id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 31670 Furness, William Henry A Discourse for the Time, delivered January 4, 1852 in the First Congregational Unitarian Church .txt text/plain 5348 205 70 is made the direct and plain duty of every man and woman of us to know So, then, the fact that private men are interested in public affairs, indifferent to things of a vital private concern, simply because they life and human rights, ready to shed blood to any extent to gratify the capacity take in things of public concern. country, and for the world--the plain truth is, that '_no man liveth or any man's while to suffer, and die any death that a relentless power since, in the very constitution of things, every man's 'own business' is nature, he has bound up the life, the interests, the business of the his very nature, then, is it not every man's own business to know what declaration of human rights before all the world, a people so lavish in one thing that the great Hungarian has to ask of us, for his own people ./cache/31670.txt ./txt/31670.txt