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