The greater the share the people have in government, the less liberty, civil or religious, does a nation enjoy.


As quoted in England in the Eighteenth Century (1714 - 1815) (1964) by J. H. Plumb, p. 94


The greater the share the people have in government, the less liberty, civil or religious, does a nation enjoy.

The greater the share the people have in government, the less liberty, civil or religious, does a nation enjoy.

The greater the share the people have in government, the less liberty, civil or religious, does a nation enjoy.

The greater the share the people have in government, the less liberty, civil or religious, does a nation enjoy.