The Works of John Locke, Volume 5 |
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Page 78
... who , in the beginning of his distemper , first discovered himself to be out of his wits , by getting together and boiling a great number of groats , with a design , as he said , to make them plim , i . e . grow thicker .
... who , in the beginning of his distemper , first discovered himself to be out of his wits , by getting together and boiling a great number of groats , with a design , as he said , to make them plim , i . e . grow thicker .
Page 209
READER , Thou hast here the beginning and end of a discourse concerning government ; what fate has otherwise disposed of the papers that should have filled up the middle , , and were more than all the rest , it is not worth while to ...
READER , Thou hast here the beginning and end of a discourse concerning government ; what fate has otherwise disposed of the papers that should have filled up the middle , , and were more than all the rest , it is not worth while to ...
Page 215
12 , 14 , “ fatherly authority , right of fatherhood , " p . 12 , 20. One would have thought he would , in the beginning of such a work as this , on which was to depend the authority of princes , and the obedience of ...
12 , 14 , “ fatherly authority , right of fatherhood , " p . 12 , 20. One would have thought he would , in the beginning of such a work as this , on which was to depend the authority of princes , and the obedience of ...
Page 218
God also hath given to the father a- right or liberty to alien his power over his children to any other ; whence we find the sale and gift of children to have been much in use in the beginning of the world , when men had their servants ...
God also hath given to the father a- right or liberty to alien his power over his children to any other ; whence we find the sale and gift of children to have been much in use in the beginning of the world , when men had their servants ...
Page 227
thus king , till one has examined whether king be to be taken , as the words in the beginning of this passage would persuade , on supposition of his private dominion , which was , by God's positive grant , “ monarch of the world by ...
thus king , till one has examined whether king be to be taken , as the words in the beginning of this passage would persuade , on supposition of his private dominion , which was , by God's positive grant , “ monarch of the world by ...
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Adam Adam's allowed amongst answer authority beginning belonged body bound bring brought bullion called carried cent clipped coin comes command common commonwealth consent consider crown denomination descending distinct dominion earth England equal exchange executive father fatherhood follow force foreign gave give given gold grant greater hands hath heir hundred inheritance interest judge keep king labour land law of nature legislative less liberty living lord mankind matter means measure monarch nature necessary never obedience original ounce parents pass paternal person pieces plain political possession present preservation princes prove quantity raising reason receive rest rule shillings silver society sons standard succession suppose taken tells thing thought trade true weight whole worth