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CHAP. XI.
Of the
Extent of the Legislative Power.
Sec. 134.
THE great end of men's entering into society, being the enjoyment of
their properties in peace and safety, and the great instrument and means
of that being the laws established in that society; the first and fundamental
positive law of all commonwealths is the establishing of the legislative
power; as the first and fundamental natural law, which is to govern
even the legislative itself, is the preservation of the society, and
(as far as will consist with the public good) of every person in it.
This legislative is not only the supreme power of the common-wealth,
but sacred and unalterable in the hands where the community have once
placed it; nor can any edict of any body else, in what form soever conceived,
or by what power soever backed, have the force and obligation of a law,
which has not its sanction from that legislative which the public has
chosen and appointed: for without this the law could not have that,
which is absolutely necessary to its being a law,* the consent of the
society, over whom no body can have a power to make laws, but by their
own consent, and by authority received from them; and therefore all
the obedience, which by the most solemn ties any one can be obliged
to pay, ultimately terminates in this supreme power, and is directed
by those laws which it enacts: nor can any oaths to any foreign power
whatsoever, or any domestic subordinate power, discharge any member
of the society from his obedience to the legislative, acting pursuant
to their trust; nor oblige him to any obedience contrary to the laws
so enacted, or farther than they do allow; it being ridiculous to imagine
one can be tied ultimately to obey any power in the society, which is
not the supreme.
(* The
lawful power of making laws to command whole politic societies of men,
belonging so properly unto the same intire societies, that for any prince
or potentate of what kind soever upon earth, to exercise the same of
himself, and not by express commission immediately and personally received
from God, or else by authority derived at the first from their consent,
upon whose persons they impose laws, it is no better than mere tyranny.
Laws they are not therefore which public approbation hath not made so.
Hooker's Eccl. Pol. l. i. sect. 10. Of this point therefore we are to
note, that sith men naturally have no full and perfect power to command
whole politic multitudes of men, therefore utterly without our consent,
we could in such sort be at no man's commandment living. And to be commanded
we do consent, when that society, whereof we be a part, hath at any
time before consented, without revoking the same after by the like universal
agreement.
Laws therefore
human, of what kind so ever, are available by consent. Ibid.)
Sec. 135.
Though the legislative, whether placed in one or more, whether it be
always in being, or only by intervals, though it be the supreme power
in every common-wealth; yet,
First,
It is not, nor can possibly be absolutely arbitrary over the lives and
fortunes of the people: for it being but the joint power of every member
of the society given up to that person, or assembly, which is legislator;
it can be no more than those persons had in a state of nature before
they entered into society, and gave up to the community: for no body
can transfer to another more power than he has in himself; and no body
has an absolute arbitrary power over himself, or over any other, to
destroy his own life, or take away the life or property of another.
A man, as has been proved, cannot subject himself to the arbitrary power
of another; and having in the state of nature no arbitrary power over
the life, liberty, or possession of another, but only so much as the
law of nature gave him for the preservation of himself, and the rest
of mankind; this is all he cloth, or can give up to the common-wealth,
and by it to the legislative power, so that the legislative can have
no more than this. Their power, in the utmost bounds of it, is limited
to the public good of the society. It is a power, that hath no other
end but preservation, and therefore can never* have a right to destroy,
enslave, or designedly to impoverish the subjects. The obligations of
the law of nature cease not in society, but only in many cases are drawn
closer, and have by human laws known penalties annexed to them, to inforce
their observation. Thus the law of nature stands as an eternal rule
to all men, legislators as well as others. The rules that they make
for other men's actions, must, as well as their own and other men's
actions, be conformable to the law of nature, i.e. to the will of God,
of which that is a declaration, and the fundamental law of nature being
the preservation of mankind, no human sanction can be good, or valid
against it.
(* Two
foundations there are which bear up public societies; the one a natural
inclination, whereby all men desire sociable life and fellowship; the
other an order, expresly or secretly agreed upon, touching the manner
of their union in living together: the latter is that which we call
the law of a commonweal, the very soul of a politic body, the parts
whereof are by law animated, held together, and set on work in such
actions as the common good requireth. Laws politic, ordained for external
order and regiment amongst men, are never framed as they should be,
unless presuming the will of man to be inwardly obstinate, rebellious,
and averse from all obedience to the sacred laws of his nature; in a
word, unless presuming man to be, in regard of his depraved mind, little
better than a wild beast, they do accordingly provide, notwithstanding,
so to frame his outward actions, that they be no hindrance unto the
common good, for which societies are instituted. Unless they do this,
they are not perfect. Hooker's Eccl. Pol. l. i. sect. 10.)
Sec. 136.
Secondly,* The legislative, or supreme authority, cannot assume to its
self a power to rule by extemporary arbitrary decrees, but is bound
to dispense justice, and decide the rights of the subject by promulgated
standing laws, and known authorized judges: for the law of nature being
unwritten, and so no where to be found but in the minds of men, they
who through passion or interest shall miscite, or misapply it, cannot
so easily be convinced of their mistake where there is no established
judge: and so it serves not, as it ought, to determine the rights, and
fence the properties of those that live under it, especially where every
one is judge, interpreter, and executioner of it too, and that in his
own case: and he that has right on his side, having ordinarily but his
own single strength, hath not force enough to defend himself from injuries,
or to punish delinquents. To avoid these inconveniences, which disorder
men's propperties in the state of nature, men unite into societies,
that they may have the united strength of the whole society to secure
and defend their properties, and may have standing rules to bound it,
by which every one may know what is his. To this end it is that men
give up all their natural power to the society which they enter into,
and the community put the legislative power into such hands as they
think fit, with this trust, that they shall be governed by declared
laws, or else their peace, quiet, and property will still be at the
same uncertainty, as it was in the state of nature.
(* Human
laws are measures in respect of men whose actions they must direct,
howbeit such measures they are as have also their higher rules to be
measured by, which rules are two, the law of God, and the law of nature;
so that laws human must be made according to the general laws of nature,
and without contradiction to any positive law of scripture, otherwise
they are ill made. Hooker's Eccl. Pol. l. iii. sect. 9.
To constrain
men to any thing inconvenient cloth seem unreasonable. Ibid. l. i. sect.
10.)
Sec. 137.
Absolute arbitrary power, or governing without settled standing laws,
can neither of them consist with the ends of society and government,
which men would not quit the freedom of the state of nature for, and
tie themselves up under, were it not to preserve their lives, liberties
and fortunes, and by stated rules of right and property to secure their
peace and quiet. It cannot be supposed that they should intend, had
they a power so to do, to give to any one, or more, an absolute arbitrary
power over their persons and estates, and put a force into the magistrate's
hand to execute his unlimited will arbitrarily upon them. This were
to put themselves into a worse condition than the state of nature, wherein
they had a liberty to defend their right against the injuries of others,
and were upon equal terms of force to maintain it, whether invaded by
a single man, or many in combination. Whereas by supposing they have
given up themselves to the absolute arbitrary power and will of a legislator,
they have disarmed themselves, and armed him, to make a prey of them
when he pleases; he being in a much worse condition, who is exposed
to the arbitrary power of one man, who has the command of 100,000, than
he that is exposed to the arbitrary power of 100,000 single men; no
body being secure, that his will, who has such a command, is better
than that of other men, though his force be 100,000 times stronger.
And therefore, whatever form the common-wealth is under, the ruling
power ought to govern by declared and received laws, and not by extemporary
dictates and undetermined resolutions: for then mankind will be in a
far worse condition than in the state of nature, if they shall have
armed one, or a few men with the joint power of a multitude, to force
them to obey at pleasure the exorbitant and unlimited decrees of their
sudden thoughts, or unrestrained, and till that moment unknown wills,
without having any measures set down which may guide and justify their
actions: for all the power the government has, being only for the good
of the society, as it ought not to be arbitrary and at pleasure, so
it ought to be exercised by established and promulgated laws; that both
the people may know their duty, and be safe and secure within the limits
of the law; and the rulers too kept within their bounds, and not be
tempted, by the power they have in their hands, to employ it to such
purposes, and by such measures, as they would not have known, and own
not willingly.
Sec. 138.
Thirdly, The supreme power cannot take from any man any part of his
property without his own consent: for the preservation of property being
the end of government, and that for which men enter into society, it
necessarily supposes and requires, that the people should have property,
without which they must be supposed to lose that, by entering into society,
which was the end for which they entered into it; too gross an absurdity
for any man to own. Men therefore in society having property, they have
such a right to the goods, which by the law of the community are their's,
that no body hath a right to take their substance or any part of it
from them, without their own consent: without this they have no property
at all; for I have truly no property in that, which another can by right
take from me, when he pleases, against my consent. Hence it is a mistake
to think, that the supreme or legislative power of any commonwealth,
can do what it will, and dispose of the estates of the subject arbitrarily,
or take any part of them at pleasure. This is not much to be feared
in governments where the legislative consists, wholly or in part, in
assemblies which are variable, whose members, upon the dissolution of
the assembly, are subjects under the common laws of their country, equally
with the rest. But in governments, where the legislative is in one lasting
assembly always in being, or in one man, as in absolute monarchies,
there is danger still, that they will think themselves to have a distinct
interest from the rest of the community; and so will be apt to increase
their own riches and power, by taking what they think fit from the people:
for a man's property is not at all secure, tho' there be good and equitable
laws to set the bounds of it between him and his fellow subjects, if
he who commands those subjects have power to take from any private man,
what part he pleases of his property, and use and dispose of it as he
thinks good.
Sec. 139.
But government, into whatsoever hands it is put, being, as I have before
shewed, intrusted with this condition, and for this end, that men might
have and secure their properties; the prince, or senate, however it
may have power to make laws, for the regulating of property between
the subjects one amongst another, yet can never have a power to take
to themselves the whole, or any part of the subjects property, without
their own consent: for this would be in effect to leave them no property
at all. And to let us see, that even absolute power, where it is necessary,
is not arbitrary by being absolute, but is still limited by that reason,
and confined to those ends, which required it in some cases to be absolute,
we need look no farther than the common practice of martial discipline:
for the preservation of the army, and in it of the whole common-wealth,
requires an absolute obedience to the command of every superior officer,
and it is justly death to disobey or dispute the most dangerous or unreasonable
of them; but yet we see, that neither the serjeant, that could command
a soldier to march up to the mouth of a cannon, or stand in a breach,
where he is almost sure to perish, can command that soldier to give
him one penny of his money; nor the general, that can condemn him to
death for deserting his post, or for not obeying the most desperate
orders, can yet, with all his absolute power of life and death, dispose
of one farthing of that soldier's estate, or seize one jot of his goods;
whom yet he can command any thing, and hang for the least disobedience;
because such a blind obedience is necessary to that end, for which the
commander has his power, viz. the preservation of the rest; but the
disposing of his goods has nothing to do with it.
Sec. 140.
It is true, governments cannot be supported without great charge, and
it is fit every one who enjoys his share of the protection, should pay
out of his estate his proportion for the maintenance of it. But still
it must be with his own consent, i.e. the consent of the majority, giving
it either by themselves, or their representatives chosen by them: for
if any one shall claim a power to lay and levy taxes on the people,
by his own authority, and without such consent of the people, he thereby
invades the fundamental law of property, and subverts the end of government:
for what property have I in that, which another may by right take, when
he pleases, to himself?
Sec. 141.
Fourthly, The legislative cannot transfer the power of making laws to
any other hands: for it being but a delegated power from the people,
they who have it cannot pass it over to others. The people alone can
appoint the form of the common-wealth, which is by constituting the
legislative, and appointing in whose hands that shall be. And when the
people have said, We will submit to rules, and be governed by laws made
by such men, and in such forms, no body else can say other men shall
make laws for them; nor can the people be bound by any laws, but such
as are enacted by those whom they have chosen, and authorized to make
laws for them. The power of the legislative, being derived from the
people by a positive voluntary grant and institution, can be no other
than what that positive grant conveyed, which being only to make laws,
and not to make legislators, the legislative can have no power to transfer
their authority of making laws, and place it in other hands.
Sec. 142.
These are the bounds which the trust, that is put in them by the society,
and the law of God and nature, have set to the legislative power of
every common-wealth, in all forms of government.
First,
They are to govern by promulgated established laws, not to be varied
in particular cases, but to have one rule for rich and poor, for the
favourite at court, and the country man at plough.
Secondly,
These laws also ought to be designed for no other end ultimately, but
the good of the people.
Thirdly,
They must not raise taxes on the property of the people, without the
consent of the people, given by themselves, or their deputies. And this
properly concerns only such governments where the legislative is always
in being, or at least where the people have not reserved any part of
the legislative to deputies, to be from time to time chosen by themselves.
Fourthly,
The legislative neither must nor can transfer the power of making laws
to any body else, or place it any where, but where the people have.
CHAP. XII.
Of the
Legislative, Executive, and Federative Power of the Common-wealth.
Sec. 143.
THE legislative power is that, which has a right to direct how the force
of the common-wealth shall be employed for preserving the community
and the members of it. But because those laws which are constantly to
be executed, and whose force is always to continue, may be made in a
little time; therefore there is no need, that the legislative should
be always in being, not having always business to do. And because it
may be too great a temptation to human frailty, apt to grasp at power,
for the same persons, who have the power of making laws, to have also
in their hands the power to execute them, whereby they may exempt themselves
from obedience to the laws they make, and suit the law, both in its
making, and execution, to their own private advantage, and thereby come
to have a distinct interest from the rest of the community, contrary
to the end of society and government: therefore in well ordered commonwealths,
where the good of the whole is so con sidered, as it ought, the legislative
power is put into the hands of divers persons, who duly assembled, have
by themselves, or jointly with others, a power to make laws, which when
they have done, being separated again, they are themselves subject to
the laws they have made; which is a new and near tie upon them, to take
care, that they make them for the public good.
