A country without freedom is like a prisoner with shackled hands.
[I] like to be anchored by routine, not shackled by it.
Nobody says you have to be shackled to tradition.
There is nothing evil save that which perverts the mind and shackles the conscience.
Marriage to Fernando offered shelter and security, but the shackle was the price I'd pay.
Forgiveness is the key to the heart's shackles.
Well married a person has wings, poorly married shackles.
Most doctors are prisoners of their education and shackled by their profession.
I do come shackled with whatever people think I am.
My parents had broken through the shackles of dogma.
A prisoner's shackles would always be a lawyers joy.
You're free to be free, just break the shackles and run loose.
Commercial shackles are generally unjust, oppressive, and impolitic.
You cannot discover your soul under the shackles of slavery.
Without an imagination we would be irreparably shackled to what is, and never be released to what could be.
Conflicting commercial regulations of the different States shackled and diminished both foreign and domestic trade; hence the power to regulate commerce was conferred.
Well married, a man is winged—ill-matched, he is shackled.
But it required a disastrous, internecine war to bring this question of human freedom to a crisis, and the process of striking the shackles from the slave was accomplished in a single hour.
It's time to believe again in the potential of private enterprise set free from the shackles of over-bearing federal government.
There's a long tradition in Western thought that humans are not shackled by biology, whereas animals are pure instinct machines.
Slavery remains rife, the shackles are just different. Labels and desires have replaced the cuffs and chains.