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A VINDICATION OF THE AGE OF REASON, &c.
MANY and virulent are the Replies which have appeared to Mr. Paine's Age of Reason. It was not, indeed, to be expected that a work of this description, which struck immediately at the very root of priest-craft, should remain long unanswered. No sooner was the challenge given, than a "whole host of witnesses" started up in defence of that system, from whence (as Deme∣trius in a similar case observed to his colleagues at Ephesus) they derive their wealth. Men who had long been in the habit of fattening in luxurious ease upon the spoils and contributions of credulity, bigotry, and superstition, were justly apprehensive, lest the investigation of truth should at length open the eyes of the community at large, and discover in all its na∣kedness the fallacy of that system, by virtue of