Southern Quarterly Review, Volume 2Daniel Kimball Whitaker, Milton Clapp, William Gilmore Simms, James Henley Thornwell Wiley & Putnam, 1967 |
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Page 57
... natural code , are the same in all times and in all soci- eties . But there is a distinction in the condition of indivi- duals which nature has established , and which society would in vain attempt to abrogate . Fruitless were the ...
... natural code , are the same in all times and in all soci- eties . But there is a distinction in the condition of indivi- duals which nature has established , and which society would in vain attempt to abrogate . Fruitless were the ...
Page 396
... nature , to make laws for another . He may repel another when his own rights are infringed , but he has no right to govern him . He is sovereign merely over himself , not over another . He has a right of self protection , but that he ...
... nature , to make laws for another . He may repel another when his own rights are infringed , but he has no right to govern him . He is sovereign merely over himself , not over another . He has a right of self protection , but that he ...
Page 443
... nature and a sort of necessity , it includes the rest , or draws the other moral perfections into action along with it ; for what is so powerful as Goodness ? What other quality exerts such an irresistible sway over the hearts of men ...
... nature and a sort of necessity , it includes the rest , or draws the other moral perfections into action along with it ; for what is so powerful as Goodness ? What other quality exerts such an irresistible sway over the hearts of men ...
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