Sec. 144.
But because the laws, that are at once, and in a short time made, have
a constant and lasting force, and need a perpetual execution, or an
attendance thereunto; therefore it is necessary there should be a power
always in being, which should see to the execution of the laws that
are made, and remain in force. And thus the legislative and executive
power come often to be separated.
Sec. 145.
There is another power in every common-wealth, which one may call natural,
because it is that which answers to the power every man naturally had
before he entered into society: for though in a common-wealth the members
of it are distinct persons still in reference to one another, and as
such as governed by the laws of the society; yet in reference to the
rest of mankind, they make one body, which is, as every member of it
before was, still in the state of nature with the rest of mankind. Hence
it is, that the controversies that happen between any man of the society
with those that are out of it, are managed by the public; and an injury
done to a member of their body, engages the whole in the reparation
of it. So that under this consideration, the whole community is one
body in the state of nature, in respect of all other states or persons
out of its community.
Sec. 146.
This therefore contains the power of war and peace, leagues and alliances,
and all the transactions, with all persons and communities without the
common-wealth, and may be called federative, if any one pleases. So
the thing be understood, I am indifferent as to the name.
Sec. 147.
These two powers, executive and federative, though they be really distinct
in themselves, yet one comprehending the execution of the municipal
laws of the society within its self, upon all that are parts of it;
the other the management of the security and interest of the public
without, with all those that it may receive benefit or damage from,
yet they are always almost united. And though this federative power
in the well or ill management of it be of great moment to the common-wealth,
yet it is much less capable to be directed by antecedent, standing,
positive laws, than the executive; and so must necessarily be left to
the prudence and wisdom of those, whose hands it is in, to be managed
for the public good: for the laws that concern subjects one amongst
another, being to direct their actions, may well enough precede them.
But what is to be done in reference to foreigners, depending much upon
their actions, and the variation of designs and interests, must be left
in great part to the prudence of those, who have this power committed
to them, to be managed by the best of their skill, for the advantage
of the common-wealth.
Sec. 148.
Though, as I said, the executive and federative power of every community
be really distinct in themselves, yet they are hardly to be separated,
and placed at the same time, in the hands of distinct persons: for both
of them requiring the force of the society for their exercise, it is
almost impracticable to place the force of the common-wealth in distinct,
and not subordinate hands; or that the executive and federative power
should be placed in persons, that might act separately, whereby the
force of the public would be under different commands: which would be
apt some time or other to cause disorder and ruin.
CHAP. XIII.
Of the
Subordination of the Powers of the Common-wealth.
Sec. 149.
THOUGH in a constituted common-wealth, standing upon its own basis,
and acting according to its own nature, that is, acting for the preservation
of the community, there can be but one supreme power, which is the legislative,
to which all the rest are and must be subordinate, yet the legislative
being only a fiduciary power to act for certain ends, there remains
still in the people a supreme power to remove or alter the legislative,
when they find the legislative act contrary to the trust reposed in
them: for all power given with trust for the attaining an end, being
limited by that end, whenever that end is manifestly neglected, or opposed,
the trust must necessarily be forfeited, and the power devolve into
the hands of those that gave it, who may place it anew where they shall
think best for their safety and security. And thus the community perpetually
retains a supreme power of saving themselves from the attempts and designs
of any body, even of their legislators, whenever they shall be so foolish,
or so wicked, as to lay and carry on designs against the liberties and
properties of the subject: for no man or society of men, having a power
to deliver up their preservation, or consequently the means of it, to
the absolute will and arbitrary dominion of another; when ever any one
shall go about to bring them into such a slavish condition, they will
always have a right to preserve, what they have not a power to part
with; and to rid themselves of those, who invade this fundamental, sacred,
and unalterable law of self-preservation, for which they entered into
society. And thus the community may be said in this respect to be always
the supreme power, but not as considered under any form of government,
because this power of the people can never take place till the government
be dissolved.
Sec. 150.
In all cases, whilst the government subsists, the legislative is the
supreme power: for what can give laws to another, must needs be superior
to him; and since the legislative is no otherwise legislative of the
society, but by the right it has to make laws for all the parts, and
for every member of the society, prescribing rules to their actions,
and giving power of execution, where they are transgressed, the legislative
must needs be the supreme, and all other powers, in any members or parts
of the society, derived from and subordinate to it.
Sec. 151.
In some commonwealths, where the legislative is not always in being,
and the executive is vested in a single person, who has also a share
in the legislative; there that single person in a very tolerable sense
may also be called supreme: not that he has in himself all the supreme
power, which is that of law-making; but because he has in him the supreme
execution, from whom all inferior magistrates derive all their several
subordinate powers, or at least the greatest part of them: having also
no legislative superior to him, there being no law to be made without
his consent, which cannot be expected should ever subject him to the
other part of the legislative, he is properly enough in this sense supreme.
But yet it is to be observed, that tho' oaths of allegiance and fealty
are taken to him, it is not to him as supreme legislator, but as supreme
executor of the law, made by a joint power of him with others; allegiance
being nothing but an obedience according to law, which when he violates,
he has no right to obedience, nor can claim it otherwise than as the
public person vested with the power of the law, and so is to be considered
as the image, phantom, or representative of the common-wealth, acted
by the will of the society, declared in its laws; and thus he has no
will, no power, but that of the law. But when he quits this representation,
this public will, and acts by his own private will, he degrades himself,
and is but a single private person without power, and without will,
that has any right to obedience; the members owing no obedience but
to the public will of the society.
Sec. 152.
The executive power, placed any where but in a person that has also
a share in the legislative, is visibly subordinate and accountable to
it, and may be at pleasure changed and displaced; so that it is not
the supreme executive power, that is exempt from subordination, but
the supreme executive power vested in one, who having a share in the
legislative, has no distinct superior legislative to be subordinate
and accountable to, farther than he himself shall join and consent;
so that he is no more subordinate than he himself shall think fit, which
one may certainly conclude will be but very little. Of other ministerial
and subordinate powers in a commonwealth, we need not speak, they being
so multiplied with infinite variety, in the different customs and constitutions
of distinct commonwealths, that it is impossible to give a particular
account of them all. Only thus much, which is necessary to our present
purpose, we may take notice of concerning them, that they have no manner
of authority, any of them, beyond what is by positive grant and commission
delegated to them, and are all of them accountable to some other power
in the common-wealth.
Sec. 153.
It is not necessary, no, nor so much as convenient, that the legislative
should be always in being; but absolutely necessary that the executive
power should, because there is not always need of new laws to be made,
but always need of execution of the laws that are made. When the legislative
hath put the execution of the laws, they make, into other hands, they
have a power still to resume it out of those hands, when they find cause,
and to punish for any maladministration against the laws. The same holds
also in regard of the federative power, that and the executive being
both ministerial and subordinate to the legislative, which, as has been
shewed, in a constituted common-wealth is the supreme. The legislative
also in this case being supposed to consist of several persons, (for
if it be a single person, it cannot but be always in being, and so will,
as supreme, naturally have the supreme executive power, together with
the legislative) may assemble, and exercise their legislature, at the
times that either their original constitution, or their own adjournment,
appoints, or when they please; if neither of these hath appointed any
time, or there be no other way prescribed to convoke them: for the supreme
power being placed in them by the people, it is always in them, and
they may exercise it when they please, unless by their original constitution
they are limited to certain seasons, or by an act of their supreme power
they have adjourned to a certain time; and when that time comes, they
have a right to assemble and act again.
Sec. 154.
If the legislative, or any part of it, be made up of representatives
chosen for that time by the people, which afterwards return into the
ordinary state of subjects, and have no share in the legislature but
upon a new choice, this power of chusing must also be exercised by the
people, either at certain appointed seasons, or else when they are summoned
to it; and in this latter case ' the power of convoking the legislative
is ordinarily placed in the executive, and has one of these two limitations
in respect of time: that either the original constitution requires their
assembling and acting at certain intervals, and then the executive power
does nothing but ministerially issue directions for their electing and
assembling, according to due forms; or else it is left to his prudence
to call them by new elections, when the occasions or exigencies of the
public require the amendment of old, or making of new laws, or the redress
or prevention of any inconveniencies, that lie on, or threaten the people.
Sec. 155.
It may be demanded here, What if the executive power, being possessed
of the force of the common-wealth, shall make use of that force to hinder
the meeting and acting of the legislative, when the original constitution,
or the public exigencies require it? I say, using force upon the people
without authority, and contrary to the trust put in him that does so,
is a state of war with the people, who have a right to reinstate their
legislative in the exercise of their power: for having erected a legislative,
with an intent they should exercise the power of making laws, either
at certain set times, or when there is need of it, when they are hindered
by any force from what is so necessary to the society, and wherein the
safety and preservation of the people consists, the people have a right
to remove it by force. In all states and conditions, the true remedy
of force without authority, is to oppose force to it. The use of force
without authority, always puts him that uses it into a state of war,
as the aggressor, and renders him liable to be treated accordingly.
Sec. 156.
The power of assembling and dismissing the legislative, placed in the
executive, gives not the executive a superiority over it, but is a fiduciary
trust placed in him, for the safety of the people, in a case where the
uncertainty and variableness of human affairs could not bear a steady
fixed rule: for it not being possible, that the first framers of the
government should, by any foresight, be so much masters of future events,
as to be able to prefix so just periods of return and duration to the
assemblies of the legislative, in all times to come, that might exactly
answer all the exigencies of the commonwealth; the best remedy could
be found for this defect, was to trust this to the prudence of one who
was always to be present, and whose business it was to watch over the
public good. Constant frequent meetings of the legislative, and long
continuations of their assemblies, without necessary occasion, could
not but be burdensome to the people, and must necessarily in time produce
more dangerous inconveniencies, and yet the quick turn of affairs might
be sometimes such as to need their present help: any delay of their
convening might endanger the public; and sometimes too their business
might be so great, that the limited time of their sitting might be too
short for their work, and rob the public of that benefit which could
be had only from their mature deliberation. What then could be done
in this case to prevent the community from being exposed some time or
other to eminent hazard, on one side or the other, by fixed intervals
and periods, set to the meeting and acting of the legislative, but to
intrust it to the prudence of some, who being present, and acquainted
with the state of public affairs, might make use of this prerogative
for the public good? and where else could this be so well placed as
in his hands, who was intrusted with the execution of the laws for the
same end? Thus supposing the regulation of times for the assembling
and sitting of the legislative, not settled by the original constitution,
it naturally fell into the hands of the executive, not as an arbitrary
power depending on his good pleasure, but with this trust always to
have it exercised only for the public weal, as the occurrences of times
and change of affairs might require. Whether settled periods of their
convening, or a liberty left to the prince for convoking the legislative,
or perhaps a mixture of both, hath the least inconvenience attending
it, it is not my business here to inquire, but only to shew, that though
the executive power may have the prerogative of convoking and dissolving
such conventions of the legislative, yet it is not thereby superior
to it.
Sec. 157.
Things of this world are in so constant a flux, that nothing remains
long in the same state. Thus people, riches, trade, power, change their
stations, flourishing mighty cities come to ruin, and prove in times
neglected desolate corners, whilst other unfrequented places grow into
populous countries, filled with wealth and inhabitants. But things not
always changing equally, and private interest often keeping up customs
and privileges, when the reasons of them are ceased, it often comes
to pass, that in governments, where part of the legislative consists
of representatives chosen by the people, that in tract of time this
representation becomes very unequal and disproportionate to the reasons
it was at first established upon. To what gross absurdities the following
of custom, when reason has left it, may lead, we may be satisfied, when
we see the bare name of a town, of which there remains not so much as
the ruins, where scarce so much housing as a sheepcote, or more inhabitants
than a shepherd is to be found, sends as many representatives to the
grand assembly of law-makers, as a whole county numerous in people,
and powerful in riches. This strangers stand amazed at, and every one
must confess needs a remedy; tho' most think it hard to find one, because
the constitution of the legislative being the original and supreme act
of the society, antecedent to all positive laws in it, and depending
wholly on the people, no inferior power can alter it. And therefore
the people, when the legislative is once constituted, having, in such
a government as we have been speaking of, no power to act as long as
the government stands; this inconvenience is thought incapable of a
remedy.
Sec. 158.
Salus populi suprema lex, is certainly so just and fundamental a rule,
that he, who sincerely follows it, cannot dangerously err. If therefore
the executive, who has the power of convoking the legislative, observing
rather the true proportion, than fashion of representation, regulates,
not by old custom, but true reason, the number of members, in all places
that have a right to be distinctly represented, which no part of the
people however incorporated can pretend to, but in proportion to the
assistance which it affords to the public, it cannot be judged to have
set up a new legislative, but to have restored the old and true one,
and to have rectified the disorders which succession of time had insensibly,
as well as inevitably introduced: For it being the interest as well
as intention of the people, to have a fair and equal representative;
whoever brings it nearest to that, is an undoubted friend to, and establisher
of the government, and cannot miss the consent and approbation of the
community; prerogative being nothing but a power, in the hands of the
prince, to provide for the public good, in such cases, which depending
upon unforeseen and uncertain occurrences, certain and unalterable laws
could not safely direct; whatsoever shall be done manifestly for the
good of the people, and the establishing the government upon its true
foundations, is, and always will be, just prerogative, The power of
erecting new corporations, and therewith new representatives, carries
with it a supposition, that in time the measures of representation might
vary, and those places have a just right to be represented which before
had none; and by the same reason, those cease to have a right, and be
too inconsiderable for such a privilege, which before had it. 'Tis not
a change from the present state, which perhaps corruption or decay has
introduced, that makes an inroad upon the government, but the tendency
of it to injure or oppress the people, and to set up one part or party,
with a distinction from, and an unequal subjection of the rest. Whatsoever
cannot but be acknowledged to be of advantage to the society, and people
in general, upon just and lasting measures, will always, when done,
justify itself; and whenever the people shall chuse their representatives
upon just and undeniably equal measures, suitable to the original frame
of the government, it cannot be doubted to be the will and act of the
society, whoever permitted or caused them so to do.
