Sections (TOC) :
• 1
20 Words; 115 Characters
• 2
16 Words; 94 Characters
• 3
65 Words; 353 Characters
• 4
23 Words; 157 Characters
• 5
70 Words; 421 Characters
• 6
87 Words; 438 Characters
• 7
15 Words; 93 Characters
• 8
111 Words; 594 Characters
Sections (Content) :
• 1
The love of independence is a sentiment that surely none would wish to be erased from the breast of man...
• 2
...independence must come first if there is to be anything to follow at all later on.
• 3
The liberty of the individual is still believed in, almost as in the nineteenth century. But this has nothing to do with economic liberty, the right to exploit others for profit. It is the liberty to have a home of your own, to do what you like in your spare time, to choose your own amusements instead of having them chosen for you from above.
• 4
To survive, or at least to preserve any kind of independence, was essentially criminal, since it meant breaking rules which you yourself recognized.
• 5
It is precisely the keenest critic who is hit hardest by the curse of his principle. Putting from him one exclusive thing after another, shaking off churchliness, patriotism, etc., he undoes one tie after another and separates himself from the churchly man, from the patriot, until at last, when all ties are undone, he stands -- alone. He, of all men, must exclude all that have anything exclusive or private...
• 6
As I am not willing to be a slave of my maxims, but lay them bare to my continual criticism without any warrant, and admit no bail at all for their persistence, so still less do I obligate myself to the union for my future and pledge my soul to it, as is said to be done with the devil, and is really the case with the state and all spiritual authority; but I am and remain more to myself than state, Church, God, and the like...
• 7
...in that prairie land, a hero should, by good rights, wear a citizen's dress only.
• 8
A man's life should be a stately march to an unheard music; and when to his fellows it may seem irregular and inharmonious, he will be stepping to a livelier measure, which only his nicer ear can detect. There will be no halt ever, but at most a marching on his post, or such a pause as is richer than any sound, when the deeper melody is no longer heard, but implicitly consented to with the whole life and being. He will take a false step never, even in the most arduous circumstances; for then the music will not fail to swell into greater volume, and rule the movement it inspired.
Chronology :
March 12, 2020 : Independence -- Added.
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