| Charles Swan - 1824 - 596 pages
...ridiculed by Cervantes. But, in times of oppression, when every one followed " the simple plan, That he may take who has the power, And he may keep who can," the wandering hero, ever ready to risk his life in defence of the injured, was governed by a noble... | |
| Wynnard Hooper - 1824 - 552 pages
...ridiculed by Cervantes. But, in times of oppression, when every one followed " the simple plan, That he may take who has the power, And he may keep who can," the wandering hero, ever ready to risk his life in defence of the injured, was governed by a noble... | |
| Charles Swan - 1824 - 566 pages
...ridiculed by Cervantes. But, in times of oppression, when every one followed " the simple plan, That he may take who has the power, And he may keep who can," the wandering hero, ever ready to risk his life in defence of the injured, was governed by a noble... | |
| 1824 - 558 pages
...ridiculed by Cervantes. But, in times of oppression, when every one followed " the simple plan, That he may take who has the power, And he may keep who can," the wandering hero, ever ready to risk his life in defence of the injured, was governed by a noble... | |
| Romani - 1824 - 548 pages
...ridiculed by Cervantes. But, in times of oppression, when every one followed " the simple plan, That he may take who has the power, And he may keep who can," the wandering hero, ever ready to risk his life in defence of the injured, was governed by a noble... | |
| 1844 - 554 pages
...governed by the sophism, that " Might makes right." Or by "The good old rule, the simple plan, That he may take who has the power, And he may keep who can." In this age of intelligence, there is no moving power but mind ; all others, are passive and inert.... | |
| 1863 - 804 pages
...governed by the sophism, that " Might malees right ;" Or by "The good old rule, the simple plan, That he may take who has the power, And he may keep who can." In this age of intelligence, there is no moving power but mind ; all other powers are passive and inert.... | |
| Henry Astbury Leveson - 1860 - 564 pages
...leader whose cowardice or treachery allowed the sole object of the expedition to fail, I obtained leave to throw up my appointment and return to the Crimea,...our baggage, or rather to carry whatever we might pick up, for a Bashi-Bazouk always returns heavier laden than when he set out, if he knows his trade.... | |
| Illinois. Supreme Court - 1868 - 636 pages
...members. A contrary rule befits only that condition of society in which the principle is recognized that He may take who has the power, And he may keep who can. If the right to use force be once admitted, it must necessarily / follow as a logical sequence, that... | |
| 1885 - 676 pages
...for existence among families or peoples comes, the law of force prevails. Man tacitly assumes " that he may take who has the power, and he may keep who can." No doubt the social instincts on the one hand, and experience of the evils of war on the other, tend... | |
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