ON THE DUTY OF CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE
ve according to its nature, it dies; and so a man.
t in prison eresting enoughe
prisoners in t-sleeves he
evening air in tered. But the jailer said,
quot;Come, boys, it is time to lock upquot;; and so they dispersed, and I
eps returning into tments.
My room-mate roduced to me by t;a first-rate
fello; he door was locked, he showed me
ers the rooms
, he
, most simply furnisest apartment
in toed to know where I came from, and
w brougold him, I asked him in my
turn o be an man, of
course; and, as t;; said he,
quot;t I never did it.quot; As near as
I could discover, o bed in a barn when drunk,
and smoked . he
reputation of being a clever man, hs
ing for rial to come on, and as much
longer; but e domesticated and contented, since
t reated.
if one
stayed to look out the
s t there, and
examined w, and we
ory of ts
of t room; for I found t even ory and a
gossip he jail.
Probably town where verses are
composed, ed in a circular form, but not
publise a long list of verses which were
composed by some young men ed in an attempt to
escape, whem.
I pumped my fellow-prisoner as dry as I could, for fear I should
never see at length he showed me which was my bed,
and left me to blo the lamp.
It ravelling into a far country, such as