CHAP. XIV.
Of Prerogative.
Sec. 159.
WHERE the legislative and executive power are in distinct hands, (as
they are in all moderated monarchies, and well-framed governments) there
the good of the society requires, that several things should be left
to the discretion of him that has the executive power: for the legislators
not being able to foresee, and provide by laws, for all that may be
useful to the community, the executor of the laws having the power in
his hands, has by the common law of nature a right to make use of it
for the good of the society, in many cases, where the municipal law
has given no direction, till the legislative can conveniently be assembled
to provide for it. Many things there are, which the law can by no means
provide for; and those must necessarily be left to the discretion of
him that has the executive power in his hands, to be ordered by him
as the public good and advantage shall require: nay, it is fit that
the laws themselves should in some cases give way to the executive power,
or rather to this fundamental law of nature and government, viz. That
as much as may be, all the members of the society are to be preserved:
for since many accidents may happen, wherein a strict and rigid observation
of the laws may do harm; (as not to pull down an innocent man's house
to stop the fire, when the next to it is burning) and a man may come
sometimes within the reach of the law, which makes no distinction of
persons, by an action that may deserve reward and pardon; 'tis fit the
ruler should have a power, in many cases, to mitigate the severity of
the law, and pardon some offenders: for the end of government being
the preservation of all, as much as may be, even the guilty are to be
spared, where it can prove no prejudice to the innocent.
Sec. 160.
This power to act according to discretion, for the public good, without
the prescription of the law, and sometimes even against it, is that
which is called prerogative: for since in some governments the lawmaking
power is not always in being, and is usually too numerous, and so too
slow, for the dispatch requisite to execution; and because also it is
impossible to foresee, and so by laws to provide for, all accidents
and necessities that may concern the public, or to make such laws as
will do no harm, if they are executed with an inflexible rigour, on
all occasions, and upon all persons that may come in their way; therefore
there is a latitude left to the executive power, to do many things of
choice which the laws do not prescribe.
Sec. 161.
This power, whilst employed for the benefit of the community, and suitably
to the trust and ends of the government, is undoubted prerogative, and
never is questioned: for the people are very seldom or never scrupulous
or nice in the point; they are far from examining prerogative, whilst
it is in any tolerable degree employed for the use it was meant, that
is, for the good of the people, and not manifestly against it: but if
there comes to be a question between the executive power and the people,
about a thing claimed as a prerogative; the tendency of the exercise
of such prerogative to the good or hurt of the people, will easily decide
that question.
Sec. 162.
It is easy to conceive, that in the infancy of governments, when commonwealths
differed little from families in number of people, they differed from
them too but little in number of laws: and the governors, being as the
fathers of them, watching over them for their good, the government was
almost all prerogative. A few established laws served the turn, and
the discretion and care of the ruler supplied the rest. But when mistake
or flattery prevailed with weak princes to make use of this power for
private ends of their own, and not for the public good, the people were
fain by express laws to get prerogative determined in those points wherein
they found disadvantage from it: and thus declared limitations of prerogative
were by the people found necessary in cases which they and their ancestors
had left, in the utmost latitude, to the wisdom of those princes who
made no other but a right use of it, that is, for the good of their
people.
Sec. 163.
And therefore they have a very wrong notion of government, who say,
that the people have encroached upon the prerogative, when they have
got any part of it to be defined by positive laws: for in so doing they
have not pulled from the prince any thing that of right belonged to
him, but only declared, that that power which they indefinitely left
in his or his ancestors hands, to be exercised for their good, was not
a thing which they intended him when he used it otherwise: for the end
of government being the good of the community, whatsoever alterations
are made in it, tending to that end, cannot be an encroachment upon
any body, since no body in government can have a right tending to any
other end: and those only are encroachments which prejudice or hinder
the public good. Those who say otherwise, speak as if the prince had
a distinct and separate interest from the good of the community, and
was not made for it; the root and source from which spring almost all
those evils and disorders which happen in kingly governments. And indeed,
if that be so, the people under his government are not a society of
rational creatures, entered into a community for their mutual good;
they are not such as have set rulers over themselves, to guard, and
promote that good; but are to be looked on as an herd of inferior creatures
under the dominion of a master, who keeps them and works them for his
own pleasure or profit. If men were so void of reason, and brutish,
as to enter into society upon such terms, prerogative might indeed be,
what some men would have it, an arbitrary power to do things hurtful
to the people.
Sec. 164.
But since a rational creature cannot be supposed, when free, to put
himself into subjection to another, for his own harm; (though, where
he finds a good and wise ruler, he may not perhaps think it either necessary
or useful to set precise bounds to his power in all things) prerogative
can be nothing but the people's permitting their rulers to do several
things, of their own free choice, where the law was silent, and sometimes
too against the direct letter of the law, for the public good; and their
acquiescing in it when so done: for as a good prince, who is mindful
of the trust put into his hands, and careful of the good of his people,
cannot have too much prerogative, that is, power to do good; so a weak
and ill prince, who would claim that power which his predecessors exercised
without the direction of the law, as a prerogative belonging to him
by right of his office, which he may exercise at his pleasure, to make
or promote an interest distinct from that of the public, gives the people
an occasion to claim their right, and limit that power, which, whilst
it was exercised for their good, they were content should be tacitly
allowed. Sec. 165. And therefore he that will look into the history
of England, will find, that prerogative was always largest in the hands
of our wisest and best princes; because the people, observing the whole
tendency of their actions to be the public good, contested not what
was done without law to that end: or, if any human frailty or mistake
(for princes are but men, made as others) appeared in some small declinations
from that end; yet 'twas visible, the main of their conduct tended to
nothing but the care of the public. The people therefore, finding reason
to be satisfied with these princes, whenever they acted without, or
contrary to the letter of the law, acquiesced in what they did, and,
without the least complaint, let them inlarge their prerogative as they
pleased, judging rightly, that they did nothing herein to the prejudice
of their laws, since they acted conformable to the foundation and end
of all laws, the public good.
Sec. 166.
Such god-like princes indeed had some title to arbitrary power by that
argument, that would prove absolute monarchy the best government, as
that which God himself governs the universe by; because such kings partake
of his wisdom and goodness. Upon this is founded that saying, That the
reigns of good princes have been always most dangerous to the liberties
of their people: for when their successors, managing the government
with different thoughts, would draw the actions of those good rulers
into precedent, and make them the standard of their prerogative, as
if what had been done only for the good of the people was a right in
them to do, for the harm of the people, if they so pleased; it has often
occasioned contest, and sometimes public disorders, before the people
could recover their original right, and get that to be declared not
to be prerogative, which truly was never so; since it is impossible
that any body in the society should ever have a right to do the people
harm; though it be very possible, and reasonable, that the people should
not go about to set any bounds to the prerogative of those kings, or
rulers, who themselves transgressed not the bounds of the public good:
for prerogative is nothing but the power of doing public good without
a rule.
Sec. 167.
The power of calling parliaments in England, as to precise time, place,
and duration, is certainly a prerogative of the king, but still with
this trust, that it shall be made use of for the good of the nation,
as the exigencies of the times, and variety of occasions, shall require:
for it being impossible to foresee which should always be the fittest
place for them to assemble in, and what the best season; the choice
of these was left with the executive power, as might be most subservient
to the public good, and best suit the ends of parliaments.
Sec. 168.
The old question will be asked in this matter of prerogative, But who
shall be judge when this power is made a right use of ? 1 answer: between
an executive power in being, with such a prerogative, and a legislative
that depends upon his will for their convening, there can be no judge
on earth; as there can be none between the legislative and the people,
should either the executive, or the legislative, when they have got
the power in their hands, design, or go about to enslave or destroy
them. The people have no other remedy in this, as in all other cases
where they have no judge on earth, but to appeal to heaven: for the
rulers, in such attempts, exercising a power the people never put into
their hands, (who can never be supposed to consent that any body should
rule over them for their harm) do that which they have not a right to
do. And where the body of the people, or any single man, is deprived
of their right, or is under the exercise of a power without right, and
have no appeal on earth, then they have a liberty to appeal to heaven,
whenever they judge the cause of sufficient moment. And therefore, though
the people cannot be judge, so as to have, by the constitution of that
society, any superior power, to determine and give effective sentence
in the case; yet they have, by a law antecedent and paramount to all
positive laws of men, reserved that ultimate determination to themselves
which belongs to all mankind, where there lies no appeal on earth, viz.
to judge, whether they have just cause to make their appeal to heaven.
And this judgment they cannot part with, it being out of a man's power
so to submit himself to another, as to give him a liberty to destroy
him; God and nature never allowing a man so to abandon himself, as to
neglect his own preservation: and since he cannot take away his own
life, neither can he give another power to take it. Nor let any one
think, this lays a perpetual foundation for disorder; for this operates
not, till the inconveniency is so great, that the majority feel it,
and are weary of it, and find a necessity to have it amended. But this
the executive power, or wise princes, never need come in the danger
of: and it is the thing, of all others, they have most need to avoid,
as of all others the most perilous.
CHAP. XV.
Of Paternal,
Political, and Despotical Power, considered together.
Sec. 169.
THOUGH I have had occasion to speak of these separately before, yet
the great mistakes of late about government, having, as I suppose, arisen
from confounding these distinct powers one with another, it may not,
perhaps, be amiss to consider them here together.
Sec. 170.
First, then, Paternal or parental power is nothing but that which parents
have over their children, to govern them for the children's good, till
they come to the use of reason, or a state of knowledge, wherein they
may be supposed capable to understand that rule, whether it be the law
of nature, or the municipal law of their country, they are to govern
themselves by: capable, I say, to know it, as well as several others,
who live as freemen under that law. The affection and tenderness which
God hath planted in the breast of parents towards their children, makes
it evident, that this is not intended to be a severe arbitrary government,
but only for the help, instruction, and preservation of their offspring.
But happen it as it will, there is, as I have proved, no reason why
it should be thought to extend to life and death, at any time, over
their children, more than over any body else; neither can there be any
pretence why this parental power should keep the child, when grown to
a man, in subjection to the will of his parents, any farther than having
received life and education from his parents, obliges him to respect,
honour, gratitude, assistance and support, all his life, to both father
and mother. And thus, 'tis true, the paternal is a natural government,
but not at all extending itself to the ends and jurisdictions of that
which is political. The power of the father doth not reach at all to
the property of the child, which is only in his own disposing.
Sec. 171.
Secondly, Political power is that power, which every man having in the
state of nature, has given up into the hands of the society, and therein
to the governors, whom the society hath set over itself, with this express
or tacit trust, that it shall be employed for their good, and the preservation
of their property: now this power, which every man has in the state
of nature, and which he parts with to the society in all such cases
where the society can secure him, is to use such means, for the preserving
of his own property, as he thinks good, and nature allows him; and to
punish the breach of the law of nature in others, so as (according to
the best of his reason) may most conduce to the preservation of himself,
and the rest of mankind. So that the end and measure of this power,
when in every man's hands in the state of nature, being the preservation
of all of his society, that is, all mankind in general, it can have
no other end or measure, when in the hands of the magistrate, but to
preserve the members of that society in their lives, liberties, and
possessions; and so cannot be an absolute, arbitrary power over their
lives and fortunes, which are as much as possible to be preserved; but
a power to make laws, and annex such penalties to them, as may tend
to the preservation of the whole, by cutting off those parts, and those
only, which are so corrupt, that they threaten the sound and healthy,
without which no severity is lawful. And this power has its original
only from compact and agreement, and the mutual consent of those who
make up the community.
Sec. 172.
Thirdly, Despotical power is an absolute, arbitrary power one man has
over another, to take away his life, whenever he pleases. This is a
power, which neither nature gives, for it has made no such distinction
between one man and another; nor compact can convey: for man not having
such an arbitrary power over his own life, cannot give another man such
a power over it; but it is the effect only of forfeiture, which the
aggressor makes of his own life, when he puts himself into the state
of war with another: for having quitted reason, which God hath given
to be the rule betwixt man and man, and the common bond whereby human
kind is united into one fellowship and society; and having renounced
the way of peace which that teaches, and made use of the force of war,
to compass his unjust ends upon another, where he has no right; and
so revolting from his own kind to that of beasts, by making force, which
is their's, to be his rule of right, he renders himself liable to be
destroyed by the injured person, and the rest of mankind, that will
join with him in the execution of justice, as any other wild beast,
or noxious brute, with whom mankind can have neither society nor security*.
And thus captives, taken in a just and lawful war, and such only, are
subject to a despotical power, which, as it arises not from compact,
so neither is it capable of any, but is the state of war continued:
for what compact can be made with a man that is not master of his own
life? what condition can he perform? and if he be once allowed to be
master of his own life, the despotical, arbitrary power of his master
ceases. He that is master of himself, and his own life, has a right
too to the means of preserving it; so that as soon as compact enters,
slavery ceases, and he so far quits his absolute power, and puts an
end to the state of war, who enters into conditions with his captive.
(* Another
copy corrected by Mr. Locke, has it thus, Noxious brute that is destructive
to their being.)
Sec. 173.
Nature gives the first of these, viz. paternal power to parents for
the benefit of their children during their minority, to supply their
want of ability, and understanding how to manage their property. (By
property I must be understood here, as in other places, to mean that
property which men have in their persons as well as goods.) Voluntary
agreement gives the second, viz. political power to governors for the
benefit of their subjects, to secure them in the possession and use
of their properties. And forfeiture gives the third despotical power
to lords for their own benefit, over those who are stripped of all property.
