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Why
kings were created
Now, seeing that kings have been ever established by the people, and
that they have had associates joined with them to contain them within
the limits of their duties, these associates, when considered in particular
one by one, are under the king, and altogether in one entire body are
above him. We must consequently see why kings were first established,
and what is principally their duty. We usually esteem a thing just and
good when it attains to the proper end for which it is ordained.
In the first place every one agrees that men, by nature loving liberty
and hating servitude, and born rather to command than obey, have not
willingly admitted to be governed by another, and renounced, as it were,
the privilege of nature by submitting themselves to the commands of
others for some special and great profit that they expected from it.
For as Aesop says, "That the horse being before accustomed to wander
at his pleasure, would never have received the bit into his mouth, nor
the rider on his back, but that he hoped by that means to overmatch
the bull." Neither let us imagine, that kings were chosen to apply
to their own proper use the goods that are gotten by the sweat of their
subjects; for every man loves and cherishes his own. They have not received
the power and authority of the people so they can use it to pander to
their pleasures: for ordinarily, the inferiors hate, or at least envy,
their superiors.
Let us then conclude, that they are established in this place to maintain
by justice, and to defend by force of arms, both the public state, and
particular persons from all damages and outrages. This is why St. Augustine
said, "Those are properly called lords and masters who provide
for the good and profit of others, as the husband for the wife, fathers
for their children." They must therefore obey them who provide
for them; although, indeed, to speak truly, those who govern in this
manner may in a sort be said to serve those whom they command over.
For, as says the same doctor, they command not for the desire of dominion,
but for the duty they owe to provide for the good of those who are subjected
to them; not affecting any lord-like domineering, but with charity and
singular affection, desiring the welfare of those who are committed
to them.
Seneca in the eighty-first epistle says, "That in the golden age,
wise men only governed kingdoms: they kept themselves within the bounds
of moderation, and preserved the meanest from the oppression of the
greatest. They persuaded and dissuaded, according as it advantaged or
disadvantaged, the public profit; by their wisdom, they furnished the
public with plenty of all necessaries, and by their discretion prevented
scarcity, by their valor and courage they expelled dangers, by their
many benefits they increased and enriched their subjects; they pleaded
not their duty in making pompous shows, but in well governing their
people. No man made trial what he was able to do against them, because
every one received what he was capable of from them," etc.
Therefore, to govern is nothing else but to provide for. These proper
ends of commanding, being for the people's benefit, the only duty of
kings and emperors is to provide for the people's good. The kingly dignity
to speak properly is not a title of honor, but a weighty and burdensome
office. It is not a discharge or vacation from affairs to run a licentious
course of liberty, but a charge and vocation to all industrious employments
for the service of the commonwealth; the which has some glimpse of honor
with it because in those first and golden ages, no man would have tasted
such continual troubles if they had not been sweetened with some relish
of honor; insomuch as there was nothing more true than that which was
commonly said in those times, "If every man knew with what turmoils
and troubles the royal wreath was wrapped with, no man would desire
to pick it up, even if it lay right at his feet."
When, therefore, that the distinction between 'mine' and 'thine' entered
into the world, and that differences occurred between fellow citizens,
touching the propriety of goods, and wars amongst neighboring people
about boundary disputes, the people bethought themselves to have recourse
to some one who both could and should take order that the poor were
not oppressed by the rich, nor the patriots wronged by strangers.
Nor as wars and suits increased, they chose someone in whose wisdom
and valor they gave all their confidence. See, then, why kings were
created in the first ages; that is, to administer justice at home, and
to be leaders in the wars abroad, and not only to repulse the incursions
of the enemy, but also to repress and hinder the devastation and spoiling
of the subjects and their goods at home; but above all, to expel and
drive away all devices and debauchments far from their dominions.
This may be proved by every history, both sacred and secular. For the
people of God, they had at first no other king but God Himself, who
dwelt in the midst of them, and gave answer from between the cherubims,
appointed extraordinary Judges and captains for the wars; by means whereof
the people thought they had no need of lieutenants, being honored by
the continual presence of their Sovereign King.
Now, when the people of God began to grow weary of the injustice of
the sons of Samuel, on whose old age they dare no longer rely, they
demanded a king after the manner of other nations, saying to Samuel,
"Give us a king as other people have, that he may judge us."
There is mentioned the first and principal point of the duty of a king,
a little after they are both mentioned. "We will have" (said
they) "a king over us like other nations. Our king shall judge
us, and go in and out before us, and lead our armies." To do justice
is always set in the first place, for so much as it is an ordinary and
regular thing; but wars are extraordinary, and happen, as it were, haphazardly.
Therefore, Aristotle says, that in the time of Herold, all kings were
judges and captains. For the Lacedemonian kings, they in his time also
had sovereign authority only in the army, and that confined also to
the commandments of the magistrates.
In like manner the Medes, who were ever in perpetual quarrels amongst
themselves, at length chose Deolces to be judge, who had carried himself
well in the deciding of some particular differences; presently after
they made him king, and gave him officers and guards, that he might
more easily suppress the powerful and insolent.
Cicero says that in ancient times all kings were established to administer
justice, and that all institutions, and all laws, had one and the same
end, which was, that equity and right might be duly rendered to all
men. This may be verified by the propriety of the words in almost all
languages. Kings are called by the Latins, Reges a regendo, for that
they must rule and govern the limits and bounds, both of the public
and particulars. The names of emperors, princes, and dukes have relation
to their conduct in the wars, and principal places in battles, and other
places of command. Likewise the Greeks call them in their language,
Basiles, Archae, Hegomodes, which is to say chiefs of the people, princes,
leaders. The Germans and other nations use all significant names which
express that the duty of a king consists not in making glorious parades;
but that it is an office of a weighty charge and continual care. But,
in brief, the poet Homer calls kings the judges of cities, and in describing
Agamemnon, he calls him wise, strong, and valiant. As also, Ovid, speaking
of Erechtheus, says, that it was hard to know, whether justice or valor
were more visible in him; in which these two poets seem exactly to have
described the duties of kings and princes. You see what was the custom
of the kings of the heathen nations; after whose examples, the Jews
demanded and established their kings.
The Queen of Sheba said also to Solomon, that God had made him king
over them to do judgment and justice. And Solomon himself, speaking
to God, said, "Thou hast chosen me to be a king over Thy people,
and a judge of Thy sons and daughters."
For this cause also the good kings, as David, Josephat, and others,
being not able in their own persons to determine all the suits and differences
of their subjects (although in the causes of greatest importance they
reserved an appeal always to themselves, as appears in Samuel), had
ever above all things a special care, to establish in all places just
and discreet judges, and principally still to have an eye to the right
administration of justice; knowing themselves to carry the sword, as
well to chastise wicked and unjust subjects, as to repulse foreign enemies.
Briefly, as the apostle says, "The prince is ordained by God, for
the good and profit of the people, being armed with the sword to defend
the good from the violence of the wicked, and when he discharges his
duty therein, all men owe him honor and obedience."
Seeing then that kings are ordained by God and established by the people,
to procure and provide for the good of those who are committed unto
them, and that this good or profit be principally expressed in two ways,
to wit, in the administration of justice to their subjects and in the
managing of armies for the defense against their enemies: certainly,
we must infer and conclude from this, that the prince who applied himself
to nothing but his own pleasures pursuits, or to those ends which most
readily contribute "hereunto, who contemns and perverts all laws,
who uses his subjects more cruelly than the barbarous enemy would do,
he may truly and really be called a tyrant, and that those who in this
manner govern their kingdoms, be they of never so large an extent, are
more properly unjust pillagers and free-booters, than lawful governors."
We must here yet proceed a little further: for it is demanded whether
the king who presides in the administration of justice has power to
resolve and determine business according to his own will and pleasure?
Must the kings be subject to the law, or does the law depend upon the
king? The law (says an ancient) is respected by those who otherways
condemn virtue, for it enforces obedience, and ministers' conduct in
warfaring, and gives vigor and luster to justice and equity. Pausanias
the Spartan will answer in a word, that it becomes laws to direct, and
men to yield obedience to their authority. Agesilaus, king of Sparta,
says that all commanders must obey the commandments of the laws. But
it shall not be amiss to carry this matter a little higher. When people
began to seek for justice to determine their differences, if they met
with any private man that did justly appoint them, they were satisfied
with it. Now for so much as such men were rarely and with much difficulty
met with, and for that the judgments of kings received as laws were
oftentimes found contrary and difficult, then the magistrates and others
of great wisdom invented laws, which might speak to all men in one and
the same voice.
This being done, it was expressly enjoined to kings, that they should
be the guardians and administrators, and sometimes also, for so much
as the laws could not foresee the particularities of actions to resolve
exactly, it was permitted the king to supply this defect, by the same
natural equity by which the laws were drawn; and for fear lest they
should go against law, the people appointed them from time to time associates,
counsellors, of whom we have formerly made mention, therefore there
is nothing which exempts the king from the obedience which he owes to
the law, which he ought to acknowledge as his lady and mistress, esteeming
nothing can become him worse than that feminine of which Juvenal speaks:
Sic volo, sic jubeo, sic pro ratione voluntas: I will, I command, my
will shall serve instead of reason. Neither should they think their
authority the less because they are confined to laws, for seeing the
law is a divine gift coming from above, which human societies are happily
governed and addressed to their best and most blessed end. Those kings
are as ridiculous and worthy of contempt who repute it a dishonor to
conform themselves to law, as those surveyors who think themselves disgraced
by using a rule, a compass, a chain or other instruments, which men
understanding the art of surveying are accustomed to do, or a pilot
who had rather fail according to his fantasy and imagination, than steer
his course by his needle and seaman's compass.
Who can doubt that it is more profitable and convenient to obey the
law rather than the king who is but one man? The law is the soul of
a good king, it gives him motion, sense and life. The king is the organ
and, as it were, the body by which the law displays her forces, exercises
her function, and expresses her conceptions. Now it is a thing much
more reasonable to obey the soul than the body; the law is the wisdom
of diverse sages, recollected in few words, but many see more clear
and further than one alone. It is much better to follow the law than
any one man's opinion, be he ever so perceptive. The law is reason and
wisdom itself, free from all perturbation, not subject to be moved with
ill-temper, ambition, hate, or favoritism. Entreaties nor threats cannot
make to bow nor bend; on the contrary, a man, though endued with reason,
permits himself to be lead and transported with anger, desire of revenge,
and other passions which perplex him in such sort, that he loses his
understanding, because being composed of reason and disordered affections,
he cannot so contain himself, but sometimes his passions become his
master. Accordingly we see that Valentinian, a good emperor, permits
those of the empire to have two wives at once, because he himself was
misled by that impure affection. Because Cambises, the son of Cyrus,
became enamored of his own sister, he would therefore have marriages
between brother and sister be approved and held lawful. Cubades, king
of the Persians, prohibited the punishment of adulterers. We must expect
such laws continually if we allow the law to be subject to the king.
