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Honor is unknown in despotic states.
Baron de Montesquieu
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Baron de Montesquieu
Despotism
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Despotic
More quotes by Baron de Montesquieu
Trade is the best cure for prejudice.
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Men, who are rogues individually, are in the mass very honorable people.
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When the legislative and executive powers are united in the same person, or in the same body of magistrates, there can be no liberty because apprehensions may arise, lest the same monarch or senate should enact tyrannical laws, to execute them in a tyrannical manner.
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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.
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The Christian religion is a stranger to mere despotic power. The mildness so frequently recommended in the Gospel is incompatible with the despotic rage.
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Man, as a physical being, is like other bodies governed by invariable laws.
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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.
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We must have constantly present in our minds the difference between independence and liberty. Liberty is a right of doing whatever the laws permit, and if a citizen could do what they forbid he would no longer be possessed of liberty.
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An empire founded by war has to maintain itself by war.
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Raillery is a mode of speaking in favor of one's wit at the expense of one's better nature.
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Laws undertake to punish only overt acts.
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Life was given to me as a favor, so I may abandon it when it is one no longer.
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I have never known any distress that an hour's reading did not relieve.
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A nation may lose its liberties in a day and not miss them in a century.
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To love to read is to exchange hours of ennui for hours of delight.
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There is no one, says another, whom fortune does not visit once in his life but when she does not find him ready to receive her, she walks in at the door, and flies out at the window.
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When a government lasts a long while, it deteriorates by insensible degrees. Republics end through luxury, monarchies through poverty.
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Luxury ruins republics poverty, monarchies.
Baron de Montesquieu
The state is the association of men, and not men themselves the citizen may perish, and the man remain.
Baron de Montesquieu
Wonderful maxim: not to talk of things any more after they are done.
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