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Front Page Titles (by Subject) VOLUME TWO - Cato's Letters, vol. 2 June 24, 1721 to March 3, 1722 (LF ed.)
VOLUME TWO - John Trenchard, Cato’s Letters, vol. 2 June 24, 1721 to March 3, 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. 2.
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- Volume Two
- No. 34. Saturday, June 24, 1721. of Flattery. (gordon)
- No. 35. Saturday, July 1, 1721. of Publick Spirit. (gordon)
- No. 36. Saturday, July 8, 1721. of Loyalty. (gordon)
- No. 37. Saturday, July 15, 1721. Character of a Good and of an Evil Magistrate, Quoted From Algernon Sidney, Esq. (gordon)
- No. 38. Saturday, July 22, 1721. the Right and Capacity of the People to Judge of Government. (gordon)
- No. 39. Saturday, July 29, 1721. of the Passions; That They Are All Alike Good Or All Alike Evil, According As They Are Applied. (gordon)
- No. 40. Saturday, August 5, 1721. Considerations On the Restless and Selfish Spirit of Man. (gordon)
- No. 41. Saturday, August 19, 1721. the Emperor Galba’s Speech to Piso, With an Introduction. (gordon)
- No. 42. Saturday, August 26, 1721. Considerations On the Nature of Laws. (gordon)
- No. 43. Saturday, September 2, 1721. the Natural Passion of Men For Superiority. (gordon)
- No. 44. Saturday, September 9, 1721. Men Not Ruled By Principle, But By Passion. (gordon)
- No. 45. Saturday, September 16, 1721. of the Equality and Inequality of Men. (gordon)
- No. 46. Saturday, September 23, 1721. of the False Guises Which Men Put On, and Their Ill Effect. (gordon)
- No. 47. Saturday, October 7, 1721. of the Frailty and Uncertainty of Human Judgment. (gordon)
- No. 48. Saturday, October 14, 1721. the General Unhappy State of the World, Ftom the Baseness and Iniquity of Its Governors In Most Countries . (gordon)
- No. 49. Saturday, October 21, 1721. of the Power of Prejudice. (gordon)
- No. 50. Saturday, October 28, 1721. an Idea of the Turkish Government, Taken From Sir Paul Ricaut. (gordon)
- No. 51. Saturday, November 4, 1721. Popularity No Proof of Merit. (gordon)
- No. 52. Saturday, November Ii, 1721. of Divine Judgments; the Wickedness and Absurdity of Applying Them to Men and Events. (gordon)
- No. 53. Saturday, November 18, 1721. Dr. Prideaux's Reasoning About the Death of Cambyses, Examined; Whether the Same Was a Judgment For His Killing the Egyptian God Apis. (gordon)
- No. 54. Saturday, November 25, 1721. the Reasoning of Dr. Prideaux About the Fate of Brennus the Gaul, and of His Followers, Examined; Whether the Same Was a Judgment For an Intention to Plunder the Temple of Delphos. (gordon)
- No. 55. Saturday, December 2, 1721. the Lawfulness of Killing Julius Caesar Considered, and Defended, Against Dr. Prideaux. (gordon)
- No. 56. Saturday, December 9, 1721. a Vindication of Brutus, For Having Killed Caesar. (gordon)
- No. 57. Saturday, December 16, 1721. of False Honour, Publick and Private. (gordon)
- No. 58. Saturday, December 23, 1721. Letter From a Lady, With an Answer, About Love, Marriage, and Settlements. (a Woman, Trenchard, and Gordon)
- No. 59. Saturday, December 30, 1721. Liberty Proved to Be the Unalienable Right of All Mankind. (trenchard)
- No. 60. Saturday, January 6, 1722. All Government Proved to Be Instituted By Men, and Only to Intend the General Good of Men. (trenchard)
- No. 61. Saturday, January 13, 1722. How Free Governments Are to Be Framed So As to Last, and How They Differ From Such As Are Arbitrary. (trenchard)
- No. 62. Saturday, January 20, 1722. an Enquiry Into the Nature and Extent of Liberty; With Its Loveliness and Advantages, and the Vile Effects of Slavery. (gordon)
- No. 63. Saturday, January 27, 1722. Civil Liberty Produces All Civil Blessings, and How; With the Baneful Nature of Tyranny. (gordon)
- No. 64. Saturday, February 3, 1722. Trade and Naval Power the Offspring of Civil Liberty Only, and Cannot Subsist Without It. (trenchard)
- No. 65. Saturday, February 10, 1722. Military Virtue Produced and Supported By Civil Liberty Only. (gordon)
- No. 66. Saturday, February 17, 1722. Arbitrary Government Proved Incompatible With True Religion, Whether Natural Or Revealed. (gordon)
- No. 67. Saturday, February 24, 1722. Arts and Sciences the Effects of Civil Liberty Only, and Ever Destroyed Or Oppressed By Tyranny. (gordon)
- No. 68. Saturday, March 3, 1722. Property and Commerce Secure In a Free Government Only; With the Consuming Miseries Under Simple Monarchies. (gordon)
VOLUME TWO
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