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Laws undertake to punish only overt acts.
Baron de Montesquieu
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Baron de Montesquieu
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More quotes by Baron de Montesquieu
The love of study is in us the only lasting passion. All the others quit us in proportion as this miserable machine which holds them approaches its ruins.
Baron de Montesquieu
In republican governments, men are all equal equal they are also in despotic governments: in the former, because they are everything in the latter, because they are nothing.
Baron de Montesquieu
An author is a fool who, not content with boring those he lives with, insists on boring future generations.
Baron de Montesquieu
Life was given to me as a favor, so I may abandon it when it is one no longer.
Baron de Montesquieu
The Ottoman Empire whose sick body was not supported by a mild and regular diet, but by a powerful treatment, which continually exhausted it.
Baron de Montesquieu
Political liberty in a citizen is that tranquillity of spirit which comes from the opinion each one has of his security, and in order for him to have this liberty the government must be such that one citizen cannot fear another citizen.
Baron de Montesquieu
Better it is to say that the government most comfortable to nature is that which best agrees with the humor and disposition of the people in whose favor it is established.
Baron de Montesquieu
I suffer from the disease of writing books and being ashamed of them when they are finished.
Baron de Montesquieu
A nation may lose its liberties in a day and not miss them in a century.
Baron de Montesquieu
There is hardly any grief that an hour's reading will not dissipate.
Baron de Montesquieu
I have ever held it as a maxim never to do that through another which it was impossible for me to execute myself
Baron de Montesquieu
I have never known any distress that an hour's reading did not relieve.
Baron de Montesquieu
Wonderful maxim: not to talk of things any more after they are done.
Baron de Montesquieu
...when the laws have ceased to be executed, as this can only come from the corruption of the republic, the state is already lost.
Baron de Montesquieu
When one wants to change manners and customs, one should not do so by changing the laws.
Baron de Montesquieu
Virtue in a republic is the love of one's country, that is the love of equality.
Baron de Montesquieu
When the body of the people is possessed of the supreme power, it is called a democracy.
Baron de Montesquieu
Those who have few affairs to attend to are great speakers. The less men think, the more they talk.
Baron de Montesquieu
With truths of a certain kind, it is not enough to make them appear convincing: one must also make them felt. Of such kind are moral truths.
Baron de Montesquieu
Law in general is human reason, inasmuch as it governs all the inhabitants of the earth: the political and civil laws of each nation ought to be only the particular cases in which human reason is applied.
Baron de Montesquieu