ON THE DUTY OF CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE
I had never
expected to beo lie t. It seemed to me
t I never orike before, nor the evening
sounds of t he windows open, which
ing. It o see my native village in the
ligurned into a Rhine
stream, and visions of knigles passed before me. they
I reets. I was
an involuntary spectator and auditor of wever was done and said
in tc village-inn -- a wholly new and rare
experience to me. It ive town. I was
fairly inside of it. I never s institutions before.
ts peculiar institutions; for it is a sown. I
began to compre its inants .
In ts the
door, in small oblong-square tin pans, made to fit, and holding a
pint of ce, hey
called for to return w
bread I ; but my comrade seized it, and said t I should
lay t up for luncer out to work
at every day, and
be back till noon; so he
doubted if he should see me again.
of prison -- for some one interfered, and paid
t tax -- I did not perceive t great caken place on
t in a youth and emerged a
tottering and gray- a co my eyes come
over toate, and country -- greater than
any t mere time could effect. I sa more distinctly the
State in ent the people among whom
I lived could be trusted as good neig their
friends t greatly
propose to do rig tinct race from me by their
prejudices and superstitions, as t
in t