The Elements of Morality: Including Polity, Band 1Harper & Bros., 1845 |
Im Buch
Seite 129
... of the woman is suspended during the marriage , or at least is incorporated and consolidated in that of her husband : under whose wing , protection , and cover , she performs everything ; and is therefore in our Law French a feme ...
... of the woman is suspended during the marriage , or at least is incorporated and consolidated in that of her husband : under whose wing , protection , and cover , she performs everything ; and is therefore in our Law French a feme ...
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Andere Ausgaben - Alle anzeigen
Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
abstract Appetites Benevolent Affections Bodily Desires bound Cardinal Virtues character common conceive Conceptions Concubinage condition conform Conscience consider Contract course cultivate death demnation Desires and Affections direct Disposition English Law established exist express external Faculties Family fear feel free agency Government gratification habits Hence Human Action husband Idea immoral implies intention Justice kind labour land lence Love man's mankind Marriage means Men's Rights Mental Desires mind mon language moral character Moral Culture Moral Principles moral progress Moral Rules Moral Sentiments Moralist mutual nation nature Necessity Obedience offence operation ourselves parents person Polygamy possess promise Purity Reason Reflex Sentiments regard requisite Res Nullius Reverence Right of Property Roman Law Rule of Human Rules of Action Rules of Duty sires Society speak spoken Springs of Action Supreme Law Supreme Rule tend term things thought tion transgression Truth Twelve Tables understanding Usucapio violation Virtues wife wrong
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 91 - And he that stealeth a man, and selleth him, or if he be found in his hand, he shall surely be put to death.
Seite 354 - Equity is a roguish thing : for law we have a measure, know what to trust to ; equity is according to the conscience of him that is chancellor, and as that is larger or narrower, so is equity. "Tis all one as if they should make the standard for the measure we call a foot...
Seite 129 - I come now, lastly, to speak of the legal consequences of such making, or dissolution. (By marriage the husband and wife are one person in law : that is, the very being or legal existence of the woman is suspended during the marriage, or at least is incorporated and consolidated into that of the husband : under whose wing, protection, and cover, she performs everything...
Seite 92 - As when a man goeth into the wood with his neighbour to hew wood, and his hand fetcheth a stroke with the axe to cut down the tree, and the head slippeth from the helve, and lighteth upon his neighbour, that he die; he shall flee unto one of those cities, and live...
Seite 129 - But in trials of any sort they are not allowed to be evidence for, or against, each other: partly because it is impossible their testimony should be indifferent, but principally because of the union of person; and therefore, if they were admitted to be witnesses for each other, they would contradict one maxim of law, "nemo in propria causa testis esse debet"; and if against each other, they would contradict another maxim, "nemo tenetur seipsum accusare.
Seite 139 - For the canon law, which the common law follows in this case, deems so highly and with such mysterious reverence of the nuptial tie, that it will not allow it to be unloosed for any cause whatsoever, that arises after the union is made.
Seite 401 - Introduction to Church History : being a new Inquiry into the true Dates of the Birth and Death of our Lord and...
Seite 280 - Duty. 400. Though assertions, not literally true, may, by general Convention, cease to be Lies, we must be careful of trifling with the limits of such cases, and of too readily assuming, and acting upon, such Conventions. Carelessness in these matters, will diminish our habitual reverence for truth. Some Moralists have ranked with the cases in which Convention supersedes the general rule of truth, an Advocate asserting the justice, or his belief in the justice, of his Client's cause...
Seite 130 - In the civil law the husband and the wife are considered as two distinct persons, and may have separate estates, contracts, debts, and injuries: and therefore in our ecclesiastical courts, a woman may sue and be sued without her husband.
Seite 93 - But in this, and in every other case of homicide upon provocation, if there be a sufficient cooling-time for passion to subside and reason to interpose, and the person so provoked afterwards kills the other, this is deliberate revenge and not heat of blood, and accordingly amounts to murder.