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" ... both free and happy. When we go forth, it walks silent and unobtrusive by our side, covering us with its invisible shield from violence and wrong. Beneath our own roof, or by our own fireside, it makes our home our castle. All ages, sexes, and conditions,... "
An Anniversary Discourse: Delivered Before the Historical Society of New ... - Page 60
by William Sampson - 1824 - 68 pages
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The North American Review, Volume 19

Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - American fiction - 1824 - 586 pages
...why ? because it is the law of a free people, and has freedom for its end, and under it we live 414 both free and happy. When we go forth, it walks silent...perfect in the consciousness that no tyrant's power dares snatch it from her arms ; that when she consigns it to repose, its innocent slumbers are guarded...
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A Dissertation on the Nature and Extent of the Jurisdiction of the Courts of ...

Peter Stephen Du Ponceau - Courts - 1824 - 326 pages
...freedom for its end, and under it we live both free and happy. When we go forih, it walks silentand unobtrusive by our side, covering us with its invisible...heart, her joy is perfect in the consciousness that no tyrants power dare to snatch it from her arms; that when she consigns it to repose, its innocent slumbers...
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The Atlantic Magazine, Volume 1

1824 - 494 pages
...violence and wrong. Beneath our own roof, or by our own fireside, it makes our home our casthi. All sexes and conditions share its protecting influence....power dare snatch it from her arms ; that when she consigns.it to repose, its innocent slumbers are guarded by a nation's strength, an* that it sleeps...
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Oddities of the Law

Franklin Fiske Heard - Law - 1881 - 212 pages
...castle. All ages, sexes, and conditions share in its protecting influence. It shadows with its wings the infant's cradle, and with its arm upholds the tottering steps of age.' It is the duty of the judiciary not only to guard it with vigilance against incongruous innovations,...
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Wit and Humor of Bench and Bar

Marshall Brown - Law - 1899 - 602 pages
...castle. All ages, sexes, and conditions share in its protecting influence. It shadows with its wings the infant's cradle, and with its arm upholds the tottering steps of age." It is the duty of the judiciary not only to guard it with vigilance against incongruous innovations,...
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Modern Conception of Law

Frank Johnston - Analytical jurisprudence - 1925 - 376 pages
...castle. All ages, sexes and conditions share in its protecting! influence. It shadows with its wings the infant's cradle, and with its arm upholds the tottering steps of age.' It is the duty of the judiciary not only to guard it with vigilance against incongruous innovations,...
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The North American Review, Volume 19

Jared Sparks, Edward Everett, James Russell Lowell, Henry Cabot Lodge - American fiction - 1824 - 518 pages
...and why ? because it is the law of a free people, and has freedom for its end, and under it we live both free and happy. When we go forth, it walks silent...perfect in the consciousness that no tyrant's power dares snatch it from her arms ; that when she consigns it to repose, its innocent slumbers are guarded...
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