John W. Danford,
Roots of Freedom
from Chapter 12, "American
Liberty"(2000)
E. McClung Fleming, from "From Indian Princess to
Greek Goddess: The American Image, 1783-1815,"
Winterthur Portfolio
(1967)
Stewart Justman,
The Hidden Text of Mill's Liberty from Chapter 5, "The Hidden
Dimension of Mill's Liberty
(1991)
G.W. Smith, from "Social Liberty and Free
Agency: Some Ambiguities in Mill's Conception of Freedom,"
J.S. Mill On Liberty in Focus
(1991)
Brenda Banks, from "Rhetorical Missiles and
Double-Talk: Napoleon, Wordsworth, and the Invasion Scare of 1804,"
Romanticism, Radicalism, and the Press
(1997)
Thomas Love Peacock,
Crotchet Castle
from Chapter XI,
"Correspondence"(1831)
Elizabeth Gaskell,
Mary Barton
from Chapter XVII(1848)
Charles Dickens,
A Tale of Two Cities
from Book Three: The Track of a Storm.
Chapter I, "In Secret"(1859)
Anthony Trollope,
Rachel Ray
from Volume II, Chapter XI,
"Cornbury Grange"(1863)
Percy Bysshe Shelley, from An
Address to the People on the Death of Princess Charlotte
(1817)
G.W.F. Hegel,
Lectures on the Philosophy of History
from Part IV, "The German
World," Chapter III, "The Exlaircissement and Revolution"(c. 1823-1827)
James Haughton, "Liberty,"
Liberty Bell
(1849)
John Stuart Mill,
On Liberty
Chapter III: "On
Individuality"(1859)
John Stuart Mill,
The Subjection of Women
from Chapter 4(1869)
George Richardson, "Concord, Discord, Liberty,
Servitude,"
Iconology
(1779)
America Trampling on Oppression
(1789)
"The Save-all and the
Extinguisher!!,"
(1803)
George Cruikshank, "Boney beating Mack—And
Nelson giving him a Whack,"
(1805)
George Cruikshank, "Death or Liberty!,"
(1819)
"Free Italy (?),"
Punch
(1859)
Walter Crane,
The Triumph of Labour
(1891)
William Blake,
"A Song of Liberty"
(c. 1793)
Mary Robinson, from The
Progress of Liberty
(1801)
William Wordsworth, Selections from The Complete Poetical Works of William Wordsworth
(1802-1816)
Lord Byron, "Sonnet on Chillon,"
(c. 1816)
Percy Bysshe Shelley, "To Wordsworth,"
(1816)
Percy Bysshe Shelley, "Feelings of a Republican on the
Fall of Bonaparte,"
(1816)
Lord Byron,
Childe Harold's Pilgrimage
from Canto IV(1818)
Percy Bysshe Shelley, "An Ode, To The Assertors Of
Liberty,"
(1820)
Percy Bysshe Shelley, "Ode to Liberty,"
(1820)
James Montgomery, from Make
Way for Liberty!
(1828)
Hartley Coleridge, "Liberty,"
(1851)
Katherine Barland, "Love and Liberty,"
Liberty Bell
(1851)
Oscar Wilde, "Sonnet to Liberty,"
(1881)
Robert Browning, "Why I am a Liberal,"
(1886)