“To live without duties is obscene.”
                                        
                                        Aristocracy 
1880s, Lectures and Biographical Sketches (1883)
                                    
History and Utopia (1960)
“To live without duties is obscene.”
                                        
                                        Aristocracy 
1880s, Lectures and Biographical Sketches (1883)
                                    
                                        
                                        the 1948 borders 
 Sermons on Palestinian TV http://www.memritv.org/Transcript.asp?P1=563 February 2005
                                    
Inaugural address (March 4, 1841)
                                
                                    “Youth's the season made for joys,
Love is then our duty.”
                                
                                
                                
                                
                            
                                        
                                        Act II, sc. iv, air 22 
The Beggar's Opera (1728)
                                    
“Reason shows us our duty; he who can make us love our duty is more powerful than reason itself.”
                                        
                                        No. 15. 
Maxims and Moral Sentences
                                    
                                        
                                        To My People (July 4, 1973) 
Source: Assata: An Autobiography
                                    
Source: Dictionary of Burning Words of Brilliant Writers (1895), P. 378.
                                        
                                        "The Holy Dimension", p. 333 
Moral Grandeur and Spiritual Audacity: Essays (1997) 
Context: He whose soul is charged with awareness of God earns his inner livelihood by a passionate desire to pour his life into the eternal wells of love. … We do not live for our own sake. Life would be preposterous if not for the love it confers.
Faith implies no denial of evil, no disregard of danger, no whitewashing of the abominable. He whose heart is given to faith is mindful of the obstructive and awry, of the sinister and pernicious. It is God's strange dominion over both good and evil on which he relies. … Faith is not a mechanical insurance but a dynamic, personal act, flowing between the heart of man and the love of God.