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ON THE DUTY OF CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE
n will

    not leave t to t to prevail

    ty.  t little virtue in

    tion of masses of men.  y s lengte

    for tion of slavery, it hey are

    indifferent to slavery, or because t little slavery left

    to be abolise.  the only slaves.

    Only e can en tion of slavery ws his

    own freedom by e.

    I ion to be  Baltimore, or elsewhere,

    for tion of a candidate for the Presidency, made up chiefly

    of editors, and men  I think,

    to any independent, intelligent, and respectable man w

    decision to?  S age of his

    count upon some

    independent votes?  Are t many individuals in try

    tend conventions?  But no: I find t table

    man, so called, ely drifted from ion, and

    despairs of ry, wry o despair

    of s one of tes ted as

    t he is himself available

    for any purposes of te is of no more h

    t of any unprincipled foreigner or ive, who may

    .  Oh for a man who is a man, and, as my neighbor

    says,  pass your hand

    tatistics are at fault: tion has been

    returned too large.  o a square thousand

    miles in try?   America offer any

    inducement for men to settle o

    an Odd Fellow -- one w of his

    organ of gregariousness, and a manifest lack of intellect and

    c and chief concern, on coming

    into to see t the almshouses are in good repair;

    and, before yet o collect a

    fund for t of t may be; who, in

    s ventures
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