To come to our purpose, the law is an understanding mind, or rather
an obstacle of many understandings: the mind, being the seal of all
the intelligent faculties, is (if I may so term it) a parcel of divinity;
insomuch as he who obeys the law, seems to obey God, and receive Him
for arbitrator of the matters in controversy.
But, on the contrary, insomuch as man is composed of this divine understanding,
and of a number of unruly passions; so losing himself in that brutishness,
as he becomes void of reason; and, being in that condition, he is no
longer a man, but a beast; he then who desires rather to obey the king
than the law, seems to prefer the commandment of a beast before that
of God.
And furthermore, though Aristotle were the tutor of Alexander, yet he
confesses that the Divinity cannot so properly be compared to anything
in this life, as to the ancient laws of well-governed states. He who
prefers the commonwealth, applies himself to God's ordinances: but he
who leans to the king's fancies, instead of law, prefers brutish sensuality
before well-ordered discretion. To which also the prophets seem to have
respect, who, in some places, describe these great empires as under
the representation of ravening beasts. But to go on, is not he a very
beast, who had rather have for his guide a blind and mad man, than he
who sees both with the eyes of the body and mind, a beast rather than
God? Whence it comes, that though kings, as says Aristotle, for a while,
at the first, commanded without restraint of laws; yet presently after,
civilized people reduced them to a lawful condition, by binding them
to keep and observe the laws: and for this unruly absolute authority,
it remained only amongst those who commanded over barbarous nations.
He says afterwards that this absolute power was the next degree to plain
tyranny, and he would have absolutely called it tyranny, had not these
beasts, like barbarians, willingly subjected themselves to it. But it
will be replied, that it is unworthy of the majesty of kings to have
their wills bridled by laws. But I will say, that nothing is more royal
than to have our unruly desires ruled by good laws.
It is much pity to be restrained from that which we would do; it is
much more worse to will that which we should not do, but it is the worst
of all to do that which the laws forbid.
I hear, methinks, a certain furious tribune of the people who opposed
the passing of a law that was made against the excess which then reigned
in Rome, saying, "My masters, you are bridled, you are idle and
fettered with the rude bonds of servitude; your liberty is lost, a law
is laid on you that commands you to be moderate. To what purpose is
it to say you are free, since you may not live in what excess of pleasure
you like?" This is the very complaint of many kings at this day,
and of their minions and flatterers. The royal majesty is abolished,
if they may not turn the kingdom topsy-turvy at their pleasure. Kings
may go and shake their ears, if laws must be observed. Therefore, it
is a miserable thing to live, if a madman may not be permitted to kill
himself when he will. For what else do those things which violate and
abolish laws, without which, neither empires, no, nor the very societies
of free-booters can at all subsist?
Let us then reject these detestable, faithless, and impious vanities
of the court-flatterers, which make kings gods, and receive their sayings
as oracles, and, worse, shamelessly persuade kings that nothing is just
or equitable except as it takes its true form of justice or injustice
according as it pleases the king to ordain, as if he were some god,
which could never err nor sin at all. Certainly, all that which God
wills is just, and therefore, suppose it is God's will; but that must
be just with the king's will before it is his will. For it is not just
because the king has appointed it; but that king is just, which appoints
that to be held for just, which is so of itself.
We will not then say as Anaxarchus did to Alexander, much perplexed
for the death of his friend Clitus, whom he had killed with his own
hands; to wit, that Themis, the goddess of Justice, sits by kings' side,
as she does by Jupiter's, to approve and confirm whatsoever to them
shall seem good. Rather, she sits as president over kingdoms, to severely
chastise those kings who wrong or violate the majesty of the laws. We
can in no ways approve that saying of Thrasimachus the Chaldonian that
the profit and pleasure of princes is the rule by which all laws are
defined. Instead, right must limit the profit of princes, and the laws
restrain their pleasures. And instead of approving that which that villainous
woman said to Caracalla, that whatsoever he desired was allowed him,
we will maintain that nothing is lawful but what the law permits.
And absolutely rejecting that detestable opinion of the same Caracalla,
that princes give laws to others but received none from any; we will
say, that in all kingdoms well established, the king receives the laws
from the people which he ought carefully to consider and maintain. And
whatsoever he does against them, either by force or fraud, must always
be reputed unjust.
Kings
receive laws from the people
These may be sufficiently verified by examples. Before there was a king
in Israel, God by Moses prescribed to him both sacred and civil ordinances,
which he should have perpetually before his eyes. But after Saul was
elected and established by the people, Samuel delivered it to him written,
to the end, he might carefully observe it; neither were the succeeding
kings received before they had sworn to keep those ordinances.
The ceremony was this, that together with the setting of the crown on
the king's head, they delivered into his hands the Book of the Testimony,
which some understand to be the right of the people of the land, others,
the law of God according to which he ought to govern the people. Cyrus,
acknowledging himself conservator of his country's laws, obliges himself
to oppose any man who would offer to infringe them; and at his inauguration,
ties himself to observe them, although some flatterers tickled the ears
of his son Cambises, that all things were lawful for him.
The kings of Sparta, whom Aristotle calls lawful princes, did every
month renew their oaths, promising in the hands of the magistrates speaking
for the kingdom, to rule according to those laws which they had from
Lycurgus. When Archidamus, the son of Zeuxidamus, was asked who were
the governors of Sparta, he answered, "The laws, and the lawful
magistrates." And lest the laws might grow into contempt, these
people bragged that they received them from heaven; and that they were
inspired from above, to the end that men might believe that their determinations
were from God, and not from man. The kings of Egypt did in nothing vary
from the tenor of the laws, and confessed that their principal felicity
consisted in the obedience they yielded to them. Romulus, at the institution
of the Roman kingdom, made this agreement with senators: the people
should make laws, and he would take both for himself and others, to
see them observed and kept. Antiochus, the third of that name, king
of Asia, wrote to all the cities of his kingdom, that if in the letters
sent to them in his name, there were anything found repugnant to the
laws, they should believe they were no act of the king's, and therefore
yield no obedience unto them. Now, although some citizens say, that
by decree of the senate, the emperor Augustus was declared to be exempt
from obedience to laws; yet, notwithstanding, Theodosius, and all the
other good and reasonable emperors, have professed that they were bound
to the laws, lest what had been extorted by violence, might be acknowledged
and received instead of law. And for Augustus Caesar, insomuch as the
Roman commonwealth was enslaved by his power and violence; she could
say nothing freely, but that she had lost her freedom. And because they
dare not call Augustus a tyrant, the senate said he was exempt from
all obedience to the laws, which was in effect as much as if they plainly
should have said the emperor was an outlaw. The same right has ever
been of force in all well-governed states and kingdoms of Christendom.
For neither the emperor, the king of France, nor the kings of Spain,
England, Poland, Hungary, and all other lawful princes; as the archdukes
of Austria, dukes of Brabante, earls of Flanders, and Holland, nor other
princes, are not admitted to the government of their estates, before
they have promised to the electors, peers, palatines, lords, barons,
and governors, that they will render to every one right according to
the laws of the country. This oath is so strict that they cannot alter
or innovate anything contrary to the privileges of the countries without
the consent of the towns and provinces. If they do it, they are no less
guilty of rebellion against the laws than the people are in like manner,
if they refuse obedience when they command according to law. Briefly,
lawful princes receive the laws from the people as well as the crown,
in lieu of honor, and the scepter, in lieu of power, which they are
bound to keep and maintain and therein lies their highest glory.
If
the ruler may make new laws
What then? Shall it not be lawful for a ruler to make new laws and abrogate
the old? Seeing it belongs to the king, not only to advise that nothing
be done neither against, nor to defraud the laws, but also that nothing
be wanting to them, nor anything too much in them: briefly, that neither
age nor lapse of time do abolish or entomb them; if there be anything
to abridge, to be added or taken away from them, it is his duty to assemble
the estates, and to demand their advice and resolution, without presuming
to publish anything before the whole have been, first, duly examined
and approved by them. After the law is once enacted and published, there
is no more dispute to be made about it; all men owe obedience to it.
And the ruler, to teach other men their duty (for all men are easier
led by example than by precepts), must necessarily express his willingness
to observe the laws, or else by what right can he require obedience
in his subjects, to that which he himself condemns?
For the difference which is between kings and subjects ought not to
consist in impunity, but in equity and justice. And therefore, although
Augustus was esteemed to be exempt by the decree of the senate, notwithstanding,
reproving of a young man who had broken the Julian law concerning adultery,
he boldly replied to Augustus, that he himself had transgressed the
same law which condemns adulterers. The emperor acknowledged his fault,
and for grief forbore too late. So convenient a thing it is in nature,
to practice by example that which we would teach by precept. The lawgiver
Solon was wont to compare laws to money, for they maintain human societies,
as money preserves traffic, and neither are improper, then, if the king
may not (or at the least heretofore could not), lawfully alter or debase
the currency without the consent of the commonwealth — much more
less can he have power to make and unmake laws without which kings nor
subjects, can live together in security, but must be forced to live
brutishly in caves and deserts like wild beasts. Therefore the emperor
of Germany, esteeming it needful to make some law for the good of the
empire, first demanded the advice of the estates. If it be there approved,
the rulers, barons, and deputies of the towns sign it, and then the
law is satisfied, for he solemnly swears to keep the laws already made,
and to introduce no new ones without a general consent.
There is a law in Poland, which has been renewed in the year 1454, and
also in the year 1538, and by this it is decreed, that no new laws shall
be made, but by a common consent, nor nowhere else, but in the general
assembly of the estates.
For the kingdom of France, where the kings are thought to have greater
authority than in other places, in ancient times all laws were only
made in the assembly of the estates, or in the ambulatory parliament.
But since this parliament has been sedentary, the king's edicts are
not received as authentic before the parliament has approved them.
Whereas on the contrary, the decrees of this parliament, where the law
is defective, have commonly the power and effect of law. In the kingdoms
of England, Spain, Hungary, and others, they yet enjoy in some sort
their ancient privileges.
For if the welfare of the kingdom depends on the observation of the
laws, and the laws are enslaved to the pleasure of one man, is it not
most certain, that there can be no permanent stability in that government?
Must it not then necessarily come to pass, that if the king (as some
have been) be infected with lunacy, either continually, or by intervals,
that the whole state fall inevitably to ruin? But if the laws are superior
to the king, as we have already proved, and that the king is tied in
the same respect of obedience to the laws as the servant is to his master,
who will be so senseless, who will not rather obey the law than the
king or will not readily yield his best assistance against those who
seek to violate or infringe them? Now seeing that the king is not lord
over the laws, let us examine how far his power may be justly extended
in other things.
