Page:A discourse upon the origin and foundation of the inequality among mankind (IA discourseuponori00rous).pdf/12

 Faculties, that is, to the Poibility of being well governed, and in which every Member was o ufficient for his Employments, as to be under no Neceity of devolving upon others the Trut repoed in him: a State, where all the Subjects could be o well known to each other, that neither the dark Machinations of Vice, nor the humble Modety of Virtue, hould be able to ecape the Eyes and Judgment of the Public; and where, on Account of the weet habit of eeing and knowing each other, every Citizen's Love of his Country hould be a Love for its Inhabitants rather than for its Soil.