Sec. 174.
He, that shall consider the distinct rise and extent, and the different
ends of these several powers, will plainly see, that paternal power
comes as far short of that of the magistrate, as despotical exceeds
it; and that absolute dominion, however placed, is so far from being
one kind of civil society, that it is as inconsistent with it, as slavery
is with property. Paternal power is only where minority makes the child
incapable to manage his property; political, where men have property
in their own disposal; and despotical, over such as have no property
at all.
CHAP. XVI.
Of Conquest.
Sec. 175.
THOUGH governments can originally have no other rise than that before
mentioned, nor polities be founded on any thing but the consent of the
people; yet such have been the disorders ambition has filled the world
with, that in the noise of war, which makes so great a part of the history
of mankind, this consent is little taken notice of: and therefore many
have mistaken the force of arms for the consent of the people, and reckon
conquest as one of the originals of government. But conquest is as far
from setting up any government, as demolishing an house is from building
a new one in the place. Indeed, it often makes way for a new frame of
a common-wealth, by destroying the former; but, without the consent
of the people, can never erect a new one.
Sec. 176.
That the aggressor, who puts himself into the state of war with another,
and unjustly invades another man's right, can, by such an unjust war,
never come to have a right over the conquered, will be easily agreed
by all men, who will not think, that robbers and pyrates have a right
of empire over whomsoever they have force enough to master; or that
men are bound by promises, which unlawful force extorts from them. Should
a robber break into my house, and with a dagger at my throat make me
seal deeds to convey my estate to him, would this give him any title?
Just such a title, by his sword, has an unjust conqueror, who forces
me into submission. The injury and the crime is equal, whether committed
by the wearer of a crown, or some petty villain. The title of the offender,
and the number of his followers, make no difference in the offence,
unless it be to aggravate it. The only difference is, great robbers
punish little ones, to keep them in their obedience; but the great ones
are rewarded with laurels and triumphs, because they are too big for
the weak hands of justice in this world, and have the power in their
own possession, which should punish offenders. What is my remedy against
a robber, that so broke into my house? Appeal to the law for justice.
But perhaps justice is denied, or I am crippled and cannot stir, robbed
and have not the means to do it. If God has taken away all means of
seeking remedy, there is nothing left but patience. But my son, when
able, may seek the relief of the law, which I am denied: he or his son
may renew his appeal, till he recover his right. But the conquered,
or their children, have no court, no arbitrator on earth to appeal to.
Then they may appeal, as lephtha did, to heaven, and repeat their appeal
till they have recovered the native right of their ancestors, which
was, to have such a legislative over them, as the majority should approve,
and freely acquiesce in. If it be objected, This would cause endless
trouble; I answer, no more than justice does, where she lies open to
all that appeal to her. He that troubles his neighbour without a cause,
is punished for it by the justice of the court he appeals to: and he
that appeals to heaven must be sure he has right on his side; and a
right too that is worth the trouble and cost of the appeal, as he will
answer at a tribunal that cannot be deceived, and will be sure to retribute
to every one according to the mischiefs he hath created to his fellow
subjects; that is, any part of mankind: from whence it is plain, that
he that conquers in an unjust war can thereby have no title to the subjection
and obedience of the conquered.
Sec. 177.
But supposing victory favours the right side, let us consider a conqueror
in a lawful war, and see what power he gets, and over whom.
First,
It is plain he gets no power by his conquest over those that conquered
with him. They that fought on his side cannot suffer by the conquest,
but must at least be as much freemen as they were before. And most commonly
they serve upon terms, and on condition to share with their leader,
and enjoy a part of the spoil, and other advantages that attend the
conquering sword; or at least have a part of the subdued country bestowed
upon them. And the conquering people are not, I hope, to be slaves by
conquest, and wear their laurels only to shew they are sacrifices to
their leaders triumph. They that found absolute monarchy upon the title
of the sword, make their heroes, who are the founders of such monarchies,
arrant Draw-can-sirs, and forget they had any officers and soldiers
that fought on their side in the battles they won, or assisted them
in the subduing, or shared in possessing, the countries they mastered.
We are told by some, that the English monarchy is founded in the Norman
conquest, and that our princes have thereby a title to absolute dominion:
which if it were true, (as by the history it appears otherwise) and
that William had a right to make war on this island; yet his dominion
by conquest could reach no farther than to the Saxons and Britons, that
were then inhabitants of this country. The Normans that came with him,
and helped to conquer, and all descended from them, are freemen, and
no subjects by conquest; let that give what dominion it will. And if
1, or any body else, shall claim freedom, as derived from them, it will
be very hard to prove the contrary: and it is plain, the law, that has
made no distinction between the one and the other, intends not there
should be any difference in their freedom or privileges.
Sec. 178.
But supposing, which seldom happens, that the conquerors and conquered
never incorporate into one people, under the same laws and freedom;
let us see next what power a lawful conqueror has over the subdued:
and that I say is purely despotical. He has an absolute power over the
lives of those who by an unjust war have forfeited them; but not over
the lives or fortunes of those who engaged not in the war, nor over
the possessions even of those who were actually engaged in it.
Sec. 179.
Secondly, I say then the conqueror gets no power but only over those
who have actually assisted, concurred, or consented to that unjust force
that is used against him: for the people having given to their governors
no power to do an unjust thing, such as is to make an unjust war, (for
they never had such a power in themselves) they ought not to be charged
as guilty of the violence and unjustice that is committed in an unjust
war, any farther than they actually abet it; no more than they are to
be thought guilty of any violence or oppression their governors should
use upon the people themselves, or any part of their fellow subjects,
they having empowered them no more to the one than to the other. Conquerors,
it is true, seldom trouble themselves to make the distinction, but they
willingly permit the confusion of war to sweep all together: but yet
this alters not the right; for the conquerors power over the lives of
the conquered, being only because they have used force to do, or maintain
an injustice, he can have that power only over those who have concurred
in that force; all the rest are innocent; and he has no more title over
the people of that country, who have done him no injury, and so have
made no forfeiture of their lives, than he has over any other, who,
without any injuries or provocations, have lived upon fair terms with
him.
Sec. 180.
Thirdly, The power a conqueror gets over those he overcomes in a just
war, is perfectly despotical: he has an absolute power over the lives
of those, who, by putting themselves in a state of war, have forfeited
them; but he has not thereby a right and title to their possessions.
This I doubt not, but at first sight will seem a strange doctrine, it
being so quite contrary to the practice of the world; there being nothing
more familiar in speaking of the dominion of countries, than to say
such an one conquered it; as if conquest, without any more ado, conveyed
a right of possession. But when we consider, that the practice of the
strong and powerful, how universal soever it may be, is seldom the rule
of right, however it be one part of the subjection of the conquered,
not to argue against the conditions cut out to them by the conquering
sword.
Sec. 181.
Though in all war there be usually a complication of force and damage,
and the aggressor seldom fails to harm the estate, when he uses force
against the persons of those he makes war upon; yet it is the use of
force only that puts a man into the state of war: for whether by force
he begins the injury, or else having quietly, and by fraud, done the
injury, he refuses to make reparation, and by force maintains it, (which
is the same thing, as at first to have done it by force) it is the unjust
use of force that makes the war: for he that breaks open my house, and
violently turns me out of doors; or having peaceably got in, by force
keeps me out, does in effect the same thing; supposing we are in such
a state, that we have no common judge on earth, whom I may appeal to,
and to whom we are both obliged to submit: for of such I am now speaking.
It is the unjust use of force then, that puts a man into the state of
war with another; and thereby he that is guilty of it makes a forfeiture
of his life: for quitting reason, which is the rule given between man
and man, and using force, the way of beasts, he becomes liable to be
destroyed by him he uses force against, as any savage ravenous beast,
that is dangerous to his being.
Sec. 182.
But because the miscarriages of the father are no faults of the children,
and they may be rational and peaceable, notwithstanding the brutishness
and injustice of the father; the father, by his miscarriages and violence,
can forfeit but his own life, but involves not his children in his guilt
or destruction. His goods, which nature, that willeth the preservation
of all mankind as much as is possible, hath made to belong to the children
to keep them from perishing, do still continue to belong to his children:
for supposing them not to have joined in the war, either thro'infancy,
absence, or choice, they have done nothing to forfeit them: nor has
the conqueror any right to take them away, by the bare title of having
subdued him that by force attempted his destruction; though perhaps
he may have some right to them, to repair the damages he has sustained
by the war, and the defence of his own right; which how far it reaches
to the possessions of the conquered, we shall see by and by. So that
he that by conquest has a right over a man's person to destroy him if
he pleases, has not thereby a right over his estate to possess and enjoy
it: for it is the brutal force the aggressor has used, that gives his
adversary a right to take away his life, and destroy him if he pleases,
as a noxious creature; but it is damage sustained that alone gives him
title to another man's goods: for though I may kill a thief that sets
on me in the highway, yet I may not (which seems less) take away his
money, and let him go: this would be robbery on my side. His force,
and the state of war he put himself in, made him forfeit his life, but
gave me no title to his goods. The right then of conquest extends only
to the lives of those who joined in the war, not to their estates, but
only in order to make reparation for the damages received, and the charges
of the war, and that too with reservation of the right of the innocent
wife and children.
Sec. 183.
Let the conqueror have as much justice on his side, as could be supposed,
he has no right to seize more than the vanquished could forfeit: his
life is at the victor's mercy; and his service and goods he may appropriate,
to make himself reparation; but he cannot take the goods of his wife
and children; they too had a title to the goods he enjoyed, and their
shares in the estate he possessed: for example, I in the state of nature
(and all commonwealths are in the state of nature one with another)
have injured another man, and refusing to give satisfaction, it comes
to a state of war, wherein my defending by force what I had gotten unjustly,
makes me the aggressor. I am conquered: my life, it is true, as forfeit,
is at mercy, but not my wife's and children's. They made not the war,
nor assisted in it. I could not forfeit their lives; they were not mine
to forfeit. My wife had a share in my estate; that neither could I forfeit.
And my children also, being born of me, had a right to be maintained
out of my labour or substance. Here then is the case: the conqueror
has a title to reparation for damages received, and the children have
a title to their father's estate for their subsistence: for as to the
wife's share, whether her own labour, or compact, gave her a title to
it, it is plain, her husband could not forfeit what was her's. What
must be done in the case? I answer; the fundamental law of nature being,
that all, as much as may be, should be preserved, it follows, that if
there be not enough fully to satisfy both, viz, for the conqueror's
losses, and children's maintenance, he that hath, and to spare, must
remit something of his full satisfaction, and give way to the pressing
and preferable title of those who are in danger to perish without it.
Sec. 184.
But supposing the charge and damages of the war are to be made up to
the conqueror, to the utmost farthing; and that the children of the
vanquished, spoiled of all their father's goods, are to be left to starve
and perish; yet the satisfying of what shall, on this score, be due
to the conqueror, will scarce give him a title to any country he shall
conquer: for the damages of war can scarce amount to the value of any
considerable tract of land, in any part of the world, where all the
land is possessed, and none lies waste. And if I have not taken away
the conqueror's land, which, being vanquished, it is impossible I should;
scarce any other spoil I have done him can amount to the value of mine,
supposing it equally cultivated, and of an extent any way coming near
what I had overrun of his. The destruction of a year's product or two
(for it seldom reaches four or five) is the utmost spoil that usually
can be done: for as to money, and such riches and treasure taken away,
these are none of nature's goods, they have but a fantastical imaginary
value: nature has put no such upon them: they are of no more account
by her standard, than the wampompeke of the Americans to an European
prince, or the silver money of Europe would have been formerly to an
American. And five years product is not worth the perpetual inheritance
of land, where all is possessed, and none remains waste, to be taken
up by him that is disseized: which will be easily granted, if one do
but take away the imaginary value of money, the disproportion being
more than between five and five hundred; though, at the same time, half
a year's product is more worth than the inheritance, where there being
more land than the inhabitants possess and make use of, any one has
liberty to make use of the waste: but there conquerors take little care
to possess themselves of the lands of the vanquished, No damage therefore,
that men in the state of nature (as all princes and governments are
in reference to one another) suffer from one another, can give a conqueror
power to dispossess the posterity of the vanquished, and turn them out
of that inheritance, which ought to be the possession of them and their
descendants to all generations. The conqueror indeed will be apt to
think himself master: and it is the very condition of the subdued not
to be able to dispute their right. But if that be all, it gives no other
title than what bare force gives to the stronger over the weaker: and,
by this reason, he that is strongest will have a right to whatever he
pleases to seize on.
Sec. 185.
Over those then that joined with him in the war, and over those of the
subdued country that opposed him not, and the posterity even of those
that did, the conqueror, even in a just war, hath, by his conquest,
no right of dominion: they are free from any subjection to him, and
if their former government be dissolved, they are at liberty to begin
and erect another to themselves.
Sec. 186.
The conqueror, it is true, usually, by the force he has over them, compels
them, with a sword at their breasts, to stoop to his conditions, and
submit to such a government as he pleases to afford them; but the enquiry
is, what right he has to do so? If it be said, they submit by their
own consent, then this allows their own consent to be necessary to give
the conqueror a title to rule over them. It remains only to be considered,
whether promises extorted by force, without right, can be thought consent,
and how far they bind. To which I shall say, they bind not at all; because
whatsoever another gets from me by force, I still retain the right of,
and he is obliged presently to restore. He that forces my horse from
me, ought presently to restore him, and I have still a right to retake
him. By the same reason, he that forced a promise from me, ought presently
to restore it, i.e. quit me of the obligation of it; or I may resume
it myself, i.e. chuse whether I will perform it: for the law of nature
laying an obligation on me only by the rules she prescribes, cannot
oblige me by the violation of her rules: such is the extorting any thing
from me by force. Nor does it at all alter the case to say, I gave my
promise, no more than it excuses the force, and passes the right, when
I put my hand in my pocket, and deliver my purse myself to a thief,
who demands it with a pistol at my breast.