Whether
the ruler have power of life and death over his subjects
The minions of the court consider it self-evident that rulers have the
same power of life and death over their subjects as ancient masters
had over their slaves. With these false imaginations have so bewitched
rulers, that many, although they do not much use this imaginary right,
yet imagine that they may lawfully do so, and in how much they desist
from the practice thereof, insomuch that they quit and relinquish their
right and due.
But we affirm on the contrary, that the ruler is but as the minister
and executor of the law, and may only unsheathe the sword against those
whom the law has condemned; and if he do otherwise, he is no more a
king, but a tyrant; no longer a judge, but a malefactor, and instead
of that honorable title of conservator, he shall be justly branded with
that foul term of violator of the law and equity.
We must here first of all take into our consideration the foundation
on which this our disputation is built, which we have resolved into
this head, that kings are ordained for the benefit and profit of the
public state; this being granted, the question is soon discussed. For
who will believe that men sought and desired a king, who, upon any sudden
motion, might at his pleasure cut their throats; or which in anger or
revenge, might, when he would, take their heads from their shoulders?
Briefly, who (as the wise man says) carried death at his tongue's end,
we must not think so idly.
There is no man so vain who would accept willingly that his welfare
should depend on another's pleasure. No, with much difficulty will any
man trust his life in the hands of a friend or a brother, much less
of a stranger, be he never so worthy. Seeing that envy, hate, rage,
did so far transport Athanas and Ajax, beyond the bounds of reason,
that the one killed his children, the other failing to effect his desire
in the same kind against his friends and companions, turned his fury
and murderous intent and acted the same revenge upon himself. Now it
being natural to every man to love himself, and to see the preservation
of his own life, in what assurance, I ask you, would any man rest, to
have a sword continually hanging over his head by a small thread, with
the point towards him? Would any mirth or jollity be relished in such
a continual affright? Can you possibly make choice of a more slender
thread, than to expose your life and welfare into the hands and power
of a man so unpredictable, who changes with every puff of wind, and
who, almost a thousand times a day, shakes off the restraint of reason
and discretion, and yields himself slave to his own unruly and disordered
passions?
Can there be hoped or imagined any profit or advantage so great or so
worthy, which might equalize or counteract this fear or this danger?
Let us conclude then, that it is against delinquents only, whom the
mouth of the law has condemned, that kings may draw forth the sword
of their authority.
If
the king may pardon those whom the law condemns
But, because life is precious, and greatly desired, perhaps it will
be demanded that the king be granted the power to pardon and absolve
those whom the law has condemned.
This I refuse. Otherwise, this cruel pity would keep alive thieves,
robbers, murderers, rapists, poisoners, sorcerers, and other plagues
of mankind, as history says tyrants have done before now in many places,
and to our woeful experience, we see at this present time. Therefore,
the stopping of law in this kind will, by impunity, much increase the
number of offenders.
So that he who received the sword of authority from the law to pardon
offences will thus arm offenders against the laws, and send the wolf
into the fold, which he ought to have secured against their ravenous
outrage.
But for so much that it may so happen in some occasions that the law
is mute, therefore there is need of a speaking law, and that the king
being, in some cases, the ablest expositor, taking for the rule of his
actions, equity and reason, which as the soul of the soul may so make
clear the law's intention, and it may be that the offence is rather
committed against the words than the intention of the law. In which
case the king may free the innocent offender from the guilt thereof
because a just and equitable exposition of the law may in all good reason
be taken for law itself, as being the closest thing to the intention
of the law-makers.
Notwithstanding, lest passion should supplant reason, kings should imitate
the practice of the emperor Severus, not to determine absolutely anything
before it were maturely discussed by upright and discreet men.
And so the king may rigorously punish the murderer; and yet, notwithstanding,
pardon him, who casually, and without any such purpose, kills a murderer.
He may put to death the thief, and yet pardon that man, who, in his
own defence kills him that would have robbed him. Briefly, in all other
occurrences, he may distinguish, as being an established arbitrator
and thus neutral, manslaughter from malice, fore-thought a good purpose
from the rigor of the law, without favoring at any time malice or treason.
Neither by the right omission of this duty can he gain any true esteem
of merciful men: for certainly that shepherd is much more pitiful who
kills the wolf, than he who lets him escape: the clemency of that king
is more commendable who commits the malefactor to the hangman, than
he who delivers him; by putting to death the murderer, many innocents
are delivered from danger: whereas by allowing him to escape, both he
and others through hope of the like impunity, are made more audacious
to perpetrate further mischief, so that the immediate act of saving
one delinquent, arms many hands to murder many innocents. There is,
therefore, both true mildness in putting to death some, and as certain
there is cruelty in pardoning others. Therefore, as it is permitted
the king, since he is the custodian of the law, in some cases to interpret
the words, so in all well-ordered kingdoms, the council of state is
responsible to examine the king's interpretation, and to moderate both
his severity and facility. If, through the corruption and weakness of
men, this have not been so really and thoroughly observed as it ought:
yet, notwithstanding, the right always remains entire, and only integrity
and courage in the parties is necessary to make it effectual.
But not to heap up too many examples in a matter so manifestly clear,
it has been practiced in this manner in France. For there we have often
seen those put to death to whom the king had granted his charter of
pardon; and those pardoned, whom he commanded should be put to death;
and sometimes offences committed in the king's presence remitted, because
there was no other witness other than himself. This happened in the
time of Henry II to a certain stranger, who was accused by the king
himself of a grievous offence. If an offender, by the intercession of
friends, gets his pardon granted by the king, the chancellor upon sufficient
cause may cancel it. If the chancellor connive, yet must the criminal
present it before the judges, who ought not only carefully to consider
whether the pardon were gotten by surreptitious or indirect means, but
also if it be legal, and in due form. Neither can the delinquent who
has obtained his charter of pardon make use of it, until first he appeal
in public court bare-headed, and on his knees plead it, submitting himself
prisoner until the judges have maturely weighed and considered the reasons
that induced the king to grant him his pardon. If they be found insufficient,
the offender must suffer the full punishment of the law, just as if
the king had not granted him any pardon at all. But, if his pardon is
allowed, he ought not so much to thank the king, as the equity of the
law which saved his life. The manner of these proceedings was excellently
ordained, both to contain the king within the limits of equity, lest
being armed with public authority, he should seek to take revenge according
to his personal whims, or out of fancy or partiality, remit the wrongs
and outrages committed against the public safety: as partly also to
restrain an opinion in the subject, that anything could be obtained
of the king which might prejudice the laws. If these things have not
been observed in our times, even so that which we have formerly said
remains always certain, that it is the laws which have power over the
lives and deaths of the inhabitants of a kingdom, and not the king,
who is but administrator and conservator of the laws.
The
king's subjects are his brethren, not his slaves
For truly neither are the subjects, as it is commonly said, the king's
slaves, or bondmen: being neither war prisoners nor bought for money.
But if as one entire body they are considered as lords, as we have formerly
proved; so each of them in particular ought to be held as the king's
brothers and kinsmen. And to the end that we think this isn't strange,
let us hear what God Himself says when He prescribes a law to kings:
That they lift not their heart above their brethren from amongst whom
they were chosen. Whereupon Bartolus, a famous lawyer, who lived in
an age that bred many tyrants, also drew this conclusion from that law,
that subjects were to be held and used in the quality and condition
of the king's brethren, and not of his slaves. Also king David was not
ashamed to call his subjects his brethren. The ancient kings were called
Abimelech, a Hebrew word which means "my father the king."
The almighty and all good God, of whose great gentleness and mercy we
are daily partakers, and very seldom feel His severity, although we
justly deserve it, yet is it always mercifully mixed with compassion;
whereby He teaches princes, His lieutenants, that subjects ought rather
to be held in obedience by love, than by fear.
But, lest they should have anything against me, as if I sought to detract
too much from the royal authority, I believe it is so much the greater,
by how much it is likely to be of longer continuance. For, says one,
servile fear is a bad guardian, for that authority we desire should
continue; for those in subjection hate them they fear, and whom we hate,
we naturally wish their destruction. On the contrary, there is nothing
more proper to maintain their authority than the affection of their
subjects, on whose love they may safely and with most security lay the
foundation of their greatness. And therefore that ruler who governs
his subjects as brethren may confidently assure himself to live securely
in the midst of dangers: whereas he who uses them like slaves, will
live in much anxiety and fear, and may well resemble to the condition
of that master who remains alone in some desert in the midst of a great
troop of slaves; for look how many slaves any has, he must make account
of so many enemies, which almost all tyrants who have been killed by
their subjects have experienced. Whereas, on the contrary, the subjects
of good kings are ever as solicitously careful of their safety, as of
their own welfare.
This may have reference to what we read in various places of Aristotle,
and was said by Agasicles, king of Sparta, that is, that kings command
as fathers over their children, and tyrants as masters over their slaves,
which we must take in the same sense that the civilian Martianus does,
to wit, that paternal authority consists in piety, and not in rigor,
for that which was practiced under the acorns, that fathers might sell,
and put to death their children at their pleasure, has no authority
amongst Christians. In fact, the very pagans who had any humanity would
not permit it to be practiced on their slaves. Therefore, then, the
father has no power over the son's life, before first the law has first
determined it, otherwise he offends the case law Cornelius against privy
murderers, and by the case law Pompeius against parricides, the father
is no less guilty who kills the son, than the son who murders the father.
For the same occasion the emperor Adrian banished into an island, which
was the usual punishment for notorious offenders, a father who had slain
his son, of whom he had entertained a jealous opinion for his mother-in-law.
Concerning servants or slaves, we are admonished in holy writ to treat
them like brethren, but by human constitutions as hirelings, or mercenaries.
By the civil law of the Egyptians and Romans, and by the constitutions
of the Antonines, the master is as well liable to punishment who has
killed his own slave, as he who killed another man's. In like manner
the law delivers from the power of the master, the slave, whom, in his
sickness, he has altogether neglected, or has not afforded convenient
food, and the enfranchised slave whose condition was somewhat better,
might, for any apparent injury, bring his action against his patron.
Now, seeing there is so great difference between slaves and lawful children,
between lords and fathers, and, notwithstanding heretofore, it was not
permitted amongst the heathen, to use their slaves cruelly, what shall
we say, pray tell, of that father of the people, who cries out tragically
with Atreus, "I will devour my children!"? In what esteem
shall we hold that ruler who takes such pleasure in the massacre of
his subjects (condemned without being ever heard), that he dispatched
thousands of them in one day, and yet is not glutted with blood? Briefly,
who, after the example of Caligula (surnamed the Phaeton of the world)
wishes that all his people had but one head that he might cut it off
at one blow? Shall it not be lawful to implore the assistance of the
law against such furious madness, and to pull from such a tyrant the
sword which he received to maintain the law, and defend the good, when
it is drawn by him only for rapine, and ruin?
