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Front Page Authors (by Period) Cato's Letters, vol. 3 March 10, 1722 to December 1, 1722 (LF ed.)
John Trenchard, Cato’s Letters, vol. 3 March 10, 1722 to December 1, 1722 (LF ed.) [1724]Edition used:Cato’s Letters, or Essays on Liberty, Civil and Religious, and Other Important Subjects. Four volumes in Two, edited and annotated by Ronald Hamowy (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 1995). Vol. 3.

 | About this title:Volume 3 of a four volumes in 2 set. Almost a generation before Washington, Henry, and Jefferson were even born, two Englishmen, concealing their identities with the honored ancient name of Cato, wrote newspaper articles condemning tyranny and advancing principles of liberty that immensely influenced American colonists. The Englishmen were John Trenchard and Thomas Gordon. Their prototype was Cato the Younger (95-46 B.C.), the implacable foe of Julius Caesar and a champion of liberty and republican principles. Their 144 essays were published from 1720 to 1723, originally in the London Journal, later in the British Journal. Subsequently collected as Cato’s Letters, these “Essays on Liberty, Civil and Religious” became, as Clinton Rossiter has remarked, “the most popular, quotable, esteemed source of political ideas in the colonial period.” This new two-volume edition offers minimally modernized versions of the letters from the four-volume sixth edition printed in London in 1755.
About Liberty Fund:Liberty Fund, Inc. is a private, educational foundation established to encourage the study of the ideal of a society of free and responsible individuals. Copyright information:The copyright to this edition, in both print and electronic forms, is held by Liberty Fund, Inc.
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This material is put online to further the educational goals of Liberty Fund, Inc. Unless otherwise stated in the Copyright Information section above, this material may be used freely for educational and academic purposes. It may not be used in any way for profit.
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- Volume Three
- No. 69. Saturday, March 10, 1722. Address to the Freeholders, &c. About the Choice of Their Representatives. (trenchard)
- No. 70. Saturday, March 17, 1722. Second Address to the Freeholders, &c. Upon the Same Subject. (gordon)
- No. 71. Saturday, March 31, 1722. Polite Arts and Learning Naturally Produced In Free States, and Marred By Such As Are Not Free. (gordon)
- No. 72. Saturday, April 7, 1722. In Absolute Monarchies the Monarch Seldom Rules, But His Creatures Instead of Him. That Sort of Government a Gradation of Tyrants. (gordon)
- No. 73. Saturday, April 21, 1722. a Display of Tyranny, Its Destructive Nature, and Tendency to Dispeople the Earth. (gordon)
- No. 74. Saturday, April 28, 1722. the Vanity of Conquerors, and the Calamities Attending Conquests. (gordon)
- No. 75. Saturday, May 5, 1722. of the Restraints Which Ought to Be Laid Upon Publick Rulers. (gordon)
- No. 76. Saturday, May 12, 1722. the Same Subject Continued. (gordon)
- No. 77. Saturday, May 19, 1722. of Superstitious Fears, and Their Causes Natural and Accidental. (trenchard)
- No. 78. Saturday, May 26, 1722. the Common Notion of Spirits, Their Power and Feats, Exposed. (trenchard)
- No. 79. Saturday, June 2, 1722. a Further Detection of the Vulgar Absurdities About Ghosts and Witches. (trenchard)
- No. 80. Saturday, June 9, 1722. That the Two Great Parties In England Do Not Differ So Much As They Think In Principles of Politicks. (trenchard)
- No. 81. Saturday, June 16, 1722. the Established Church of England In No Danger From Dissenters. (trenchard)
- No. 82. Saturday, June 23, 1722. the Folly and Characters of Such As Would Overthrow the Present Establishment. (trenchard)
- No. 83. Saturday, June 30, 1722. the Vain Hopes of the Pretender and His Party. (trenchard)
- No. 84. Saturday, July 7, 1722. Property the First Principle of Power. the Errors of Our Princes Who Attended Not to This. (trenchard)
- No. 85. Saturday, July 14, 1722. Britain Incapable of Any Government But a Limited Monarchy; With the Defects of a Neighbouring Republick. (trenchard)
- No. 86. Saturday, July 21, 1722. the Terrible Consequences of a War to England, and Reasons Against Engaging In One. (trenchard)
- No. 87. Saturday, July 28, 1722. Gold and Silver In a Country to Be Considered Only As Commodities. (trenchard)
- No. 88. Saturday, August 4, 1722. the Reasonableness and Advantage of Allowing the Exportation of Gold and Silver, With the Impossibility of Preventing the Same. (trenchard)
- No. 89. Saturday, August 11, 1722. Every Man's True Interest Found In the General Interest. How Little This Is Considered. (trenchard)
- No. 90. Saturday, August 18, 1722. Monopolies and Exclusive Companies, How Pernicious to Trade. (trenchard)
- No. 91. Saturday, August 25, 1722. How Exclusive Companies Influence and Hurt Our Government. (trenchard)
- No. 92. Saturday, September 1, 1722. Against the Petition of the South-sea Company, For a Remittance of Two Millions of Their Debt to the Publick. (trenchard)
- No. 93. Saturday, September 8, 1722. an Essay Upon Heroes. (gordon)
- No. 94. Saturday, September 15, 1722. Against Standing Armies. (trenchard and Gordon)
- No. 95. Saturday, September 22, 1722. Further Reasonings Against Standing Armies. (trenchard)
- No. 96. Saturday, September 29, 1722. of Parties In England; How They Vary, and Interchange Characters, Just As They Are In Power, Or Out of It, Yet Still Keep Their Former Names . (gordon)
- No. 97. Saturday, October 6, 1722. How Much It Is the Interest of Governors to Use the Governed Well; With an Enquiry Into the Causes of Disaffection In England. (trenchard)
- No. 98. Saturday, October 13, 1722. Address to the Members of the House of Commons. (trenchard)
- No. 99. Saturday, October 20, 1722. the Important Duty of Attendance In Parliament, Recommended to the Members. (gordon)
- No. 100. Saturday, October 27, 1722. Discourse Upon Libels. (trenchard)
- No. 101. Saturday, November 3, 1722. Second Discourse Upon Libels. (trenchard)
- No. 102. Saturday, November 10, 1722. the Contemptibleness of Grandeur Without Virtue. (trenchard)
- No. 103. Saturday, November 17, 1722. of Eloquence, Considered Politically. (trenchard)
- No. 104. Saturday, November 24, 1722. of Eloquence, Considered Philosophically. (gordon)
- No. 105. Saturday, December 1, 1722. of the Weakness of the Human Mind; How Easily It Is Misled. (trenchard)
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