Page:Moraltheology.djvu/193

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necessities of his parents or of his brothers and sisters do not require that he should remain at home. If a youth has acted in this way, and it appears to be for his benefit, English courts will not compel him to return home, and it was the common teaching of the classical moralists that in acting thus a youth would do nothing wrong.[1]

  1. Laymann, lib. 3, tract. 4, c. 8, n. 13.