Whether
the goods of the people belong to the king
But to proceed, let us now see whether the king, whom we have already
proved does not have power over the lives of his subjects, is not at
the least lord over their goods. In these days there is no rhetoric
more common in the courts of rules, than of those who say "all
belongs to the king." Therefore it follows, that in exacting anything
from his subjects, he takes but his own, and in that which he leaves
them, he expresses the care he has that they should not be altogether
destitute of means to maintain themselves. This opinion has gained so
much power in the minds of some rulers, that they are not ashamed to
say that the pains, sweat and industry of their subjects is the proper
revenue, as if their miserable subjects only kept beasts to till the
earth for their insolent master's profit and luxury. And indeed, the
practice at this day is just in this manner, although by all rights
it ought to be exactly the opposite. Now we must always remember that
kings were created for the good and profit of the people, and that these
(as Aristotle says) who endeavor and seek the welfare of the people
are truly kings; whereas those who make their own private ends and pleasures
the only goal and aim of their desires, are truly tyrants.
It being then so that every one loves that which is his own, and that
many covet that which belongs to other men, is it anything probable
that men should seek a master to give him frankly all that they had
long labored for, and gained with the sweat of their brows? May we not
rather imagine that they chose such a man on whose integrity they relied
for the administering of justice equally both to the poor and rich,
and who would not assume all to himself, but rather maintain every one
in the fruition of his own goods? Or who, like an unprofitable drone,
should suck the fruit of other men's labors, but rather preserve the
house for those whose industry justly deserved it? Briefly, who, instead
of extorting from the true owners their goods, would see them defended
from all ravening oppressors? What does it matter, says the poor country
man, whether the king or the enemy make havoc of my goods, since either
way I and my poor family will die of hunger? Of what importance is it
whether an imported or home-bred caterpillar ruins my estate, and brings
my poor fortune to poverty; whether a foreign soldier, or a sycophant
courtier, by force or fraud, make me alike miserable? Why shall he be
accounted a barbarous enemy, if you're supposedly a friendly patriot?
Why is he a tyrant if you are king? Yes, certainly by how much parricide
is greater than manslaughter, by so much the wickedness of a king exceeds
in mischief the violence of an enemy.
If therefore, in the creation of kings, men gave not their own proper
goods to them, but only recommended them to their protection; by what
other right then, but that of freebooters, can they challenge the property
of other men's goods to themselves? Therefore, the kings of Egypt were
not (according to law) at the first the lords of particular men's estates,
but only then when they were sold to them for corn, and yet may there
well be question made of the validity of that contract. Ahab, king of
Israel, could not compel Naboth to sell him his vineyard; but rather
if he had been willing, the law of God would not permit it. The Roman
emperors who had an unreasonable power, could neither by right have
done it. At this day there is with much difficulty any kingdom to be
found, where the meanest subject may not suit the king, and where many
times the king is not cast in the suit, which succeeding, he must as
well as others satisfy the judgment. And to this is not contrary, although
at the first view it seem so, that which some of their most familiars
have written of the emperors. That by the civil law all things were
the king's, and that Caesar was absolute lord of all things, they themselves
expound this their opinion in this manner, that the dominion of all
things belongs to the king, and the propriety to particular persons,
in so much as the one possesses all by the right of commanding, the
other by the law of inheritance. We know that it is a common saying
amongst the civilians, that if any make claim to a house or a ship,
it doesn't follows therefore that he can extend his right to all the
furniture or lading. And therefore, a king may challenge and gain right
to the kingdom of Germany, France and England: and yet, notwithstanding,
he may not lawfully take any honest man's estate from him, but by a
manifest injustice, seeing that they are different things, and by law
distinguished, to be possessors of the whole, and of all the particular
parts.
Whether
the king owns all property in the kingdom
But the king, is he not lord proprietor of the public revenue? We must
treat this point in a more exactly manner than we did the former. In
the first place, we must consider that the revenue of the public treasury
is one thing, and the proper heritage of the prince another. The goods
of the emperor, king, or prince are of a different nature than those
of Antonius, Henry, or Phillip; those are properly the king's, which
he enjoys as king, those are Antonius' his which he possesses, as in
the right of Antonius, the former he received from the people, the latter
from those of his blood, as inheritor to them.
This distinction is mentioned frequently in the books of the civil law,
where there is a difference is always made between the heritage of the
empire, and that of the emperor. That is, the treasury of Caesar is
one thing, and the exchequer of the commonwealth another, and both the
one and the other have their own procurers, there being different dispensers
of the sacred and public distributions, and of the particular and private
expenses, insomuch as he who as emperor is preferred before a private
man in a grant by deed or charter, may also sometime as Antonius give
place to a lower person.
In like manner in the empire of Germany, the revenue of Ferdinand of
Austria is one thing, and the revenue of the Emperor Ferdinand is another:
the empire and the emperor each have their own treasures, as there is
a also a difference between the inheritances which the princes derive
from the houses of their ancestors, and those which are connected with
being a ruler. Even among the Turks, Selimus, his gardens and inherited
lands, are distinguished from those of the public, the one serving for
the provision of the Sultan's table, the other used only for the Turkish
affairs of state. There is, notwithstanding, kingdoms as the French
and English, and others in which the king has no particular heritage,
but only the public which he has received from the people — there
this former distinction has no place. For the goods which belong to
the prince as a private person there is no question; he is absolute
owner of them as other particular persons are, and may by the civil
law sell, engage, or dispose of them at his discretion. But for the
goods of the kingdom, which in some places are commonly called the demesnes,
the kings may not be considered, in any way whatsoever, absolute proprietors
of them.
For what if a man, for the sake of the flock, have made you shepherd,
does it follow that you have liberty to slay, shear, sell, and transport
the sheep at your pleasure? Although the people have established you
judge or governor of a city, or of some province, do you therefore have
power to alienate, sell, or fritter away that city or province? And
seeing that in alienating or passing away a province, the people also
are sold, have they raised you to that authority to the end that you
should separate them from the rest, or that you should prostitute and
make them slaves to whom you please? Furthermore, I demand to know whether
the royal dignity is an heritage, or an office? If it's an office, what
community has it with any propriety? If it's an heritage, is it not
such a one that at least the primary ownership remains still in the
people who were the donors? Briefly, if the revenue of the exchequer,
or the demesnes of the kingdom, is called the dowry of the commonwealth,
and by good right, and such a dowry whose dismembering or wasting brings
with it the ruin of the public state, the kingdom and the king, by what
law shall it be lawful to alienate this dowry? Let the emperor Wencislaus
be infatuated, the French King Charles the Sixth, lunatic, and give
or sell the kingdom, or part of it, to the English, let Malcolm, King
of the Scots, lavishly dissipate the demesnes and consume the public
treasury, what follows from all this? Those who choose the king to withstand
the invasions of foreign enemies, shall they through his madness and
negligence be made the slaves of strangers? And those means and wealth,
which would have secured them in the fruition of their own estates and
fortunes, shall they, by the election of such a king, be exposed to
the prey and rapine of all comers? And that which particular persons
have saved from their own necessities, and from those under their tutorship
and government (as it happened in Scotland) to endue the commonwealth
with it, shall it be devoured by some panderer or broker, for unclean
pleasures?
But if, as we have often said, that kings were established for the people's
use, what shall that use be, if it be perverted into abuse? What good
can so much mischief and inconvenience bring, what profit can come of
such eminent and irreparable damages and dangers? If in seeking to purchase
my own liberty and welfare, I sell myself into absolute slavery and
willingly subject myself to another's yoke, and become a fettered slave
to another man's unruly desires, therefore, as it is imprinted in all
of us by nature, so also has it by a long custom been approved by all
nations, that it is not lawful for the king by the counsel of his own
fancy and pleasure, to diminish or waste the public revenue; and those
who have run a contrary course, have even lost that happy name of a
king, and stood branded with the infamous title of a tyrant.
I confess that when kings were instituted, there was of necessity means
to be assigned for them, as well to maintain their royal dignity, as
to furnish the expense of their retinue and officers. Civility, and
the welfare of the public state, seem to require it, for it was the
duty of a king to establish judges in all places, who should receive
no presents, nor sell justice: and also to have power ready to assist
the execution of their ordinances, and to secure the ways from dangers,
that commerce might be open, and free, etc. If there were likelihood
of wars, to fortify and put garrisons into the frontier places, and
to hold an army in the field, and to keep his magazines well stored
with ammunition. It is commonly said that peace cannot be well maintained
without provision for wars, nor wars managed without men, nor men kept
in discipline without pay, nor money got without subsidies and tributes.
To discharge therefore the burden of the state in time of peace was
the demesne appointed, and in time of wars the tributes and imports,
yet so as if any extraordinary necessity required it, money might be
raised by subsidies or other fitting means. The main intention of these
was ever the public utility, in so much as he who converts any of these
public revenues to his own private purposes, much more he who misspends
them in any unworthy or loose occasions, no way merits the name of a
king, for the ruler, says the apostle Paul, is the minister of God for
the good of the people; and for that cause is tribute paid to them.
This is the true original cause of the customs and taxes of the Romans,
that those rich merchandises which were brought from the Indies, Arabia,
Ethiopia, might be secured in their passage by land from thieves and
robbers, and in their transportation by sea from pirates, insomuch as
for their security, the commonwealth maintained a navy at sea. In this
rank we must put the custom which was paid in the Red Sea, and other
tolls of gates, bridges, and passages, for the securing of the great
roadways (therefore called the Pretorian Consular, and the king's highways)
from the spoil of thieves and free-booters. The repair and maintenance
of bridges was referred to commissaries deputed by the king, as appears
by the ordinance of Lewis the Courteous, concerning the twelve bridges
over the river Seine, commanding also boats to be in readiness, to ferry
over passengers, etc.
For the tax laid upon salt there was none in use in those times, the
most of the salt-pits being enjoyed by private persons, because it seemed
that that which nature out of her own bounty gave to men, ought no more
to be enhanced by sale than either the light, the air, or the water.
As a certain king called Lycurgus in the lesser Asia, began to lay some
impositions upon the salt-pits there, nature, as it were, impatiently
bearing such a restraint of her liberality, the springs are said to
have dried up suddenly. Yet certain of the court would persuade us at
this day (as Juvenal complained in his time) that the sea affords nothing
of worth, or good, which falls not within the compass of the king's
prerogative.
He who first brought this taxation into Rome, was the Censor Livius,
who therefore gained the surname of Salter; neither was it done but
in the commonwealth's extreme necessity. And in France King Philip the
Long, for the same reason obtained of the estates the imposition upon
salt for five years only. What turmoils and troubles it's continuance
has bred, every man knows. To be brief, all tributes were imposed and
continued for the provision of means and stipends for the men of war:
so as to make a province stipendiary or tributary, was esteemed the
same with military.
