Page:Disunion and restoration in Tennessee (IA disunionrestorat00neal).pdf/66

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because in the creation of the House of Commons, the cities and boroughs had in part organized it, in the time of Edward I., and to this day, as cities and boroughs, they elect members to the House of Commons; but that in this country, our cities have no such political status, and that in nowise are they separate from the balance of the community in politics, and therefore our cities are not political bodies, and that the delegation of a part of a State's sovereignty is a fiction, and the management of a city is a mere trust."