5877. Gimbel-Paine, 104, Sowerby 2826. Howes P32. A few early ink marginalia in Part II only.
Only very light occasional foxing to Part I. A handsomely bound copy in fine condition.