Solomon exacted tributes to fortify the towns, and to erect and furnish
a public storehouse. When it was accomplished, the people naturally
required of Rehoboam to be freed from that burden. The Turks call the
tribute of the provinces, the sacred blood of the people, and account
it a most wicked crime to employ it in anything but the defence of the
people. Therefore, by the same reason, all that which the king conquers
in war belongs to the people, and not to the king, because the people
bore the charges of the war, as that which is gained by a factor accrues
to the account of his master. Yea, and what advantage he gains by marriage,
if it belongs simply and absolutely to his wife, that is acquired also
to the Kingdom, for so much as it is to be presumed that he gained not
that preferment in marriage in quality of Philip or Charles, but as
he was king. On the contrary, in like manner, the queens have interest
of endowment in the estates which their husbands gained and enjoyed
before they attained the crown, and have no title to that which is gotten
after they are created kings, because that is judged to be belonging
to the common purse, and has no proper reference to the king's private
estate, which was so determined in France, between Philip of Valoys,
and his wife Jean of Burgundy. But to the end that there be no money
drawn from the people to be employed in private designs, and for particular
ends and purposes, the emperor swears not to impose any taxes or tributes
whatsoever, but by the authority of the estates of the empire. The kings
of Poland, Hungary, and Denmark make similar promises. The English in
like manner enjoy the same to this day, by the laws of Henry the Third,
and Edward the First.
The French kings in former times imposed no taxes but in the assemblies,
and with the consent of the three estates. From there came the law of
Philip of Valoys, that the people should not have any tribute laid on
them but in urgent necessity, and with the consent of the estates. Even
in old times, after these monies were collected, they were locked in
coffers through every diocese and recommended to the special care of
selected men (who are the same who at this day are called esleus), to
the end that they should pay the soldiers enrolled within the towns
of their dioceses: the which was in use in other countries, as namely
in Flanders and other neighbouring provinces. At this day, though many
corruptions have crept in, yet without the consent and confirmation
of the parliament, no exactions may be collected; notwithstanding, there
be some provinces which are not bound to anything without the approbation
of the estates of the country, as Languedoke, Brittany, Province, Daulphiny,
and some others. Finally, all the provinces of the low countries have
the same privileges, lest the exchequer devour all, like the spleen
which exhales the spirits from the other members of the body. In all
places they have confined the exchequer within its proper bounds and
limits.
Seeing then it is most certain that what has been ordinarily and extraordinarily
assigned to kings, that is, tributes, taxes, and all the demesnes which
encompasses all customs, both importations and exportations, forfeitures,
amercements, royal escheats, confiscations, and other dues of the same
nature, were consigned into their hands for the maintenance and defence
of the people and the state of the kingdom, insomuch as if the sinews
be cut, the people must fall to decay, and in demolishing these foundations,
the kingdom will come to utter ruin. It necessarily follows, that he
who lays impositions on the people only to oppress them, and by the
public detriment seeks private profit, and with their own sword kills
his subjects, he truly is unworthy the name of a king. Whereas contrarily,
a true king, if he is a careful manager of the public affairs, so is
he a ready protector of the common welfare, and not a lord in propriety
of the commonwealth, having as little authority to sell or waste the
demesnes or public revenue, as the kingdom itself. And if he misgovern
the state, seeing it imports the Commonwealth that every one make use
of his own talent, it is much more requisite for the public good, that
he who has the managing of it, carry himself as he ought.
And therefore, if a prodigal lord, by the authority of justice, be committed
to the custody of his kinsmen and friends, and compelled to allow his
revenues and means to be ordered and disposed of by others; by much
more reason may those who have interest in the affairs of state (and
whose duty obliges them to have one), take all the administration and
government of the state out of the hands of him who either negligently
executes his duties, or ruins the commonwealth, if after admonition
he endeavours not to perform his duty. And for so much as it is easily
to be proved, without searching into those elder times, that in all
lawful dominions the king cannot be held lord in propriety of the demesnes;
whereof we have an apt representation in the person of Ephron king of
the Hittites, who dare not sell the field to Abraham without the consent
of the people. This right is at this day practiced in public states:
the emperor of Germany, before his coronation, solemnly swears that
he will neither alienate, dismember, nor engage any of the rights or
members of the empire. And, if he recover, or conquer anything with
the arms and means of the public, it shall be gained to the empire,
and not to himself. This is why, when Charles the Fourth promised each
of the electors a hundred thousand crowns to choose his son Wencislaus
emperor, and, having not ready money to deliver them, he mortgaged customs,
taxes, tributes, and certain towns to them, which were the proper appurtenances
of the empire, there followed much and vehement protest, most men holding
this engagement void. And questionless it had been so declared, but
for the profit that those reaped thereby, who ought principally to have
maintained and held entire the rights and dignities of the empire. And
it followed also, that Wencislaus was justly held incapable of the government
of the empire, chiefly because he permitted the rights of the empire
over the duchy of Milan to be wrested from him.
There is a very ancient law in the kingdom of Poland which prohibits
the alienating of any of the kingdom's lands, which was renewed by King
Lewis in the year 1375. In Hungary in A.D. 1221 there was a complaint
made to Pope Honorius, that King Andrew had engaged the crown lands
contrary to his oath. In England was the same by the law of King Edward
in the year 1298. Likewise in Spain by the ordinance made under Alphonsus,
and renewed in the year 1560, in the assembly of the estates at Toledo.
These laws were then ratified, although it was a long time before custom
had obtained the vigor and effect of law.
Now, for the kingdom of France where I longer confine myself, because
she may in a sort pass as a pattern to the rest, this right has ever
remained there inviolable. It is one of the most ancient laws of the
kingdom, and a right born with the kingdom itself, that the demesne
may not be alienated, which in A.D. 1566 (although but ill-deserved)
was renewed. There are only two cases excepted, the portions or appanages
of the children and brothers of the king, yet with this reservation,
that the right of vassalage remains always to the crown in like manner
if the condition of war require necessarily an alienation, yet it must
be ever with power of redemption. Anciently neither the one nor the
other were of validity, but by the commandment of the states: at this
day since the parliament has been made stationary, the parliament of
Paris which is the court of the peers, and the chamber of accounts,
and of the treasury, must first approve it: as the edicts of Charles
the Sixth and Ninth do testify. This is a thing so certain, that if
the ancient kings themselves would endow a church (although that was
a work much favored in those days), they were, notwithstanding, bound
to have an allowance of the estates: witness King Childebert, who might
not endow the Abbey of Saint Vincent at Paris before he had the French
and Neustrians' consent. Clovis the Second, and other kings have observed
the same. They might neither remit the regalities by granting enfranchisements,
nor the nomination of prelates to any church. And if any of them have
done it, as Lewis the Second, Philip the Fourth, and Philip surnamed
Augustus, did in favor of the churches of Senis Auxera, and Nevers,
the parliament declared it void. When the king is anointed at Rheims,
he swears to observe this law: and if he infringe it, that act has as
much validity with it as if he contracted to sell the empires of the
Great Turk, or Sophia of Persia. From this spring the constitutions
or ordinances of Philip the Sixth, of John the Second, of Charles Fifth,
Sixth, and Eighth, by which they revoke all alienations made by their
predecessors.
In the assembly of the estates at Tours, where King Charles the Eighth
was in person, various alienations made by Lewis the Second were repealed
and voided, and there was taken away from the heirs of Tancred of Chastel
his great minion, various places which he had given him by his proper
authority. This was finally ratified in the last assembly of the estates
held at Orleans. Thus much concerning the kingdom's demesne. But to
the end that we may yet more clearly perceive that the kingdom is preferred
before the king, and that he cannot by his own proper authority diminish
the majesty he has received from the people, nor enfranchise or release
from his dominion any one of his subjects; nor quit or relinquish the
sovereignty of the least part of his kingdom. Charlemagne in former
times endeavored to subject the kingdom of France to the German empire,
which the French did courageously oppose by the mouth of a prince of
Glascony; and if Charlemagne had proceeded in that business, there would
have been war. In like manner, when any portion of the kingdom was granted
to the English, the sovereignty was almost always reserved. And if sometimes
they obtained it by force, as at the treaty of Bretigny, by the which
King John quitted the sovereignty of Glascony and Poytou, that agreement
was not kept, neither was he more bound to do it, than a tutor or guardian
is being prisoner (as he was then), which for his own deliverance should
engage the estate of his pupils.
By the power of the same law the parliament of Paris made void the treaty
of Conflans, by which Duke Charles of Burgundy had drawn from the king
Amiens and other towns of Picardy. In our days, the same parliament
declared void the agreement made at Madrid, between Francis the First,
then prisoner, and Charles the Fifth, concerning the Duchy of Burgundy.
But the domain made by Charles the Sixth to Henry King of England, of
the kingdom of France, after his decease, is a sufficient testimony
for this matter, and of his madness, if there had been no other proof.
But to leave off producing any further testimonies, examples, or reasons,
by what right can the king give or sell away the kingdom, or any part
of it: seeing it consists of people, and not of earth or walls? And
freemen can't be sold, nor trafficked; even the patrons themselves cannot
compel the enfranchised servants to make their habitations in places
other than they like. Particularly so in that subjects are neither slaves
nor enfranchised servants, but brothers: and not only the king's brethren
taken one by one, but also considered in one body, they ought to be
esteemed absolute lords and owners of the kingdom.
Whether the king be the usufructor of the kingdom?
But if the king be not lord in propriety, yet at the least we may esteem
him usufructor of the kingdom, and of the demesne; nay, truly we can
allow him to have the usufruct for being usufructor, though the propriety
remain in the people: yet may he absolutely dispose of the profits,
and engage them at his pleasure. Now we have already proved that kings
of their own authority cannot engage the revenues of the exchequer,
or the demesne of the kingdom. The usufructor may dispose of the profits
to whom, how, and when he pleases. Contrarily, the excessive gifts of
princes are ever judged void, his unnecessary expenses are not allowed,
his superfluous to be cut off, and that which is expended by him in
any other occasion, but for the public utility, is justly esteemed to
be unjustly extorted, and is no less liable to the law Cincea, than
the meanest Roman citizen formerly was. In France, the king's gifts
are never of force, until the chamber of accounts have confirmed them.
From hence proceed the postils of the ordinary chamber, in giving up
of the accounts in the reigns of prodigal kings, Trop donne: soyt repele,
which is, excessive gifts must be recalled. The judges of this chamber
solemnly swear to pass nothing which may prejudice the kingdom, or the
public state, notwithstanding any letters the king shall write unto
them; but they are not always so mindful of this oath as were to be
desired.
Furthermore, the law takes no care how a usufructor possesses and governs
his revenues, but contrarywise, it prescribes unto the king, how and
to what use he shall employ his. For the ancient kings of France were
bound to divide their royal revenues into four parts. The first was
implied in the maintaining of the ministers of the church, and providing
for the poor: the second for the king's table: the third for the wages
of his officers and household servants; the last in repairing of bridges,
castles, and the royal palaces. And what was remaining, was laid up
in the treasury, to be bestowed on the necessities of the commonwealth.