Sec. 187.
From all which it follows, that the government of a conqueror, imposed
by force on the subdued, against whom he had no right of war, or who
joined not in the war against him, where he had right, has no obligation
upon them.
Sec. 188.
But let us suppose, that all the men of that community, being all members
of the same body politic, may be taken to have joined in that unjust
war wherein they are subdued, and so their lives are at the mercy of
the conqueror.
Sec. 189.
1 say, this concerns not their children who are in their minority: for
since a father hath not, in himself, a power over the life or liberty
of his child, no act of his can possibly forfeit it. So that the children,
whatever may have happened to the fathers, are freemen, and the absolute
power of the conqueror reaches no farther than the persons of the men
that were subdued by him, and dies with them: and should he govern them
as slaves, subjected to his absolute arbitrary power, he has no such
right of dominion over their children. He can have no power over them
but by their own consent, whatever he may drive them to say or do; and
he has no lawfull authority, whilst force, and not choice, compels them
to submission.
Sec. 190.
Every man is born with a double right: first, a right of freedom to
his person, which no other man has a power over, but the free disposal
of it lies in himself. Secondly, a right, before any other man, to inherit
with his brethren his father's goods.
Sec. 191.
By the first of these, a man is naturally free from subjection to any
government, tho' he be born in a place under its jurisdiction; but if
he disclaim the lawful government of the country he was born in, he
must also quit the right that belonged to him by the laws of it, and
the possessions there descending to him from his ancestors, if it were
a government made by their consent.
Sec. 192.
By the second, the inhabitants of any country, who are descended, and
derive a title to their estates from those who are subdued, and had
a government forced upon them against their free consents, retain a
right to the possession of their ancestors, though they consent not
freely to the government, whose hard conditions were by force imposed
on the possessors of that country: for the first conqueror never having
had a title to the land of that country, the people who are the descendants
of, or claim under those who were forced to submit to the yoke of a
government by constraint, have always a right to shake it off, and free
themselves from the usurpation or tyranny which the sword hath brought
in upon them, till their rulers put them under such a frame of government
as they willingly and of choice consent to. Who doubts but the Grecian
Christians, descendants of the ancient possessors of that country, may
justly cast off the Turkish yoke, which they have so long groaned under,
whenever they have an opportunity to do it? For no government can have
a right to obedience from a people who have not freely consented to
it; which they can never be supposed to do, till either they are put
in a full state of liberty to chuse their government and governors,
or at least till they have such standing laws, to which they have by
themselves or their representatives given their free consent, and also
till they are allowed their due property, which is so to be proprietors
of what they have, that no body can take away any part of it without
their own consent, without which, men under any government are not in
the state of freemen, but are direct slaves under the force of war.
Sec. 193.
But granting that the conqueror in a just war has a right to the estates,
as well as power over the persons, of the conquered; which, it is plain,
he hath not: nothing of absolute power will follow from hence, in the
continuance of the government; because the descendants of these being
all freemen, if he grants them estates and possessions to inhabit his
country, (without which it would be worth nothing) whatsoever he grants
them, they have, so far as it is granted, property in. The nature whereof
is, that without a man's own consent it cannot be taken from him,
Sec. 194.
Their persons are free by a native right, and their properties, be they
more or less, are their own, and at their own dispose, and not at his;
or else it is no property. Supposing the conqueror gives to one man
a thousand acres, to him and his heirs for ever; to another he lets
a thousand acres for his life, under the rent of 501. or 5001. per arm.
has not the one of these a right to his thousand acres for ever, and
the other, during his life, paying the said rent? and hath not the tenant
for life a property in all that he gets over and above his rent, by
his labour and industry during the said term, supposing it be double
the rent? Can any one say, the king, or conqueror, after his grant,
may by his power of conqueror take away all, or part of the land from
the heirs of one, or from the other during his life, he paying the rent?
or can he take away from either the goods or money they have got upon
the said land, at his pleasure? If he can, then all free and voluntary
contracts cease, and are void in the world; there needs nothing to dissolve
them at any time, but power enough: and all the grants and promises
of men in power are but mockery and collusion: for can there be any
thing more ridiculous than to say, I give you and your's this for ever,
and that in the surest and most solemn way of conveyance can be devised;
and yet it is to be understood, that I have right, if I please, to take
it away from you again to morrow?
Sec. 195.
1 will not dispute now whether princes are exempt from the laws of their
country; but this I am sure, they owe subjection to the laws of God
and nature. No body, no power, can exempt them from the obligations
of that eternal law. Those are so great, and so strong, in the case
of promises, that omnipotency itself can be tied by them. Grants, promises,
and oaths, are bonds that hold the Almighty: whatever some flatterers
say to princes of the world, who all together, with all their people
joined to them, are, in comparison of the great God, but as a drop of
the bucket, or a dust on the balance, inconsiderable, nothing!
Sec. 196.
The short of the case in conquest is this: the conqueror, if he have
a just cause, has a despotical right over the persons of all, that actually
aided, and concurred in the war against him, and a right to make up
his damage and cost out of their labour and estates, so he injure not
the right of any other. Over the rest of the people, if there were any
that consented not to the war, and over the children of the captives
themselves, or the possessions of either, he has no power; and so can
have, by virtue of conquest, no lawful title himself to dominion over
them, or derive it to his posterity; but is an aggressor, if he attempts
upon their properties, and thereby puts himself in a state of war against
them, and has no better a right of principality, he, nor any of his
successors, than Hingar, or Hubba, the Danes, had here in England; or
Spartacus, had he conquered Italy, would have had; which is to have
their yoke cast off, as soon as God shall give those under their subjection
courage and opportunity to do it. Thus, notwithstanding whatever title
the kings of Assyria had over Judah, by the sword, God assisted Hezekiah
to throw off the dominion of that conquering empire. And the lord was
with Hezekiah, and he prospered; wherefore he went forth, and he rebelled
against the king of Assyria, and served him not, 2 Kings xviii. 7. Whence
it is plain, that shaking off a power, which force, and not right, hath
set over any one, though it hath the name of rebellion, yet is no offence
before God, but is that which he allows and countenances, though even
promises and covenants, when obtained by force, have intervened: for
it is very probable, to any one that reads the story of Ahaz and Hezekiah
attentively, that the Assyrians subdued Ahaz, and deposed him, and made
Hezekiah king in his father's lifetime; and that Hezekiah by agreement
had done him homage, and paid him tribute all this time.
CHAP. XVII.
Of Usurpation.
Sec. 197.
AS conquest may be called a foreign usurpation, so usurpation is a kind
of domestic conquest, with this difference, that an usurper can never
have right on his side, it being no usurpation, but where one is got
into the possession of what another has right to. This, so far as it
is usurpation, is a change only of persons, but not of the forms and
rules of the government: for if the usurper extend his power beyond
what of right belonged to the lawful princes, or governors of the commonwealth,
it is tyranny added to usurpation.
Sec. 198.
In all lawful governments, the designation of the persons, who are to
bear rule, is as natural and necessary a part as the form of the government
itself, and is that which had its establishment originally from the
people; the anarchy being much alike, to have no form of government
at all, or to agree that it shall be monarchical, but to appoint no
way to design the person that shall have the power, and be the monarch.
Hence all commonwealths, with the form of government established, have
rules also of appointing those who are to have any share in the public
authority, and settled methods of conveying the right to them. Whoever
gets into the exercise of any part of the power, by other ways than
what the laws of the community have prescribed, hath no right to be
obeyed, though the form of the commonwealth be still preserved; since
he is not the person the laws have appointed, and consequently not the
person the people have consented to. Nor can such an usurper, or any
deriving from him, ever have a title, till the people are both at liberty
to consent, and have actually consented to allow, and confirm in him
the power he hath till then usurped.
CHAP. XVIII.
Of Tyranny.
Sec. 199.
AS usurpation is the exercise of power, which another hath a right to;
so tyranny is the exercise of power beyond right, which no body can
have a right to. And this is making use of the power any one has in
his hands, not for the good of those who are under it, but for his own
private separate advantage. When the governor, however intitled, makes
not the law, but his will, the rule; and his commands and actions are
not directed to the preservation of the properties of his people, but
the satisfaction of his own ambition, revenge, covetousness, or any
other irregular passion.
Sec. 200.
If one can doubt this to be truth, or reason, because it comes from
the obscure hand of a subject, I hope the authority of a king will make
it pass with him. King James the first, in his speech to the parliament,
1603, tells them thus, I will ever prefer the weal of the public, and
of the whole commonwealth, in making of good laws and constitutions,
to any particular and private ends of mine; thinking ever the wealth
and weal of the commonwealth to be my greatest weal and worldly felicity;
a point wherein a lawful king doth directly differ from a tyrant: for
I do acknowledge, that the special and greatest point of difference
that is between a rightful king and an usurping tyrant, is this, that
whereas the proud and ambitious tyrant doth think his kingdom and people
are only ordained for satisfaction of his desires and unreasonable appetites,
the righteous and just king doth by the contrary acknowledge himself
to be ordained for the procuring of the wealth and property of his people,
And again, in his speech to the parliament, 1609, he hath these words,
The king binds himself by a double oath, to the observation of the fundamental
laws of his kingdom; tacitly, as by being a king, and so bound to protect
as well the people, as the laws of his kingdom; and expressly, by his
oath at his coronation, so as every just king, in a settled kingdom,
is bound to observe that paction made to his people, by his laws, in
framing his government agreeable thereunto, according to that paction
which God made with Noah after the deluge. Hereafter, seed-time and
harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night,
shall not cease while the earth remaineth. And therefore a king governing
in a settled kingdom, leaves to be a king, and degenerates into a tyrant,
as soon as he leaves off to rule according to his laws, And a little
after, Therefore all kings that are not tyrants, or perjured, will be
glad to bound themselves within the limits of their laws; and they that
persuade them the contrary, are vipers, and pests both against them
and the commonwealth. Thus that learned king, who well understood the
notion of things, makes the difference betwixt a king and a tyrant to
consist only in this, that one makes the laws the bounds of his power,
and the good of the public, the end of his government; the other makes
all give way to his own will and appetite.
Sec. 201.
It is a mistake, to think this fault is proper only to monarchies; other
forms of government are liable to it, as well as that: for wherever
the power, that is put in any hands for the government of the people,
and the preservation of their properties, is applied to other ends,
and made use of to impoverish, harass, or subdue them to the arbitrary
and irregular commands of those that have it; there it presently becomes
tyranny, whether those that thus use it are one or many. Thus we read
of the thirty tyrants at Athens, as well as one at Syracuse; and the
intolerable dominion of the Decemviri at Rome was nothing better.
Sec. 202.
Where-ever law ends, tyranny begins, if the law be transgressed to another's
harm; and whosoever in authority exceeds the power given him by the
law, and makes use of the force he has under his command, to compass
that upon the subject, which the law allows not, ceases in that to be
a magistrate; and, acting without authority, may be opposed, as any
other man, who by force invades the right of another. This is acknowledged
in subordinate magistrates. He that hath authority to seize my person
in the street, may be opposed as a thief and a robber, if he endeavours
to break into my house to execute a writ, notwithstanding that I know
he has such a warrant, and such a legal authority, as will impower him
to arrest me abroad. And why this should not hold in the highest, as
well as in the most inferior magistrate, I would gladly be informed.
Is it reasonable, that the eldest brother, because he has the greatest
part of his father's estate, should thereby have a right to take away
any of his younger brothers portions? or that a rich man, who possessed
a whole country, should from thence have a right to seize, when he pleased,
the cottage and garden of his poor neighbour? The being rightfully possessed
of great power and riches, exceedingly beyond the greatest part of the
sons of Adam, is so far from being an excuse, much less a reason, for
rapine and oppression, which the endamaging another without authority
is, that it is a great aggravation of it: for the exceeding the bounds
of authority is no more a right in a great, than in a petty officer;
no more justifiable in a king than a constable; but is so much the worse
in him, in that he has more trust put in him, has already a much greater
share than the rest of his brethren, and is supposed, from the advantages
of his education, employment, and counsellors, to be more knowing in
the measures of right and wrong.
Sec. 203.
May the commands then of a prince be opposed? may he be resisted as
often as any one shall find himself aggrieved, and but imagine he has
not right done him? This will unhinge and overturn all polities, and,
instead of government and order, leave nothing but anarchy and confusion.
Sec. 204.
To this I answer, that force is to be opposed to nothing, but to unjust
and unlawful force; whoever makes any opposition in any other case,
draws on himself a just condemnation both from God and man; and so no
such danger or confusion will follow, as is often suggested: for,
Sec. 205.
First, As, in some countries, the person of the prince by the law is
sacred; and so, whatever he commands or does, his person is still free
from all question or violence, not liable to force, or any judicial
censure or condemnation. But yet opposition may be made to the illegal
acts of any inferior officer, or other commissioned by him; unless he
will, by actually putting himself into a state of war with his people,
dissolve the government, and leave them to that defence which belongs
to every one in the state of nature: for of such things who can tell
what the end will be? and a neighbour kingdom has shewed the world an
odd example. In all other cases the sacredness of the person exempts
him from all inconveniencies, whereby he is secure, whilst the government
stands, from all violence and harm whatsoever; than which there cannot
be a wiser constitution: for the harm he can do in his own person not
being likely to happen often, nor to extend itself far; nor being able
by his single strength to subvert the laws, nor oppress the body of
the people, should any prince have so much weakness, and ill nature
as to be willing to do it, the inconveniency of some particular mischiefs,
that may happen sometimes, when a heady prince comes to the throne,
are well recompensed by the peace of the public, and security of the
government, in the person of the chief magistrate, thus set out of the
reach of danger: it being safer for the body, that some few private
men should be sometimes in danger to suffer, than that the head of the
republic should be easily, and upon slight occasions, exposed.
