Choose quotes font
The common Notions of Liberty are not from School Divines, but from Nature.
The common Notions of Liberty are not from School Divines, but from Nature.
The common Notions of Liberty are not from School Divines, but from Nature.
The common Notions of Liberty are not from School Divines, but from Nature.
The common Notions of Liberty are not from School Divines, but from Nature.
The common Notions of Liberty are not from School Divines, but from Nature.
Next quotes
Algernon Sidney:
'Tis hard to comprehend how one man can come to be master of many, equal to himself in right, unlesAlgernon Sidney:
No right can come by conquest, unless there were a right of making that conquest.Algernon Sidney:
To depend upon the Will of a Man is Slavery.Algernon Sidney:
There may be a hundred thousand men in an army, who are all equally free; but they only are naturalAlgernon Sidney:
The truth is, man is hereunto led by reason which is his nature.Algernon Sidney:
Everyone sees they cannot well live asunder, nor many together, without some rule to which all mustAlgernon Sidney:
This submission is a restraint of liberty, but could be of no effect as to the good intended, unlesIan Rankin:
My parents were working class and didn't have much money, so holidays tended to be two weeks in a cIan Rankin:
When I was in my early 20s and still at uni, I won a short-story competition: £200 was the prize.Ian Rankin:
In 1991, I won the Chandler Fulbright Prize, which came with $20,000 and the stipulation of spendin