And histories do at large relate the troubles and tumults which happened
about the year 1412 in the assembly of the estates at Paris, because
Charles the Sixth had wasted all the money that was raised of the revenues
and demesne, in his own and his minion's loose pleasures, and that the
expenses of the king's household, which before exceeded not the sum
of ninety-four thousand francs, did amount, in that miserable estate
of the commonwealth, to five hundred and forty thousand francs. Now
as the demesne was employed in the before-mentioned affairs, so the
aids were only for the war, and the taxes assigned for the payment of
the men at arms and for no other occasion. In other kingdoms the king
has no greater authority, and in divers less, especially in the empire
of Germany, and in Poland. But we have made choice of the kingdom of
France, to the end it be not thought this has any special prerogative
above others, because there perhaps, the commonwealth receives the most
detriment. Briefly, as I have before said, the name of a king signifies
not an inheritance, nor a propriety, nor a usufruct, but a charge, office,
and procuration.
As a bishop is chosen to look to the welfare of the soul, so is the
king established to take care of the body, so far forth as it concerns
the public good; the one is dispenser of the heavenly treasure, the
other of the secular, and what right the one has in the episcopal revenues,
the same has the other, and no greater in the kingdom's demesne. If
the bishop alien the goods of the bishopric without the consent of the
chapter, this alienation is of no value; if the king alien the demesne
without the approbation of the estates, that is also void; one portion
of the ecclesiastical goods ought to be employed in the reparation of
the churches; the second in relieving of the poor; the third, for the
maintenance of the church men, and the fourth for the bishop himself.
We have seen before, that the king ought to divide into four parts the
revenues of the kingdom's demesne. The abuse of these times cannot infringe
or annihilate the right, for, although some part of the bishops steal
from the poor that which they profusely cast away on their panders,
and ruin and destroy their lands and woods, the calling of the bishops
is not for all that altered. Although that some emperors have assumed
to themselves an absolute power, that cannot invest them with any further
right, because no man can be judge in his own cause. What if some Caracalla
vaunt he will not want money whilst the sword remains in his custody?
The Emperor Adrian will promise on the contrary, so to discharge his
office of principality, that he will always remember that the commonwealth
is not his, but the people's; which one thing almost distinguishes a
king from a tyrant. Neither can that act of Attalus King of Pergamus
designing the Roman people for heirs to his kingdom, nor that of Alexander
for Egypt, nor Ptolemy for the Cyrenians, bequeathing their kingdoms
to the same people, nor Prasutagus King of the Icenians, who left his
to Caesar, draw any good consequence of right to those who usurp that
which by no just title belongs to them, nay, by how much the intrusion
is more violent, by so much the equity and justice of the cause is more
perspicuous: for what the Romans assumed under the colour of right,
they would have made no difficulty if that pretext had been wanting
to have taken by force. We have seen almost in our days how the Venetians
possessed themselves of the kingdom of Cyprus, under presence of an
imaginary adoption, which would have proved ridiculous, if it had not
been seconded by power and arms. To which also may be not unfitly resembled
the pretended donation of Constantine to Pope Silvester, for that straw
of the decretist Gratian was long since consumed and turned to ashes;
neither is of more validity the grant which Lewis the Courteous made
to Pope Paschal of the city of Rome, and part of Italy. Because he gave
that which he possessed not, no man opposed it. But when his father
Charlemain would have united and subjected the kingdom of France to
the German empire, the French did lawfully oppose it: and if he had
persisted in his purpose, they were resolved to have hindered him, and
defended themselves by arms.
There can be, too, as little advantage alleged that act of Solomon's,
whom we read to have delivered twenty towns to Hiram King of Tyre: for
he did not give them to him but for the securing of the talents of gold
which Hiram had lent him, and they were redeemed at the end of the term,
as it appears by the text. Further, the soil was barren, and husbanded
by the remaining Canaanites. But Solomon, having redeemed it out of
the hands of Hiram, delivered it to the Israelites to be inhabited and
tilled. Neither serves it to much more purpose, to allege that in some
kingdoms there is no express agreement between the king and the people;
for suppose there be no mention made, yet the law of nature teacheth
us, that kings were not ordained to ruin, but to govern the commonwealths,
and that they may not by their proper authority alter or change the
rights of the public state, and although they be lords, yet can they
challenge it in no other quality, than as guardians do in the tuition
of their pupils; neither can we account him a lawful lord, who deprives
the commonwealth of her liberty, and sells her as a slave. Briefly,
neither can we also allege, that some kingdoms are the proper acquists
of the king himself, insomuch as they were not conquered by their proper
means and swords, but by the hands, and with the wealth of the public;
and there is nothing more agreeable to reason, than that which was gained
with the joint difficulties and common danger of the public, should
not be alienated or disposed of, without the consent of the states which
represent the commonwealth: and the necessity of this law is such, that
it is of force amongst robbers and free-booters themselves. He who follows
a contrary course, must needs ruin human society. And although the French
conquered by force of arms the countries of Germany and Gaule, yet this
before mentioned right remains still entire.
To conclude, we must needs resolve, that kings are neither proprietors
nor usufructuaries of the royal patrimony, but only administrators.
And being so, they can by no just right attribute to themselves the
propriety, use, or profit of private men's estates, nor with as little
reason the public revenues, which are in truth only the commonwealth's.
But before we pass any further, we must here resolve a doubt. The people
of Israel having demanded a king, the Lord said to Samuel: hearken unto
the voice of the people, notwithstanding, give them to understand what
shall be the manner of the king who shall reign over them: "he
will take your fields, your vineyards, your olive trees, to furnish
his own occasions, and to enrich his servants," briefly, "he
will make the people slaves." One would hardly believe in what
estimation the courtiers of our times hold this text, when of all the
rest of the Holy Scripture they make but a jest. In this place the almighty
and all good God would manifest to the Israelites their levity, when
that they had God Himself even present with them, who upon all occasions
appointed them holy judges and worthy commanders for the wars, would,
notwithstanding, rather subject themselves to the disordered commandments
of a vain mutable man, than to the secure protection of the omnipotent
and immutable God. He declares, then, unto them in what a slippery estate
the king was placed, and how easily unruly authority fell into disordered
violence, and kingly power was turned into tyrannous wilfulness. Seeing
the king that he gave them would by preposterous violence draw the sword
of authority against them, and subject the equity of the laws to his
own unjust desires: and this mischief which they wilfully drew on themselves,
they would happily repent of when it would not be so easily remedied.
Briefly, this text does not describe the rights of kings, but what right
they are accustomed to attribute to themselves: not what by the privilege
of their places they may justly do; but what power for the satisfying
of their own lusts, they unjustly usurp. This will manifestly appear
from the seventeenth chapter of Deuteronomy, where God appoints a law
for kings. Here says Samuel "the king will use his subjects like
slaves." There God forbids the king "to lift his heart above
his brethren," to wit, "over his subjects, whom he ought not
to insult over, but to cherish as his kinsmen." "He will make
chariots, levy horse-men, and take the goods of private men," says
Samuel: on the contrary in Deuteronomy, he is exhorted "not to
multiply horse-men, nor to heap up gold and silver, nor cause the people
to return into Egypt," to wit into bondage. In Samuel we see pictured
to the life wicked Ahab, who by pernicious means gets Naboth's vineyard:
there, David, who held it not lawful to drink that water which was purchased
with the danger of his subjects' lives. Samuel foretells that the king
demanded by the Israelites, instead of keeping the laws, would govern
all according to his own fancy. On the contrary, God commands that His
law should by the priests be delivered into the hands of the king, to
copy it out, and to have it continually before his eyes. Therefore Samuel,
being high priest, gave to Saul the royal law contained in the seventeenth
of Deuteronomy, written into a book, which certainly had been a frivolous
act if the king were permitted to break it at his pleasure. Briefly,
it is as much as if Samuel had said: You have asked a king after the
manner of other nations, the most of whom have tyrants for their governors:
you desire a king to distribute justice equally amongst you: but many
of them think all things lawful which their own appetites suggest unto
them; in the mean season you willingly shake off the Lord, whose only
will is equity and justice in the abstract.
In Herodotus there is a history which plainly expresses how apt the
royal government is to degenerate into tyranny, whereof Samuel so exactly
forewarns the people. Deioces, much renowned for his justice, was first
chosen judge amongst the Medes: presently after, to the end he might
the better repress those who would oppose justice, he was chosen king,
and invested with convenient authority; then he desired a guard, after,
a citadel to be built in Ecbatana, the principal city of the kingdom,
with colour to secure him from conspiracies and machinations of rebels;
which being effected, he presently applied himself to revenge the least
displeasures which were offered him with the greatest punishments.
Finally, no man might presume to look this king in the face, and to
laugh or cough in his presence was punished with grievous torments.
So dangerous a thing it is, to put into the hands of a weak mind (as
all men's are by nature) unlimited power. Samuel therefore teaches not
in that place that the authority of a king is absolute; on the contrary,
he discreetly admonishes the people not to enthral their liberty under
the unnecessary yoke of a weak and unruly master; he does not absolutely
exclude the royal authority, but would have it restrained within its
own limits; he does not amplify the king's right with an unbridled and
licentious liberty; but rather tacitly persuades to put a bit into his
mouth. It seems that this advice of Samuel's was very beneficial to
the Israelites, for that they circumspectly moderated the power of their
kings, the which, most nations grown wise, either by the experience
of their own, or their neighbour's harms, have carefully looked unto,
as will plainly appear by that which follows.
We have shewed already, that in the establishing of the king, there
were two alliances or covenants contracted: the first between God, the
king, and the people, of which we have formerly treated; the second,
between the king and the people, of which we must now say somewhat.
After that Saul was established king, the royal law was given him, according
to which he ought to govern. David made a covenant in Hebron before
the Lord, that is to say, taking God for witness, with all the ancients
of Israel, who represented the whole body of the people, and even then
he was made king. Joas also by the mouth of Johoiada the high priest,
entered into covenant with the whole people of the land in the house
of the Lord. And when the crown was set on his head, together with it
was the law of the testimony put into his hand, which most expounds
to be the law of God; likewise Josias promises to observe and keep the
commandments, testimonies, and statutes comprised in the book of the
covenant: under which words are contained all which belongs to the duties
both of the first and second table of the law of God. In all the before-remembered
places of the holy story, it is ever said, "that a covenant was
made with all the people, with all the multitude, with all the elders,
with all the men of Judah": to the end that we might know, as it
is also fully expressed, that not only the principals of the tribes,
but also all the milleniers, centurions, and subaltern magistrates should
meet together, each of them in the name, and for their towns and communalties,
to covenant and contract with the king. In this assembly was the creating
of the king determined of, for it was the people who made the king,
and not the king the people.
