| sir John Leng - 1877 - 360 lehte
...people of the Western States, it seems, have objected to being interfered with — the doctrine that every man has a right to do what he likes with his own prevailing there as well as in the British Isles. Perched high in the wonderfully rugged region which... | |
| Forbes Edward Winslow - 1877 - 266 lehte
...Richard Horton. How can you be so thoughtless, so unfeeling as to leave " " Now look you here, Parson, a man has a right to do what he likes with his own. You are all very well up in your pulpit, only those who like to be preached at need come near you ;... | |
| Elizabeth J. Lysaght - 1879 - 272 lehte
...wrote to Mr. Addison and said so, and got from that gentleman a short and pithy letter. "All right. Every man has a right to do what he likes with his own. I shall run down to see you after the time the wise men say there will be an unusually high tide, and... | |
| 1883 - 410 lehte
...know German. So he falls back on the sacredness of private property, and declares that, after all, a man has a right to do what he likes with his own. This alleged right of a man to do what he likes with his own is the private property principle which... | |
| William Westall - 1883 - 314 lehte
...consider about it." "Allow me to remind you, gentlemen," observed the lawyer, with some asperity, "that a man has a right to do what he likes with his own, and that none of you is very much hurt. If Rupert had stayed at home and behaved himself you would... | |
| Charles William G. St. John - 1884 - 406 lehte
...subject, but I have been led to do so by the honest conviction that, in property of this sort at least, every man has a right to " do what he likes with his own," provided his neighbour does not suffer thereby. Rabbits and hares are, like winged game, subject to... | |
| Sanitary Institute of Great Britain - 1885 - 550 lehte
...counteracted by others which have shortened life and propagated disease, but which, curiously enough, in the abstract are looked upon from very mistaken...being applied to his own purposes by the ignorant, the designing, the selfish, the vicious, the miserly, and the indolent. . Instead of being applied... | |
| Sanitary Institute of Great Britain - 1885 - 562 lehte
...counteracted by others which have shortened life and propagated disease, but which, curiously enough, in the abstract are looked upon from very mistaken...being applied to his own purposes by the ignorant, the designing, the selfish, the vicious, the miserly, and the indolent. Instead of being applied as... | |
| Christianity - 1885 - 132 lehte
...Christianity does not demand the equalisation of property, it demands its moralisation. According to Christ no man has a right to do what he likes with his own property ; each roan is bound to use his property for ends, and by methods which Christ would approve.... | |
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