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ON THE DUTY OF CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE
b or break t to be

    as free as I  for a moment feel confined, and the

    e of stone and mortar.  I felt as if I

    alone of all my to know

    o treat me, but behaved like persons who are underbred.  In

    every t and in every compliment they

    t t my co stand t

    stone  but smile to see riously they

    locked tations, w again

    let or  was

    dangerous.  As t reaco punish

    my body; just as boys, if t come at some person against

    ate

    ed, t it imid as a lone h her silver

    spoons, and t it did not knos friends from its foes, and I

    lost all my remaining respect for it, and pitied it.

    tate never intentionally confronts a mans sense,

    intellectual or moral, but only  is not

    armed  or y, but h superior physical

    strengt born to be forced.  I er my own

    fas us see .   force has a

    multitude?  than I.

    to become like t hear of men being

    forced to  by masses of men.   sort of life

    to live?   a government ;Your

    money or your life,quot; o give it my money?

    It may be in a great strait, and not knoo do: I cannot help

    t.  It must self; do as I do.  It is not he while

    to snivel about it.  I am not responsible for the successful working

    of ty.  I am not the engineer.  I

    perceive t,  fall side by side, the

    one does not remain inert to make  both obey

    t they can,

    till one, percroys t

    cannot li
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