Sec. 206.
Secondly, But this privilege, belonging only to the king's person, hinders
not, but they may be questioned, opposed, and resisted, who use unjust
force, though they pretend a commission from him, which the law authorizes
not; as is plain in the case of him that has the king's writ to arrest
a man, which is a full commission from the king; and yet he that has
it cannot break open a man's house to do it, nor execute this command
of the king upon certain days, nor in certain places, though this commission
have no such exception in it; but they are the limitations of the law,
which if any one transgress, the king's commission excuses him not:
for the king's authority being given him only by the law, he cannot
impower any one to act against the law, or justify him, by his commission,
in so doing; the commission, or command of any magistrate, where he
has no authority, being as void and insignificant, as that of any private
man; the difference between the one and the other, being that the magistrate
has some authority so far, and to such ends, and the private man has
none at all: for it is not the commission, but the authority, that gives
the right of acting; and against the laws there can be no authority.
But, notwithstanding such resistance, the king's person and authority
are still both secured, and so no danger to governor or government,
Sec. 207.
Thirdly, Supposing a government wherein the person of the chief magistrate
is not thus sacred; yet this doctrine of the lawfulness of resisting
all unlawful exercises of his power, will not upon every slight occasion
indanger him, or imbroil the government: for where the injured party
may be relieved, and his damages repaired by appeal to the law, there
can be no pretence for force, which is only to be used where a man is
intercepted from appealing to the law: for nothing is to be accounted
hostile force, but where it leaves not the remedy of such an appeal;
and it is such force alone, that puts him that uses it into a state
of war, and makes it lawful to resist him. A man with a sword in his
hand demands my purse in the high-way, when perhaps I have not twelve
pence in my pocket: this man I may lawfully kill. To another I deliver
100l. to hold only whilst I alight, which he refuses to restore me,
when I am got up again, but draws his sword to defend the possession
of it by force, if I endeavour to retake it. The mischief this man does
me is a hundred, or possibly a thousand times more than the other perhaps
intended me (whom I killed before he really did me any); and yet I might
lawfully kill the one, and cannot so much as hurt the other lawfully.
The reason whereof is plain; because the one using force, which threatened
my life, I could not have time to appeal to the law to secure it: and
when it was gone, it was too late to appeal. The law could not restore
life to my dead carcass: the loss was irreparable; which to prevent,
the law of nature gave me a right to destroy him, who had put himself
into a state of war with me, and threatened my destruction. But in the
other case, my life not being in danger, I may have the benefit of appealing
to the law, and have reparation for my 100l. that way.
Sec. 208.
Fourthly, But if the unlawful acts done by the magistrate be maintained
(by the power he has got), and the remedy which is due by law, be by
the same power obstructed; yet the right of resisting, even in such
manifest acts of tyranny, will not suddenly, or on slight occasions,
disturb the government: for if it reach no farther than some private
men's cases, though they have a right to defend themselves, and to recover
by force what by unlawful force is taken from them; yet the right to
do so will not easily engage them in a contest, wherein they are sure
to perish; it being as impossible for one, or a few oppressed men to
disturb the government, where the body of the people do not think themselves
concerned in it, as for a raving mad-man, or heady malcontent to overturn
a well settled state; the people being as little apt to follow the one,
as the other.
Sec. 209.
But if either these illegal acts have extended to the majority of the
people; or if the mischief and oppression has lighted only on some few,
but in such cases, as the precedent, and consequences seem to threaten
all; and they are persuaded in their consciences, that their laws, and
with them their estates, liberties, and lives are in danger, and perhaps
their religion too; how they will be hindered from resisting illegal
force, used against them, I cannot tell. This is an inconvenience, I
confess, that attends all governments whatsoever, when the governors
have brought it to this pass, to be generally suspected of their people;
the most dangerous state which they can possibly put themselves in.
wherein they are the less to be pitied, because it is so easy to be
avoided; it being as impossible for a governor, if he really means the
good of his people, and the preservation of them, and their laws together,
not to make them see and feel it, as it is for the father of a family,
not to let his children see he loves, and takes care of them.
Sec. 210.
But if all the world shall observe pretences of one kind, and actions
of another; arts used to elude the law, and the trust of prerogative
(which is an arbitrary power in some things left in the prince's hand
to do good, not harm to the people) employed contrary to the end for
which it was given: if the people shall find the ministers and subordinate
magistrates chosen suitable to such ends, and favoured, or laid by,
proportionably as they promote or oppose them: if they see several experiments
made of arbitrary power, and that religion underhand favoured, (tho'
publicly proclaimed against) which is readiest to introduce it; and
the operators in it supported, as much as may be; and when that cannot
be done, yet approved still, and liked the better: if a long train of
actions shew the councils all tending that way; how can a man any more
hinder himself from being persuaded in his own mind, which way things
are going; or from casting about how to save himself, than he could
from believing the captain of the ship he was in, was carrying him,
and the rest of the company, to Algiers, when he found him always steering
that course, though cross winds, leaks in his ship, and want of men
and provisions did often force him to turn his course another way for
some time, which he steadily returned to again, as soon as the wind,
weather, and other circumstances would let him?
CHAP. XIX.
Of the
Dissolution of Government.
Sec. 211.
HE that will with any clearness speak of the dissolution of government,
ought in the first place to distinguish between the dissolution of the
society and the dissolution of the government. That which makes the
community, and brings men out of the loose state of nature, into one
politic society, is the agreement which every one has with the rest
to incorporate, and act as one body, and so be one distinct commonwealth.
The usual, and almost only way whereby this union is dissolved, is the
inroad of foreign force mak ing a conquest upon them: for in that case,
(not being able to maintain and support themselves, as one intire and
independent body) the union belonging to that body which consisted therein,
must necessarily cease, and so every one return to the state he was
in before, with a liberty to shift for himself, and provide for his
own safety, as he thinks fit, in some other society. Whenever the society
is dissolved, it is certain the government of that society cannot remain.
Thus conquerors swords often cut up governments by the roots, and mangle
societies to pieces, separating the subdued or scattered multitude from
the protection of, and dependence on, that society which ought to have
preserved them from violence. The world is too well instructed in, and
too forward to allow of, this way of dissolving of governments, to need
any more to be said of it; and there wants not much argument to prove,
that where the society is dissolved, the government cannot remain; that
being as impossible, as for the frame of an house to subsist when the
materials of it are scattered and dissipated by a whirl-wind, or jumbled
into a confused heap by an earthquake.
Sec. 212.
Besides this over-turning from without, governments are dissolved from
within,
First,
When the legislative is altered. Civil society being a state of peace,
amongst those who are of it, from whom the state of war is excluded
by the umpirage, which they have provided in their legislative, for
the ending all differences that may arise amongst any of them, it is
in their legislative, that the members of a commonwealth are united,
and combined together into one coherent living body. This is the soul
that gives form, life, and unity, to the common-wealth: from hence the
several members have their mutual influence, sympathy, and connexion:
and therefore, when the legislative is broken, or dissolved, dissolution
and death follows: for the essence and union of the society consisting
in having one will, the legislative, when once established by the majority,
has the declaring, and as it were keeping of that will. The constitution
of the legislative is the first and fundamental act of society, whereby
provision is made for the continuation of their union, under the direction
of persons, and bonds of laws, made by persons authorized thereunto,
by the consent and appointment of the people, without which no one man,
or number of men, amongst them, can have authority of making laws that
shall be binding to the rest. When any one, or more, shall take upon
them to make laws, whom the people have not appointed so to do, they
make laws without authority, which the people are not therefore bound
to obey; by which means they come again to be out of subjection, and
may constitute to themselves a new legislative, as they think best,
being in full liberty to resist the force of those, who without authority
would impose any thing upon them. Every one is at the disposure of his
own will, when those who had, by the delegation of the society, the
declaring of the public will, are excluded from it, and others usurp
the place, who have no such authority or delegation.
Sec. 213.
This being usually brought about by such in the commonwealth who misuse
the power they have; it is hard to consider it aright, and know at whose
door to lay it, without knowing the form of government in which it happens.
Let us suppose then the legislative placed in the concurrence of three
distinct persons.
1. A single
hereditary person, having the constant, supreme, executive power, and
with it the power of convoking and dissolving the other two within certain
periods of time.
2. An assembly
of hereditary nobility.
3. An assembly
of representatives chosen, pro tempore, by the people. Such a form of
government supposed, it is evident,
Sec. 214.
First, That when such a single person, or prince, sets up his own arbitrary
will in place of the laws, which are the will of the society, declared
by the legislative, then the legislative is changed: for that being
in effect the legislative, whose rules and laws are put in execution,
and required to be obeyed; when other laws are set up, and other rules
pretended, and inforced, than what the legislative, constituted by the
society, have enacted, it is plain that the legislative is changed.
Whoever introduces new laws, not being thereunto authorized by the fundamental
appointment of the society, or subverts the old, disowns and overturns
the power by which they were made, and so sets up a new legislative.
Sec. 215.
Secondly, When the prince hinders the legislative from assembling in
its due time, or from acting freely, pursuant to those ends for which
it was constituted, the legislative is altered: for it is not a certain
number of men, no, nor their meeting, unless they have also freedom
of debating, and leisure of perfecting, what is for the good of the
society, wherein the legislative consists: when these are taken away
or altered, so as to deprive the society of the due exercise of their
power, the legislative is truly altered; for it is not names that constitute
governments, but the use and exercise of those powers that were intended
to accompany them; so that he, who takes away the freedom, or hinders
the acting of the legislative in its due seasons, in effect takes away
the legislative, and puts an end to the government.
Sec. 216.
Thirdly, When, by the arbitrary power of the prince, the electors, or
ways of election, are altered, without the consent, and contrary to
the common interest of the people, there also the legislative is altered:
for, if others than those whom the society hath authorized thereunto,
do chuse, or in another way than what the society hath prescribed, those
chosen are not the legislative appointed by the people.
Sec. 217.
Fourthly, The delivery also of the people into the subjection of a foreign
power, either by the prince, or by the legislative, is certainly a change
of the legislative, and so a dissolution of the government: for the
end why people entered into society being to be preserved one intire,
free, independent society, to be governed by its own laws; this is lost,
whenever they are given up into the power of another.
Sec. 218.
Why, in such a constitution as this, the dissolution of the government
in these cases is to be imputed to the prince, is evident; because he,
having the force, treasure and offices of the state to employ, and often
persuading himself, or being flattered by others, that as supreme magistrate
he is uncapable of controul; he alone is in a condition to make great
advances toward such changes, under pretence of lawful authority, and
has it in his hands to terrify or suppress opposers, as factious, seditious,
and enemies to the government: whereas no other part of the legislative,
or people, is capable by themselves to attempt any alteration of the
legislative, without open and visible rebellion, apt enough to be taken
notice of, which, when it prevails, produces effects very little different
from foreign conquest. Besides, the prince in such a form of government,
having the power of dissolving the other parts of the legislative, and
thereby rendering them private persons, they can never in opposition
to him, or without his concurrence, alter the legislative by a law,
his conse power, neglects and abandons that charge, so that the laws
already made can no longer be put in execution. This is demonstratively
to reduce all to anarchy, and so effectually to dissolve the government:
for laws not being made for themselves, but to be, by their execution,
the bonds of the society, to keep every part of the body politic in
its due place and function; when that totally ceases, the government
visibly ceases, and the people become a confused multitude, without
order or connexion. Where there is no longer the administration of justice,
for the securing of men's rights, nor any remaining power within the
community to direct the force, or provide for the necessities of the
public, there certainly is no government left. Where the laws cannot
be executed, it is all one as if there were no laws; and a government
without laws is, I suppose, a mystery in politics, unconceivable to
human capacity, and inconsistent with human society.
Sec. 220.
In these and the like cases, when the government is dissolved, the people
are at liberty to provide for themselves, by erecting a new legislative,
differing from the other, by the change of persons, or form, or both,
as they shall find it most for their safety and good: for the society
can never, by the fault of another, lose the native and original right
it has to preserve itself, which can only be done by a settled legislative,
and a fair and impartial execution of the laws made by it. But the state
of mankind is not so miserable that they are not capable of using this
remedy, till it be too late to look for any. To tell people they may
provide for themselves, by erecting a new legislative, when by oppression,
artifice, or being delivered over to a foreign power, their old one
is gone, is only to tell them, they may expect relief when it is too
late, and the evil is past cure. This is in effect no more than to bid
them first be slaves, and then to take care of their liberty; and when
their chains are on, tell them, they may act like freemen. This, if
barely so, is rather mockery than relief; and men can never be secure
from tyranny, if there be no means to escape it till they are perfectly
under it: and therefore it is, that they have not only a right to get
out of it, but to prevent it.
Sec. 221.
There is therefore, secondly, another way whereby governments are dissolved,
and that is, when the legislative, or the prince, either of them, act
contrary to their trust. First, The legislative acts against the trust
reposed in them, when they endeavour to invade the property of the subject,
and to make themselves, or any part of the community, masters, or arbitrary
disposers of the lives, liberties, or fortunes of the people.
Sec. 222.
