| 1811 - 304 páginas
...and their passport for liberty upon any terms whatsoever. Indeed, a state of slavery, with whatever seeming grandeur and happiness it may be attended,...yet so precarious a thing, that he must want sense, honour, courage, and all manner of virtue, who can endure to prefer it in his choice. A man who has... | |
| Aesop - 1831 - 370 páginas
...and their passion for liberty, upon any terms whatsoever. Indeed, a state of slavery, with whatever seeming grandeur and happiness it may be attended,...yet so precarious a thing, that he must want sense, honour, courage, and all manner of virtue, who can endure to prefer it in his choice. A man who has... | |
| Aesopus - 1850 - 300 páginas
...terms whatsoever. Indeed a state of slaverv. with whatever seeming grandeur and happiness it may he attended , is yet so precarious a thing that he must want sense, honour, courage, and all manner of yirtue, who can endure to prefer it in his choice. A man who has... | |
| Aesopus - 1859 - 226 páginas
...and their passion for liberty, upon any terms whatsoever. Indeed, a state of slavery, with whatever seeming grandeur and happiness it may be attended,...yet so precarious a thing, that he must want sense, honour, courage, and all manner of virtue, who can endure to prefer it in his choice. A man who has... | |
| Aesopus - 1861 - 248 páginas
...and their passion for liberty, upon any terms whatsoever. Indeed, a state of slavery, with whatever seeming grandeur and happiness it may be attended, is yet so precarious a thing, that he must want tense, honour. courage, and all manner of virtue, who can endure to prefer it in bis choice. A man... | |
| Aesop - 1863 - 372 páginas
...and their passion for liberty, upon any terms whatsoever. Indeed, a state of slavery, with whatever seeming grandeur and happiness it may be attended,...yet so precarious a thing, that he must want sense, honour, courage, and all manner of virtue, who can endure to prefer it in his choice. A man who has... | |
| Aesop - 1865 - 340 páginas
...and their passion for liberty, upon any terms whatsoever. Indeed, a state of slavery, with whatever seeming grandeur and happiness it may be attended,...want sense, honor, courage, and all manner of virtue, who can •endure to prefer it in his choice. A man who has so little honor as to bear to be a slave,... | |
| Aesopus - 1865 - 84 páginas
...and their passion for liberty, upon any terms whatsoever. Indeed, a state of slavery, with whatever seeming grandeur and happiness it may be attended,...yet so precarious a thing, that he must want sense, honour, courage, and all manner of virtue, who can endure to prefer it in his choice. A man who has... | |
| 1908 - 324 páginas
...is better than the most exalted station under restraint. Indeed, a state of slavery, with whatever seeming grandeur and happiness it may be attended,...yet so precarious a thing that he must want sense, honour, courage, and all manner of virtue, who can endure to prefer it by choice." But by far the greater... | |
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