Yet the mass of men are always looking for the just; all this vast machinery which makes up a State, a world of States, is, on the part of the people, an attempt to organize justice; the minute and wideextending civil machinery which makes up the law... Ten Sermons of Religion - Página 79de Theodore Parker - 1853 - 395 páginasVisualização completa - Sobre este livro
| 1874 - 906 páginas
...the actual organization of the world. The minute and wide-extending civil machinery which makes up the law and the courts, with all their officers and...effort to reduce to practice the theory of right. Constitutions are made to establish justice ; the decisions of courts are reported to help us judge... | |
| Theodore Parker - 1885 - 488 páginas
...people, an attempt to organize justice ; the minute and wide-extending civil machinery which makes up the law and the courts, with all their officers and...— often an organization of selfishness. Mankind readies out after the absolute right, makes its constitutions to establish justice and provide for... | |
| Theodore Parker - 1908 - 368 páginas
...people, an attempt to organize justice; the minute and wideextending civil machinery which makes up the law and the courts, with all their officers and...constitutions to establish justice, and provide for the common defense. We report the decisions of wise men, and of courts; we keep the record of cases decided, to... | |
| Theodore Parker - 1908 - 368 páginas
...people, an attempt to organize justice; the minute and wideextending civil machinery which makes up the law and the courts, with all their officers and...constitutions to establish justice, and provide for the common defense. We report the decisions of wise men, and of courts; we keep the record of cases decided, to... | |
| Theodore Parker - 1908 - 376 páginas
...people, an attempt to organize justice; the minute and wideextending civil machinery which makes up the law and the courts, with all their officers and...constitutions to establish justice, and provide for the common defense. We report the decisions of wise men, and of courts; we keep the record of cases decided, to... | |
| |