The reason why men enter into society, is the preservation of their
property; and the end why they chuse and authorize a legislative, is,
that there may be laws made, and rules set, as guards and fences to
the properties of all the members of the society, to limit the power,
and moderate the dominion, of every part and member of the society:
for since it can never be supposed to be the will of the society, that
the legislative should have a power to destroy that which every one
designs to secure, by entering into society, and for which the people
submitted themselves to legislators of their own making; whenever the
legislators endeavour to take away, and destroy the property of the
people, or to reduce them to slavery under arbitrary power, they put
themselves into a state of war with the people, who are thereupon absolved
from any farther obedience, and are left to the common refuge, which
God hath provided for all men, against force and violence. Whensoever
therefore the legislative shall transgress this fundamental rule of
society; and either by ambition, fear, folly or corruption, endeavour
to grasp themselves, or put into the hands of any other, an absolute
power over the lives, liberties, and estates of the people; by this
breach of trust they forfeit the power the people had put into their
hands for quite contrary ends, and it devolves to the people, who. have
a right to resume their original liberty, and, by the establishment
of a new legislative, (such as they shall think fit) provide for their
own safety and security, which is the end for which they are in society.
What I have said here, concerning the legislative in general, holds
true also concerning the supreme executor, who having a double trust
put in him, both to have a part in the legislative, and the supreme
execution of the law, acts against both, when he goes about to set up
his own arbitrary will as the law of the society. He acts also contrary
to his trust, when he either employs the force, treasure, and offices
of the society, to corrupt the representatives, and gain them to his
purposes; or openly preengages the electors, and prescribes to their
choice, such, whom he has, by sollicitations, threats, promises, or
otherwise, won to his designs; and employs them to bring in such, who
have promised before-hand what to vote, and what to enact. Thus to regulate
candidates and electors, and new-model the ways of election, what is
it but to cut up the government by the roots, and poison the very fountain
of public security? for the people having reserved to themselves the
choice of their representatives, as the fence to their properties, could
do it for no other end, but that they might always be freely chosen,
and so chosen, freely act, and advise, as the necessity of the common-wealth,
and the public good should, upon examination, and mature debate, be
judged to require. This, those who give their votes before they hear
the debate, and have weighed the reasons on all sides, are not capable
of doing. To prepare such an assembly as this, and endeavour to set
up the declared abettors of his own will, for the true representatives
of the people, and the law-makers of the society, is certainly as great
a breach of trust, and as perfect a declaration of a design to subvert
the government, as is possible to be met with. To which, if one shall
add rewards and punishments visibly employed to the same end, and all
the arts of perverted law made use of, to take off and destroy all that
stand in the way of such a design, and will not comply and consent to
betray the liberties of their country, it will be past doubt what is
doing. What power they ought to have in the society, who thus employ
it contrary to the trust went along with it in its first institution,
is easy to determine; and one cannot but see, that he, who has once
attempted any such thing as this, cannot any longer be trusted.
Sec. 223.
To this perhaps it will be said, that the people being ignorant, and
always discontented, to lay the foundation of government in the unsteady
opinion and uncertain humour of the people, is to expose it to certain
ruin; and no government will be able long to subsist, if the people
may set up a new legislative, whenever they take offence at the old
one. To this I answer, Quite the contrary. People are not so easily
got out of their old forms, as some are apt to suggest. They are hardly
to be prevailed with to amend the acknowledged faults in the frame they
have been accustomed to. And if there be any original defects, or adventitious
ones introduced by time, or corruption; it is not an easy thing to get
them changed, even when all the world sees there is an opportunity for
it. This slowness and aversion in the people to quit their old constitutions,
has, in the many revolutions which have been seen in this kingdom, in
this and former ages, still kept us to, or, after some interval of fruitless
attempts, still brought us back again to our old legislative of king,
lords and commons: and whatever provocations have made the crown be
taken from some of our princes heads, they never carried the people
so far as to place it in another line.
Sec. 224.
But it will be said, this hypothesis lays a ferment for frequent rebellion.
To which I answer,
First,
No more than any other hypothesis: for when the people are made miserable,
and find themselves exposed to the ill usage of arbitrary power, cry
up their governors, as much as you will, for sons of Jupiter; let them
be sacred and divine, descended, or authorized from heaven; give them
out for whom or what you please, the same will happen. The people generally
ill treated, and contrary to right, will be ready upon any occasion
to ease themselves of a burden that sits heavy upon them. They will
wish, and seek for the opportunity, which in the change, weakness and
accidents of human affairs, seldom delays long to offer itself. He must
have lived but a little while in the world, who has not seen examples
of this in his time; and he must have read very little, who cannot produce
examples of it in all sorts of governments in the world.
Sec. 225.
Secondly, I answer, such revolutions happen not upon every little mismanagement
in public affairs. Great mistakes in the ruling part, many wrong and
inconvenient laws, and all the slips of human frailty, will be born
by the people without mutiny or murmur. But if a long train of abuses,
prevarications and artifices, all tending the same way, make the design
visible to the people, and they cannot but feel what they lie under,
and see whither they are going; it is not to be wondered, that they
should then rouze themselves, and endeavour to put the rule into such
hands which may secure to them the ends for which government was at
first erected; and without which, ancient names, and specious forms,
are so far from being better, that they are much worse, than the state
of nature, or pure anarchy; the inconveniencies being all as great and
as near, but the remedy farther off and more difficult.
Sec. 226.
Thirdly, I answer, that this doctrine of a power in the people of providing
for their safety a-new, by a new legislative, when their legislators
have acted contrary to their trust, by invading their property, is the
best fence against rebellion, and the probablest means to hinder it:
for rebellion being an opposition, not to persons, but authority, which
is founded only in the constitutions and laws of the government; those,
whoever they be, who by force break through, and by force justify their
violation of them, are truly and properly rebels: for when men, by entering
into society and civil-government, have excluded force, and introduced
laws for the preservation of property, peace, and unity amongst themselves,
those who set up force again in opposition to the laws, do rebellare,
that is, bring back again the state of war, and are properly rebels:
which they who are in power, (by the pretence they have to authority,
the temptation of force they have in their hands, and the flattery of
those about them) being likeliest to do; the properest way to prevent
the evil, is to shew them the danger and injustice of it, who are under
the greatest temptation to run into it.
Sec. 227.
In both the fore-mentioned cases, when either the legislative is changed,
or the legislators act contrary to the end for which they were constituted;
those who are guilty are guilty of rebellion: for if any one by force
takes away the established legislative of any society, and the laws
by them made, pursuant to their trust, he thereby takes away the umpirage,
which every one had consented to, for a peaceable decision of all their
controversies, and a bar to the state of war amongst them. They, who
remove, or change the legislative, take away this decisive power, which
no body can have, but by the appointment and consent of the people;
and so destroying the authority which the people did, and no body else
can set up, and introducing a power which the people hath not authorized,
they actually introduce a state of war, which is that of force without
authority: and thus, by removing the legislative established by the
society, (in whose decisions the people acquiesced and united, as to
that of their own will) they untie the knot, and expose the people a-new
to the state of war, And if those, who by force take away the legislative,
are rebels, the legislators themselves, as has been shewn, can be no
less esteemed so; when they, who were set up for the protection, and
preservation of the people, their liberties and properties, shall by
force invade and endeavour to take them away; and so they putting themselves
into a state of war with those who made them the protectors and guardians
of their peace, are properly, and with the greatest aggravation, rebellantes,
rebels.
Sec. 228.
But if they, who say it lays a foundation for rebellion, mean that it
may occasion civil wars, or intestine broils, to tell the people they
are absolved from obedience when illegal attempts are made upon their
liberties or properties, and may oppose the unlawful violence of those
who were their magistrates, when they invade their properties contrary
to the trust put in them; and that therefore this doctrine is not to
be allowed, being so destructive to the peace of the world: they may
as well say, upon the same ground, that honest men may not oppose robbers
or pirates, because this may occasion disorder or bloodshed. If any
mischief come in such cases, it is not to be charged upon him who defends
his own right, but on him that invades his neighbours. If the innocent
honest man must quietly quit all he has, for peace sake, to him who
will lay violent hands upon it, I desire it may be considered, what
a kind of peace there will be in the world, which consists only in violence
and rapine; and which is to be maintained only for the benefit of robbers
and oppressors. VVho would not think it an admirable peace betwix the
mighty and the mean, when the lamb, without resistance, yielded his
throat to be torn by the imperious wolf? Polyphemus's den gives us a
perfect pattern of such a peace, and such a government, wherein Ulysses
and his companions had nothing to do, but quietly to suffer themselves
to be devoured. And no doubt Ulysses, who was a prudent man, preached
up passive obedience, and exhorted them to a quiet submission, by representing
to them of what concernment peace was to mankind; and by shewing the
inconveniences might happen, if they should offer to resist Polyphemus,
who had now the power over them.
Sec. 229.
The end of government is the good of mankind; and which is best for
mankind, that the people should be always exposed to the boundless will
of tyranny, or that the rulers should be sometimes liable to be opposed,
when they grow exorbitant in the use of their power, and employ it for
the destruction, and not the preservation of the properties of their
people?
Sec. 230.
Nor let any one say, that mischief can arise from hence, as often as
it shall please a busy head, or turbulent spirit, to desire the alteration
of the government. It is true, such men may stir, whenever they please;
but it will be only to their own just ruin and perdition: for till the
mischief be grown general, and the ill designs of the rulers become
visible, or their attempts sensible to the greater part, the people,
who are more disposed to suffer than right themselves by resistance,
are not apt to stir. The examples of particular injustice, or oppression
of here and there an unfortunate man, moves them not. But if they universally
have a persuation, grounded upon manifest evidence, that designs are
carrying on against their liberties, and the general course and tendency
of things cannot but give them strong suspicions of the evil intention
of their governors, who is to be blamed for it? Who can help it, if
they, who might avoid it, bring themselves into this suspicion? Are
the people to be blamed, if they have the sense of rational creatures,
and can think of things no otherwise than as they find and feel them?
And is it not rather their fault, who put things into such a posture,
that they would not have them thought to be as they are? I grant, that
the pride, ambition, and turbulency of private men have sometimes caused
great disorders in commonwealths, and factions have been fatal to states
and kingdoms. But whether the mischief hath oftener begun in the peoples
wantonness, and a desire to cast off the lawful authority of their rulers,
or in the rulers insolence, and endeavours to get and exercise an arbitrary
power over their people; whether oppression, or disobedience, gave the
first rise to the disorder, I leave it to impartial history to determine.
This I am sure, whoever, either ruler or subject, by force goes about
to invade the rights of either prince or people, and lays the foundation
for overturning the constitution and frame of any just government, is
highly guilty of the greatest crime, I think, a man is capable of, being
to answer for all those mischiefs of blood, rapine, and desolation,
which the breaking to pieces of governments bring on a country. And
he who does it, is justly to be esteemed the common enemy and pest of
mankind, and is to be treated accordingly.
Sec. 231.
That subjects or foreigners, attempting by force on the properties of
any people, may be resisted with force, is agreed on all hands. But
that magistrates, doing the same thing, may be resisted, hath of late
been denied: as if those who had the greatest privileges and advantages
by the law, had thereby a power to break those laws, by which alone
they were set in a better place than their brethren: whereas their offence
is thereby the greater, both as being ungrateful for the greater share
they have by the law, and breaking also that trust, which is put into
their hands by their brethren.
Sec. 232.
Whosoever uses force without right, as every one does in society, who
does it without law, puts himself into a state of war with those against
whom he so uses it; and in that state all former ties are cancelled,
all other rights cease, and every one has a right to defend himself,
and to resist the aggressor. This is so evident, that Barclay himself,
that great assertor of the power and sacredness of kings, is forced
to confess, That it is lawful for the people, in some cases, to resist
their king; and that too in a chapter, wherein he pretends to shew,
that the divine law shuts up the people from all manner of rebellion.
Whereby it is evident, even by his own doctrine, that, since they may
in some cases resist, all resisting of princes is not rebellion. His
words are these.
Quod siquis
dicat, Ergone populus tyrannicae crudelitati & furori jugulum semper
praebebit? Ergone multitude civitates suas fame, ferro, & flamma
vastari, seque, conjuges, & liberos fortunae ludibrio & tyranni
libidini exponi, inque omnia vitae pericula omnesque miserias &
molestias a rege deduci patientur? Num illis quod omni animantium generi
est a natura tributum, denegari debet, ut sc. vim vi repellant, seseq;
ab injuria, tueantur? Huic breviter responsum sit, Populo universo negari
defensionem, quae juris naturalis est, neque ultionem quae praeter naturam
est adversus regem concedi debere. Quapropter si rex non in singulares
tantum personas aliquot privatum odium exerceat, sed corpus etiam reipublicae,
cujus ipse caput est, i.e. totum populum, vel insignem aliquam ejus
partem immani & intoleranda saevitia seu tyrannide divexet; populo,
quidem hoc casu resistendi ac tuendi se ab injuria potestas competit,
sed tuendi se tantum, non enim in principem invadendi: & restituendae
injuriae illatae, non recedendi a debita reverentia propter acceptam
injuriam. Praesentem denique impetum propulsandi non vim praeteritam
ulciscenti jus habet. Horum enim alterum a natura est, ut vitam scilicet
corpusque tueamur. Alterum vero contra naturam, ut inferior de superiori
supplicium sumat. Quod itaque populus malum, antequam factum sit, impedire
potest, ne fiat, id postquam factum est, in regem authorem sceleris
vindicare non potest: populus igitur hoc amplius quam privatus quispiam
habet: quod huic, vel ipsis adversariis judicibus, excepto Buchanano,
nullum nisi in patientia remedium superest. Cum ille si intolerabilis
tyrannus est (modicum enim ferre omnino debet) resistere cum reverentia
possit, Barclay contra Monarchom. 1. iii. c. 8.
In English
thus:
Sec. 233.
