Thomas Malory book Le Morte d'Arthur
Book XXI, ch. 9
Le Morte d'Arthur (c. 1469) (first known edition 1485)
No. 7, line 6
Holy Sonnets (1633)
Thomas Malory book Le Morte d'Arthur
Book XXI, ch. 9
Le Morte d'Arthur (c. 1469) (first known edition 1485)
Robert Browning (1812–1889) English poet and playwright of the Victorian Era
A Death in the Desert (1864)
Robert W. Service (1874–1958) Canadian poet
The Law of the Yukon http://www.cs.rice.edu/~ssiyer/minstrels/poems/781.html (1907)
John Locke book Two Treatises of Government
Second Treatise of Civil Government, Ch. II, sec. 11
Two Treatises of Government (1689)
Context: A criminal who, having renounced reason … hath, by the unjust violence and slaughter he hath committed upon one, declared war against all mankind, and therefore may be destroyed as a lion or tyger, one of those wild savage beasts with whom men can have no society nor security. And upon this is grounded the great law of Nature, "Whoso sheddeth man's blood, by man shall his blood be shed."
“For human laws and laws divine ordain,
Who slays another, shall himself be slain.”
Ludovico Ariosto book Orlando Furioso
Che voglion tutti gli ordini e le leggi,
Che chi dà morte altrui debba esser morto.
Canto XXXVI, stanza 33 (tr. W. S. Rose)
Orlando Furioso (1532)
Winston S. Churchill (1874–1965) Prime Minister of the United Kingdom
Article for the Daily Mail (16 November 1929), quoted in Martin Gilbert, Prophet of Truth: Winston S. Churchill, 1922–1939 (London: Minerva, 1990), p. 356
Early career years (1898–1929)
Peter Kropotkin (1842–1921) Russian zoologist, evolutionary theorist, philosopher, scientist, revolutionary, economist, activist, geogr…
Source: Law and Authority (1886), I
“Bad laws are the worst sort of tyranny.”
Edmund Burke (1729–1797) Anglo-Irish statesman
Speech at Bristol Previous to the Election (6 September 1780)
1780s
“Wherever Law ends, Tyranny begins.”
John Locke book Two Treatises of Government
Second Treatise of Government, Sec. 202
Two Treatises of Government (1689)