Page:A discourse upon the origin and foundation of the inequality among mankind (IA discourseuponori00rous).pdf/158

 but turn his Head another Way; I am already buried in the Foret, my Fetters are broke, and he never ees me again.

But without initing any longer upon thee Details, every one mut ee that, as the Bonds of Servitude are formed merely by the mutual Dependence of Men one upon another and the reciprocal Neceities which unite them, it is impoible for one Man to enlave another, without having firt reduced him to a Condition in which he cannot live without the Enlaver's Aitance; a Condition which, as it does not exit in a State of Nature, mut leave every Man his own Mater, and render the Law of the tronget altogether vain and ueles.

Having proved that the Inequality, which may ubit between Man and Man in a State of Nature, is almot imperceivable, and that it has very little