“966. With customes wee live well, but lawes undoe us.”
Jacula Prudentum (1651)
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George Herbert 216
Welsh-born English poet, orator and Anglican priest 1593–1633Related quotes
“What use is equality in theory and in law, if it does not penetrate into our customs?”
Os Brâmanes, p. 33
Os Brâmanes (1866)

Source: Law and Authority (1886), II
Context: Legislators confounded in one code the two currents of custom of which we have just been speaking, the maxims which represent principles of morality and social union wrought out as a result of life in common, and the mandates which are meant to ensure external existence to inequality.
Customs, absolutely essential to the very being of society, are, in the code, cleverly intermingled with usages imposed by the ruling caste, and both claim equal respect from the crowd. "Do not kill," says the code, and hastens to add, "And pay tithes to the priest." "Do not steal," says the code, and immediately after, "He who refuses to pay taxes, shall have his hand struck off."
Such was law; and it has maintained its two-fold character to this day. Its origin is the desire of the ruling class to give permanence to customs imposed by themselves for their own advantage. Its character is the skillful commingling of customs useful to society, customs which have no need of law to insure respect, with other customs useful only to rulers, injurious to the mass of the people, and maintained only by the fear of punishment.
“It does not undo harm to acknowledge that we have done it; but it undoes us not to acknowledge it.”
The Complete Neurotic's Notebook (1981), Unclassified
4 Burr. Part IV., 2368.
Dissenting in Millar v Taylor (1769)

“The way of the world is to make laws, but follow custom.”
Attributed
“The distribution of wealth, therefore, depends on the laws and customs of society.”
Source: The Worldly Philosophers (1953), Chapter V, The Utopian Socialists, p. 123