It is certain, then, that the people by way of stipulation, require
a performance of covenants. The king promises it Now the condition of
a stipulator is in terms of law more worthy than of a promiser. The
people ask the king, whether he will govern justly and according to
the laws? He promises he will. Then the people answer, and not before,
that whilst he governs uprightly, they will obey faithfully. The king
therefore promises simply and absolutely, the people upon condition:
the which failing to be accomplished, the people rest according to equity
and reason, quit from their promise.
In the first covenant or contract there is only an obligation to piety:
in the second, to justice. In that the king promises to serve God religiously:
in this, to rule the people justly.
By the one he is obliged with the utmost of his endeavours to procure
the glory of God: by the other, the profit of the people. In the first,
there is a condition expressed, "if thou keep my commandments":
in the second, "if thou distribute justice equally to every man."
God is the proper revenger of deficiency in the former, and the whole
people the lawful punisher of delinquency in the latter, or the estates,
the representative body thereof, who have assumed to themselves the
protection of the people. This has been always practiced in all well-governed
estates. Amongst the Persians, after the due performance of holy rites,
they contracted with Cyrus in manner following:
"Thou, O Cyrus ! in the first place shalt promise, that if any
make war against the Persians, or seek to infringe the liberty of the
laws, thou wilt with the utmost of thy power defend and protect this
country." Which, having promised, they presently add, "And
we Persians promise to be aiding to keep all men in obedience, whilst
thou defendest the country." Xenophon calls this agreement, "A
Confederation," as also Isocrates calls that which he wrote of
the duties of subjects towards their princes, "A Discourse of Confederation."
The alliance or confederation was renewed every month between the kings
and Ephores of Sparta, although those kings were descended from the
line of Hercules. And as these kings did solemnly swear to govern according
to the laws, so did the Ephores also to maintain them in their authority,
whilst they performed their promise. Likewise in the Roman kingdom,
there was an agreement between Romulus, the senate, and the people,
in this manner: " That the people should make laws, and the king
look they were kept: the people should decree war, and the king should
manage it." Now, although many emperors, rather by force and ambition,
than by any lawful right, were seized of the Roman empire, and by that
which they call a royal law, attributed to themselves an absolute authority,
notwithstanding, by the fragments which remain both in books and in
Roman inscriptions of that law, it plainly appears, that power and authority
were granted them to preserve and govern the commonwealth, not to ruin
and oppress it by tyranny. Nay, all good emperors have ever professed,
that they held themselves tied to the laws, and received the empire
from the senate, to whose determination they always referred the most
important affairs, and esteemed it a great error, without their advice,
to resolve on the occasions of the public state.
If we take into our consideration the condition of the empires, kingdoms,
and states of times, there is not any of them worthy of those names,
where there is not some such covenant or confederacy between the people
and the prince. It is not long since, that in the empire of Germany,
the king of the Romans being ready to be crowned emperor, was bound
to do homage, and make oath of fealty to the empire, no more nor less
than as the vassal is bound to do to his lord when he is invested with
his fee. Although the form of the words which he is to swear have been
somewhat altered by the popes, yet, notwithstanding, the substance still
remains the same. According to which we know that Charles the Fifth,
of the house of Austria, was under certain conditions chosen emperor,
as in the same manner his successors were, the sum of which was, that
he should keep the laws already made, and make no new ones without the
consent of the electors, that he should govern the public affairs by
the advice of the general estates, nor engage anything that belongs
to the empire, and other matters which are particularly recited by the
historians. When the emperor is crowned at Aquisgrave, the Archbishop
of Cologne requires of him in the first place: If he will maintain the
church, if he will distribute justice, if he will defend the empire,
and protect widows, orphans, and all others worthy of compassion. The
which, after he has solemnly sworn before the altar, the princes also
who represent the empire, are asked if they will not promise the same;
neither is the emperor anointed, nor receives the other ornaments of
the empire, before he has first taken that solemn oath. Whereupon it
follows, that the emperor is tied absolutely, and the princes of the
empire, under condition. That the same is observed in the kingdom of
Polonia, no man will make question, who had but seen or heard of the
ceremonies and rites wherewith Henry of Anjou was lately chosen and
crowned king of that country, and especially then when the condition
of maintaining of the two religions, the reformed and the Roman, was
demanded, the which the lords of the kingdom in express terms required
of him three several times, and he as often made promise to perform.
The same is observed in the kingdoms of Bohemia, Hungary, and others;
the which we omit to relate particularly, to avoid prolixity.
Now this manner of stipulation is not only received in those kingdoms
where the right of election is yet entirely observed; but even in those
also which are esteemed to be simply hereditary. When the king of France
is crowned, the bishops of Laon and Beauvois, ecclesiastical peers,
ask all the people there present, whether they desire and command, that
he who is there before them, shall be their king? Whereupon he is said
even then in the style of the inauguration, to be chosen by the people:
and when they have given the sign of consenting, then the king swears
that he will maintain all the rights, privileges, and laws of France
universally, that he will not alien the demesne, and the other articles,
which have been yet so changed and accommodated to bad intentions, as
they differ greatly from that copy which remains in the library of the
chapter of Beauvois, according to which it is recorded, that King Philip,
the first of that name, took his oath at his coronation; yet, notwithstanding,
they are not unfitly expressed. Neither is he girded with the sword,
nor anointed, nor crowned by the peers (who at that time wore coronets
on their heads), nor receives the sceptre and rod of justice, nor is
proclaimed king, before first the people have commanded it: neither
do the peers take their oaths of allegiance before he has first solemnly
sworn to keep the laws carefully.
And those be, that he shall not waste the public revenue, that he shall
not, of his own proper authority, impose any taxes, customs, or tributes,
that he shall not make peace or war, nor determine of state affairs,
without the advice of the council of state. Briefly, that he should
leave to the parliament, to the states, and to the officers of the kingdom,
their authority entire, and all things else which have been usually
observed in the kingdom of France. And when he first enters any city
or province, he is bound to confirm their privileges, and swears to
maintain their laws and customs. This is straightly observed in the
cities of Tholouse and Rochel, and in the countries of Daulpiny, Province
and Brittany. The which towns and provinces have their particular and
express covenants and agreements with the kings, which must needs be
void, if the condition expressed in the contract be not of force, nor
the kings tied to the performance.
There is the form of the oath of the ancient kings of Burgundy, yet
extant in these words: "I will protect all men in their rights,
according to law and justice."
In England, Scotland, Sweden, and Denmark, there is almost the same
custom as in France; but in no place there is used a more discreet care
in their manner of proceeding, than in Spain. For in the kingdom of
Arragon, after the finishing of many ceremonies, which are used between
him, which represents the Justitia Major of Arragon, which comprehends
the majesty of the commonwealth, seated in a higher seat, and the king,
which is to be crowned, who swears fealty, and does his homage; and
having read the laws and conditions, to the accomplishment whereof he
is sworn.
Finally, the lords of the kingdom use to the king these words in the
vulgar language, as is before expressed, "We who are as much worth
as you, and have more power than you, choose you king upon these and
these conditions, and there is one between you and us, who commands
over you." But, lest the king should think he swore only for fashion's
sake, and to observe an old custom, every third year in full assembly
of the estates, the very same words, and in the same manner are repeated
unto him.
And, if under pretext of his royal dignity he become insolent, violating
the laws, and neglect his public faith and promise given, then, by the
privilege of the kingdom, he is judged, excommunicated, as execrable
as Julian the apostate was by the primitive church: which excommunication
is esteemed of that validity, that instead of praying for the king in
their public orations, they pray against him, and the subjects are by
the same right acquit from their oath of allegiance: as the vassal is
exempted from obedience and obligation by oath to his lord who stands
excommunicated; the which hath been determined and confirmed both by
act of council and decree of state in the kingdom of Arragon.
In like manner, in the kingdom of Castile in full assembly of the estates,
the king, being ready to be crowned, is first in the presence of all
advertised of his duty: and even then are read the articles discreetly
composed for the good of the commonwealth; the king swears he will observe
and keep them carefully and faithfully, which, being done, then the
constable takes his oath of allegiance, after the princes and deputies
for the towns swear each of them in their order; and the same is observed
in the kingdoms of Portugal, Leon, and the rest of Spain. The lesser
principalities have their institution grounded on the same right. The
contracts which the Brabancers and the rest of the Netherlanders, together
with those of Austria, Carinthia, and others, had with their princes,
were always conditional. But especially the Brabancers, to take away
all occasion of dispute, have this express condition: which is that
in the receiving of their duke, there is read in his presence the ancient
articles, wherein is comprised that which is requisite for the public
good, and thereunto is also added, that if he do not exactly and precisely
observe them, they may choose what other lord it shall seem good unto
them; the which they do in express words protest unto him. He having
allowed and accepted of these articles, does in that public assembly
promise and solemnly swear to keep them. The which was observed in the
reception of Philip the Second, king of Spain. Briefly, there is not
any man can deny, but that there is a contract mutually obligatory between
the king and the subjects, which requires the people to obey faithfully,
and the king to govern lawfully, for the performance whereof the king
swears first, and after the people.
I would ask here, wherefore a man does swear, if it be not to declare
that what he delivers he sincerely intends from his heart? Can anything
be judged more near to the law of nature, than to observe that which
we approve? Furthermore, what is the reason the king swears first, and
at the instance, and required by the people, but to accept a condition
either tacit or expressed? Wherefore is there a condition opposed to
the contract, if it be not that in failing to perform the condition,
the contract, according to law, remains void? And if for want of satisfying
the condition by right, the contract is of no force, who shall dare
to call that people perjured, which refuses to obey a king who makes
no account of his promise, which he might and ought to have kept, and
wilfully breaks those laws which he did swear to observe? On the contrary,
may we not rather esteem such a king perfidious, perjured, and unworthy
of his place? For if the law free the vassal from his lord, who dealt
feloniously with him, although that to speak properly, the lord swears
not fealty to his vassal, but he to him: if the law of the twelve tables
cloth detest and hold in execration the protector who defrauds him that
is under his tuition if the civil law permit an enfranchised servant
to bring his action against his patron, for any grievous usage: if in
such cases the same law delivers the slave from the power of his master,
although the obligation be natural only, and not civil: is it not much
more reasonable that the people be loosed from that oath of allegiance
which they have taken, if the king (who may be not unfitly resembled
by an attorney sworn to look to his client's cause) first break his
oath solemnly taken? And what if all these ceremonies, solemn oaths,
nay, sacramental promises, had never been taken? Does not nature herself
sufficiently teach that kings were on this condition ordained by the
people, that they should govern well; judges, that they should distribute
justice uprightly; captains in the war, that they should lead their
armies against their enemies? If, on the contrary, they themselves forage
and spoil their subjects, and instead of governors become enemies, as
they leave indeed the true and essential qualities of a king, so neither
ought the people to acknowledge them for lawful princes. But what if
a people (you will reply) subdued by force, be compelled by the king
to take an oath of servitude? And what if a robber, pirate, or tyrant
(I will answer) with whom no bond of human society can be effectual,
holding his dagger to your throat, constrain you presently to become
bound in a great sum of money? Is it not an unquestionable maxim in
law, that a promise exacted by violence cannot bind, especially if anything
be promised against common reason, or the law of nature? Is there anything
more repugnant to nature and reason, than that a people should manacle
and fetter themselves; and to be obliged by promise to the prince, with
their own hands and weapons to be their own executioners? There is,
therefore a mutual obligation between the king and the people, which,
whether it be civil or natural only, whether tacit or expressed in words,
it cannot by any means be annihilated, or by any law be abrogated, much
less by force made void. And this obligation is of such power that the
prince who wilfully violates it, is a tyrant. And the people who purposely
break it, may be justly termed seditious.
