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    <title>Daily quote by Freedom of thought</title>
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<title>2026-04-05</title>
<link>https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Freedom_of_thought?t=2026-04-05</link>
<description><![CDATA[<li>Liberty of conscience was the one great value which the common people had preserved from the Commonwealth. The <a href="/wiki/Country_life" title="Country life">countryside</a> was ruled by the gentry, the towns by <a href="/wiki/Corruption" title="Corruption">corrupt</a> <a href="/wiki/Corporations" title="Corporations">corporations</a>, the nation by the <a href="/wiki/Government_of_the_United_Kingdom" title="Government of the United Kingdom">corruptest corporation of all</a>: but the <a href="/wiki/Church" title="Church">chapel</a>, the <a href="/wiki/Tavern" class="mw-redirect" title="Tavern">tavern</a> and the <a href="/wiki/Home" title="Home">home</a> were their own. In the "unsteepled" places of worship there was room for a free intellectual life and for <a href="/wiki/Democracy" title="Democracy">democratic</a> experiments with "members unlimited". Against the background of London Dissent, with its fringe of <a href="/wiki/Deism" title="Deism">deists</a> and earnest <a href="/wiki/Mysticism" title="Mysticism">mystics</a>, <a href="/wiki/William_Blake" title="William Blake">William Blake</a> seems no longer the cranky untutored genius that he must seem to those who know only the genteel culture of the time. On the contrary, he is the original yet authentic voice of a long popular tradition. If some of the London Jacobins were strangely unperturbed by the execution of <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_XVI" class="extiw" title="w:Louis XVI">Louis</a> and <a href="/wiki/Marie_Antoinette" title="Marie Antoinette">Marie Antoinette</a> it was because they remembered that their own forebears had once executed <a href="/wiki/Charles_I_of_England" title="Charles I of England">a king</a>. No one with <a href="/wiki/John_Bunyan" title="John Bunyan">Bunyan</a> in their bones could have found many of Blake's aphorisms strange: "The strongest poison ever known \ Game from <a href="/wiki/Julius_Caesar" title="Julius Caesar">Caesar</a>'s laurel crown."
<ul><li><a href="/wiki/E._P._Thompson" title="E. P. Thompson">E. P. Thompson</a>, <i>The Making of the English Working Class</i> (1963), pp. 51-52</li></ul></li>]]></description>
<pubDate>Sun, 05 Apr 2026 00:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
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