But if any one should ask, Must the people then always lay themselves
open to the cruelty and rage of tyranny? Must they see their cities
pillaged, and laid in ashes, their wives and children exposed to the
tyrant's lust and fury, and themselves and families reduced by their
king to ruin, and all the miseries of want and oppression, and yet sit
still? Must men alone be debarred the common privilege of opposing force
with force, which nature allows so freely to all other creatures for
their preservation from injury? I answer: Self-defence is a part of
the law of nature; nor can it be denied the community, even against
the king himself: but to revenge themselves upon him, must by no means
be allowed them; it being not agreeable to that law. Wherefore if the
king shall shew an hatred, not only to some particular persons, but
sets himself against the body of the common-wealth, whereof he is the
head, and shall, with intolerable ill usage, cruelly tyrannize over
the whole, or a considerable part of the people, in this case the people
have a right to resist and defend themselves from injury: but it must
be with this caution, that they only defend themselves, but do not attack
their prince: they may repair the damages received, but must not for
any provocation exceed the bounds of due reverence and respect. They
may repulse the present attempt, but must not revenge past violences:
for it is natural for us to defend life and limb, but that an inferior
should punish a superior, is against nature. The mischief which is designed
them, the people may prevent before it be done; but when it is done,
they must not revenge it on the king, though author of the villany.
This therefore is the privilege of the people in general, above what
any private person hath; that particular men are allowed by our adversaries
themselves (Buchanan only excepted) to have no other remedy but patience;
but the body of the people may with respect resist intolerable tyranny;
for when it is but moderate, they ought to endure it.
Sec. 234.
Thus far that great advocate of monarchical power allows of resistance.
Sec. 235.
It is true, he has annexed two limitations to it, to no purpose:
First,
He says, it must be with reverence.
Secondly,
It must be without retribution, or punishment; and the reason he gives
is, because an inferior cannot punish a superior.
First,
How to resist force without striking again, or how to strike with reverence,
will need some skill to make intelligible. He that shall oppose an assault
only with a shield to receive the blows, or in any more respectful posture,
without a sword in his hand, to abate the confidence and force of the
assailant, will quickly be at an end of his resistance, and will find
such a defence serve only to draw on himself the worse usage. This is
as ridiculous a way of resisting, as juvenal thought it of fighting;
ubi tu pulsas, ego vapulo tantum. And the success of the combat will
be unavoidably the same he there describes it:
—
Libertas pauperis haec est:
Pulsatus rogat, & pugnis concisus, adorat,
Ut liceat paucis cum dentibus inde reverti.
This will
always be the event of such an imaginary resistance, where men may not
strike again. He therefore who may resist, must be allowed to strike.
And then let our author, or any body else, join a knock on the head,
or a cut on the face, with as much reverence and respect as he thinks
fit. He that can reconcile blows and reverence, may, for aught I know,
desire for his pains, a civil, respectful cudgeling where-ever he can
meet with it.
Secondly,
As to his second, An inferior cannot punish a superior; that is true,
generally speaking, whilst he is his superior. But to resist force with
force, being the state of war that levels the parties, cancels all former
relation of reverence, respect, and superiority: and then the odds that
remains, is, that he, who opposes the unjust agressor, has this superiority
over him, that he has a right, when he prevails, to punish the offender,
both for the breach of the peace, and all the evils that followed upon
it. Barclay therefore, in another place, more coherently to himself,
denies it to be lawful to resist a king in any case. But he there assigns
two cases, whereby a king may un-king himself. His words are,
Quid ergo,
nulline casus incidere possunt quibus populo sese erigere atque in regem
impotentius dominantem arma capere & invadere jure suo suaque authoritate
liceat? Nulli certe quamdiu rex manet. Semper enim ex divinis id obstat,
Regem honorificato; & qui potestati resistit, Dei ordinationi resisit:
non alias igitur in eum populo potestas est quam si id committat propter
quod ipso jure rex esse desinat. Tunc enim se ipse principatu exuit
atque in privatis constituit liber: hoc modo populus & superior
efficitur, reverso ad eum sc. jure illo quod ante regem inauguratum
in interregno habuit. At sunt paucorum generum commissa ejusmodi quae
hunc effectum pariunt. At ego cum plurima animo perlustrem, duo tantum
invenio, duos, inquam, casus quibus rex ipso facto ex rege non regem
se facit & omni honore & dignitate regali atque in subditos
potestate destituit; quorum etiam meminit Winzerus. Horum unus est,
Si regnum disperdat, quemadmodum de Nerone fertur, quod is nempe senatum
populumque Romanum, atque adeo urbem ipsam ferro flammaque vastare,
ac novas sibi sedes quaerere decrevisset. Et de Caligula, quod palam
denunciarit se neque civem neque principem senatui amplius fore, inque
animo habuerit interempto utriusque ordinis electissimo quoque Alexandriam
commigrare, ac ut populum uno ictu interimeret, unam ei cervicem optavit.
Talia cum rex aliquis meditator & molitur serio, omnem regnandi
curam & animum ilico abjicit, ac proinde imperium in subditos amittit,
ut dominus servi pro derelicto habiti dominium.
Sec. 236.
Alter casus est, Si rex in alicujus clientelam se contulit, ac regnum
quod liberum a majoribus & populo traditum accepit, alienae ditioni
mancipavit. Nam tunc quamvis forte non ea mente id agit populo plane
ut incommodet: tamen quia quod praecipuum est regiae dignitatis amifit,
ut summus scilicet in regno secundum Deum sit, & solo Deo inferior,
atque populum etiam totum ignorantem vel invitum, cujus libertatem sartam
& tectam conservare debuit, in alterius gentis ditionem & potestatem
dedidit; hac velut quadam regni ab alienatione effecit, ut nec quod
ipse in regno imperium habuit retineat, nec in eum cui collatum voluit,
juris quicquam transferat; atque ita eo facto liberum jam & suae
potestatis populum relinquit, cujus rei exemplum unum annales Scotici
suppeditant. Barclay contra Monarchom. 1. iii. c. 16.
Which in
English runs thus:
Sec. 237.
What then, can there no case happen wherein the people may of right,
and by their own authority, help themselves, take arms, and set upon
their king, imperiously domineering over them? None at all, whilst he
remains a king. Honour the king, and he that resists the power, resists
the ordinance of God; are divine oracles that will never permit it,
The people therefore can never come by a power over him, unless he does
something that makes him cease to be a king: for then he divests himself
of his crown and dignity, and returns to the state of a private man,
and the people become free and superior, the power which they had in
the interregnum, before they crowned him king, devolving to them again.
But there are but few miscarriages which bring the matter to this state.
After considering it well on all sides, I can find but two. Two cases
there are, I say, whereby a king, ipso facto, becomes no king, and loses
all power and regal authority over his people; which are also taken
notice of by Winzerus.
The first
is, If he endeavour to overturn the government, that is, if he have
a purpose and design to ruin the kingdom and commonwealth, as it is
recorded of Nero, that he resolved to cut off the senate and people
of Rome, lay the city waste with fire and sword, and then remove to
some other place. And of Caligula, that he openly declared, that he
would be no longer a head to the people or senate, and that he had it
in his thoughts to cut off the worthiest men of both ranks, and then
retire to Alexandria: and he wisht that the people had but one neck,
that he might dispatch them all at a blow, Such designs as these, when
any king harbours in his thoughts, and seriously promotes, he immediately
gives up all care and thought of the common-wealth; and consequently
forfeits the power of governing his subjects, as a master does the dominion
over his slaves whom he hath abandoned.
Sec. 238.
The other case is, When a king makes himself the dependent of another,
and subjects his kingdom which his ancestors left him, and the people
put free into his hands, to the dominion of another: for however perhaps
it may not be his intention to prejudice the people; yet because he
has hereby lost the principal part of regal dignity, viz. to be next
and immediately under God, supreme in his kingdom; and also because
he betrayed or forced his people, whose liberty he ought to have carefully
preserved, into the power and dominion of a foreign nation. By this,
as. it were, alienation of his kingdom, he himself loses the power he
had in it before, without transferring any the least right to those
on whom he would have bestowed it; and so by this act sets the people
free, and leaves them at their own disposal. One example of this is
to be found in the Scotch Annals.
Sec. 239.
In these cases Barclay, the great champion of absolute monarchy, is
forced to allow, that a king may be resisted, and ceases to be a king.
That is, in short, not to multiply cases, in whatsoever he has no authority,
there he is no king, and may be resisted: for wheresoever the authority
ceases, the king ceases too, and becomes like other men who have no
authority. And these two cases he instances in, differ little from those
above mentioned, to be destructive to governments, only that he has
omitted the principle from which his doctrine flows: and that is, the
breach of trust, in not preserving the form of government agreed on,
and in not intending the end of government itself, which is the public
good and preservation of property. When a king has dethroned himself,
and put himself in a state of war with his people, what shall hinder
them from prosecuting him who is no king, as they would any other man,
who has put himself into a state of war with them, Barclay, and those
of his opinion, would do well to tell us. This farther I desire may
be taken notice of out of Barclay, that he says, The mischief that is
designed them, the people may prevent before it be clone: whereby he
allows resistance when tyranny is but in design. Such designs as these
(says he) when any king harbours in his thoughts and seriously promotes,
he immediately gives up all care and thought of the common-wealth; so
that, according to him, the neglect of the public good is to be taken
as an evidence of such design, or at least for a sufficient cause of
resistance. And the reason of all, he gives in these words, Because
he betrayed or forced his people, whose liberty he ought carefully to
have preserved. What he adds, into the power and dominion of a foreign
nation, signifies nothing, the fault and forfeiture lying in the loss
of their liberty, which he ought to have preserved, and not in any distinction
of the persons to whose dominion they were subjected. The peoples right
is equally invaded, and their liberty lost, whether they are made slaves
to any of their own, or a foreign nation; and in this lies the injury,
and against this only have they the right of defence. And there are
instances to be found in all countries, which shew, that it is not the
change of nations in the persons of their governors, but the change
of government, that gives the offence. Bilson, a bishop of our church,
and a great stickler for the power and prerogative of princes, does,
if I mistake not, in his treatise of Christian subjection, acknowledge,
that princes may forfeit their power, and their title to the obedience
of their subjects; and if there needed authority in a case where reason
is so plain, I could send my reader to Bracton, Fortescue, and the author
of the Mirrour, and others, writers that cannot be suspected to be ignorant
of our government, or enemies to it. But I thought Hooker alone might
be enough to satisfy those men, who relying on him for their ecclesiastical
polity, are by a strange fate carried to deny those principles upon
which he builds it. Whether they are herein made the tools of cunninger
workmen, to pull down their own fabric, they were best look. This I
am sure, their civil policy is so new, so dangerous, and so destructive
to both rulers and people, that as former ages never could bear the
broaching of it; so it may be hoped, those to come, redeemed from the
impositions of these Egyptian under-task-masters, will abhor the memory
of such servile flatterers, who, whilst it seemed to serve their turn,
resolved all government into absolute tyranny, and would have all men
born to, what their mean souls fitted them for, slavery.
Sec. 240.
Here, it is like, the common question will be made, Who shall be judge,
whether the prince or legislative act contrary to their trust? This,
perhaps, ill-affected and factious men may spread amongst the people,
when the prince only makes use of his due prerogative. To this I reply,
The people shall be judge; for who shall be judge whether his trustee
or deputy acts well, and according to the trust reposed in him, but
he who deputes him, and must, by having deputed him, have still a power
to discard him, when he fails in his trust? If this be reasonable in
particular cases of private men, why should it be otherwise in that
of the greatest moment, where the welfare of millions is concerned,
and also where the evil, if not prevented, is greater, and the redress
very difficult, dear, and dangerous?
Sec. 241.
But farther, this question, (Who shall be judge?) cannot mean, that
there is no judge at all: for where there is no judicature on earth,
to decide controversies amongst men, God in heaven is judge. He alone,
it is true, is judge of the right. But every man is judge for himself,
as in all other cases, so in this, whether another hath put himself
into a state of war with him, and whether he should appeal to the Supreme
Judge, as leptha did.
Sec. 242.
If a controversy arise betwixt a prince and some of the people, in a
matter where the law is silent, or doubtful, and the thing be of great
consequence, I should think the proper umpire, in such a case, should
be the body of the people: for in cases where the prince hath a trust
reposed in him, and is dispensed from the common ordinary rules of the
law; there, if any men find themselves aggrieved, and think the prince
acts contrary to, or beyond that trust, who so proper to judge as the
body of the people, (who, at first, lodged that trust in him) how far
they meant it should extend? But if the prince, or whoever they be in
the administration, decline that way of determination, the appeal then
lies no where but to heaven; force between either persons, who have
no known superior on earth, or which permits no appeal to a judge on
earth, being properly a state of war, wherein the appeal lies only to
heaven; and in that state the injured party must judge for himself,
when he will think fit to make use of that appeal, and put himself upon
it.
Sec. 243.
To conclude, The power that every individual gave the society, when
he entered into it, can never revert to the individuals again, as long
as the society lasts, but will always remain in the community; because
without this there can be no community, no common-wealth, which is contrary
to the original agreement: so also when the society hath placed the
legislative in any assembly of men, to continue in them and their successors,
with direction and authority for providing such successors, the legislative
can never revert to the people whilst that government lasts; because
having provided a legislative with power to continue for ever, they
have given up their political power to the legislative, and cannot resume
it. But if they have set limits to the duration of their legislative,
and made this supreme power in any person, or assembly, only temporary;
or else, when by the miscarriages of those in authority, it is forfeited;
upon the forfeiture, or at the determination of the time set, it reverts
to the society, and the people have a right to act as supreme, and continue
the legislative in themselves; or erect a new form, or under the old
form place it in new hands, as they think good.
FINIS.
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