Hitherto we have treated of a king. It now rests we do somewhat more
fully describe a tyrant. We have shewed that he is a king who lawfully
governs a kingdom, either derived to him by succession, or committed
to him by election. It follows, therefore, that he is reputed a tyrant,
which, as opposite to a king, either gains a kingdom by violence or
indirect means, or being invested therewith by lawful election or succession,
governs it not according to law and equity, or neglects those contracts
and agreements, to the observation whereof he was strictly obliged at
his reception. All which may very well occur in one and the same person.
The first is commonly called a tyrant without title: the second a tyrant
by practice. Now, it may well so come to pass, that he who possesses
himself of a kingdom by force, to govern justly, and he on whom it descends
by a lawful title, to rule unjustly. But for so much as a kingdom is
rather a right than an inheritance, and an office than a possession,
he seems rather worthy the name of a tyrant, who unworthily acquits
himself of his charge, than he who entered into his place by a wrong
door. In the same sense is the pope called an intruder who entered by
indirect means into the papacy: and he an abuser who governs ill in
it.
Pythagoras says "that a worthy stranger is to be preferred before
an unworthy citizen, yea, though he be a kinsman." Let it be lawful
also for us to say, that a prince who gained his principality by indirect
courses, provided he govern according to law, and administer justice
equally, is much to be preferred before him, who carries himself tyrannously,
although he were legally invested into his government with all the ceremonies
and rites hereunto appertaining.
For seeing that kings were instituted to feed, to judge, to cure the
diseases of the people: Certainly I had rather that a thief should feed
me, than a shepherd devour me: I had rather receive justice from a robber,
than outrage from a judge: I had better be healed by an empiric, than
poisoned by a doctor in physic. It were much more profitable for me
to have my estate carefully managed by an intruding guardian, than to
have it wasted and dissipated by one legally appointed.
And although it may be that ambition was his first solicitor to enter
violently into the government, yet may it perhaps appear he affected
it rather to give testimony of his equity and moderation in governing;
witness Cyrus, Alexander, and the Romans, who ordinarily accorded to
those people their subdued, permission to govern themselves according
to their own laws, customs, and privileges, yea, sometimes incorporated
them into the body of their own state: on the contrary, the tyrant by
practice seems to extend the privilege of his legal succession, the
better to execute violence and extortion, as may be seen in these days,
not only by the examples of the Turks and Muscovites, but also in divers
Christian princes. Therefore the act of one who at the first was ill,
is in some reasonable time rectified by justice: whereas the other like
an inveterate disease, the older it grows, the worse it affects the
patient.
Now, if according to the saying of Saint Augustine, "those kingdoms
where justice hath no place, are but a rhapsody of free-booters,"
they are in that, both the tyrant without title, and he by practice
alike, for that they are both thieves, both robbers, and both unjust
possessors, as he certainly is no less an unjust detainer who takes
another man's goods against the owner's will, than he who employs it
ill when it was taken before.
But the fault is without comparison, much more greater of him who possesses
an estate for to ruin it, than of the other who made himself master
of it to preserve it.
Briefly, the tyrant by practice vainly colouring his unjust extortions
with the justice of his title, is much more blameable than the tyrant
without title, who recompenses the violence of his first intrusion in
a continued course of a legal and upright government.
But to proceed, there may be observed some difference amongst tyrants
without title: for there are some who ambitiously invade their neighbour's
countries to enlarge their Own, as Nimrod, Minus, and the Canaanites
have done. Although such are termed kings by their own people, yet to
those on whose confines they have encroached without any just right
or occasion, they will be accounted tyrants.
There be others, who having attained to the government of an elective
kingdom, that endeavour by deceitful means, by corruption, by presents,
and other bad practices, to make it become hereditary. For witness whereof,
we need not make search into older times; these are worse than the former,
for so much as secret fraud, as Cicero says, " is ever more odious
than open force."
There be also others who are so horribly wicked, that they seek to enthral
their own native country like the viperous brood which gnaws through
the entrails of their mother: as be those generals of armies created
by the people, who afterwards, by the means of those forces, make themselves
masters of the stage, as Caesar at Rome under presence of the dictatorship,
and divers princes of Italy.
There be women also who intrude themselves into the government of those
kingdoms which the laws only permit to the males, and make themselves
queens and regents, as Athalia did in Judah, Semiramis in Assyria, Agrippina
in the Roman empire in the reign of her son Nero, Mammea in the time
of Alexander Severus, Semiamira in Heliogabalus's; and certain Bruniehildes
in the kingdom of France, who so educated their sons (as the queens
of the house of Medicis in these latter times) during their minority,
that attaining to more maturity, their only care was to glut themselves
in pleasures and delights, so that the whole management of affairs remained
in the hands of their mothers, or of their minions, servants and officers.
Those also are tyrants without title, who, taking advantage of the sloth,
weakness, and dissolute courses of those princes who are otherwise lawfully
instituted, and seeking to enwrap them in a sleepy dream of voluptuous
idleness (as under the French kings, especially those of the Merovingian
line, some of the mayors of the palace have been advanced to that dignity
for such egregious services), transferring into their own command all
the royal authority, and leaving the king only the bare name. All which
tyrants are certainly of this condition, that if for the manner of their
government they are not blameable. Yet for so much as they entered into
that jurisdiction by tyrannous intrusion, they may justly be termed
tyrants without title.
Concerning tyrants by practice, it is not so easy to describe them as
true kings. For reason rules the one, and selfwill the other: the first
prescribes bounds to his affections, the second confines his desires
within no limits. What is the proper rights of kings may be easily declared,
but the outrageous insolences of tyrants cannot without much difficulty
be expressed. And as a right angle is uniform, and like to itself one
and the same, so an oblique diversifies itself into various and sundry
species. In like manner is justice and equity simple, and may be deciphered
in few words: but injustice and injury are divers, and for their sundry
accidents not to be so easily defined; but that more will be omitted
than expressed. Now, although there be certain rules by which these
tyrants may be represented (though not absolutely to the life), yet,
notwithstanding, there is not any more certain rude than by conferring
and comparing a tyrant's fraudulent slights with a king's virtuous actions.
A tyrant lops off those ears which grow higher than the rest of the
corn, especially where virtue makes them most conspicuously eminent;
oppresses by calumnies and fraudulent practices the principal officers
of the state; gives out reports of intended conspiracies against himself,
that he might have some colourable pretext to cut them off; witness
Tiberius, Maximinius, and others, who spared not their own kinsmen,
cousins, and brothers.
The king, on the contrary, does not only acknowledge his brothers to
be as it were consorts unto him in the empire, but also holds in the
place of brothers all the principal officers of the kingdom, and is
not ashamed to confess that of them (in quality as deputed from the
general estates) he holds the crown.
The tyrant advances above and in opposition to the ancient and worthy
nobility, mean and unworthy persons; to the end that these base fellows,
being absolutely his creatures, might applaud and apply themselves to
the fulfilling of all his loose and unruly desires. The king maintains
every man in his rank, honours and respects the grandees as the kingdom's
friends, desiring their good as well as his own.
The tyrant hates and suspects discreet and wise men, and fears no opposition
more than virtue, as being conscious of his own vicious courses, and
esteeming his own security to consist principally in a general corruption
of all estates, introduces multiplicity of taverns, gaming houses, masks,
stage plays, brothel houses, and all other licentious superfluities
that might effeminate and bastardise noble spirits, as Cyrus did, to
weaken and subdue the Sardiens. The king on the contrary, allures from
all places honest and able men and encourages them by pensions and honours;
and for seminaries of virtue, erects schools and universities in all
convenient places.
A tyrant as much as in him lies, prohibits or avoids all public assemblies,
fears parliaments, diets and meetings of the general estates, flies
the light, affecting (like the bat) to converse only in darkness; yea
he is jealous of the very gesture, countenance, and discourse of his
subjects. The king, because he converses always as in the presence of
men and angels, glories in the multitude and sufficiency of his counsellors,
esteeming nothing well done which is ordered without their advice, and
is so far from doubting or distasting the public meeting of the general
estates, as he honours and respects those assemblies with much favour
and affection.
A tyrant nourishes and feeds factions and dissensions amongst his subjects,
ruins one by the help of another, that he may the easier vanquish the
remainder, advantaging himself by this division, like those dishonest
surgeons who lengthen out their cures. Briefly, after the manner of
that abominable Vitellius, he is not ashamed to say that the carcass
of a dead enemy, especially a subject's, yields a good savour. On the
contrary, a good king endeavours always to keep peace amongst his subjects,
as a father amongst his children, choke the seeds of troubles, and quickly
heals the scar; the execution, even of justice upon rebels, drawing
tears from his compassionate eyes; yea, those whom a good king maintains
and defends against a foreign enemy, a tyrant (the enemy of nature)
compels them to turn the points of their swords into their own proper
entrails. A tyrant fills his garrisons with strange soldiers, builds
citadels against his subjects, disarms the people, throws down their
forts, makes himself formidable with guards of strangers, or men only
fit for pillage and spoil, gives pensions out of the public treasury
to spies and calumniating informers, dispersed through all cities and
provinces. Contrariwise, a king reposes more his safety in the love
of his subjects than in the strength of his fortresses against his enemies,
taking no care to enroll soldiers, but accounts every subject as a man-at-arms
to guard him, and builds forts to restrain the irruptions of foreign
enemies, and not to constrain his subjects to obedience, in whose fidelity
he puts his greatest confidence. Therefore, it is that tyrants, although
they have such numberless guards about them to drive off throngs of
people from approaching them, yet cannot all those numbers secure them
from doubts, jealousies and distrusts, which continually afflict and
terrify their timorous consciences: yea, in the midst of their greatest
strength, the tyrannizer of tyrants, fear, makes prize of their souls,
and there triumphs in their affliction.
A good king, in the greatest concourse of people, is freest from doubts
or fears, nor troubled with solicitous distrusts in his solitary retirements:
all places are equally secure unto him, his own conscience being his
best guard. If a tyrant wants civil broils to exercise his cruel disposition
in, he makes wars abroad; erects idle and needless trophies to continually
employ his tributaries, that they might not have leisure to think on
other things, as Pharaoh did the Jews, and Policrates the Samians; therefore
he always prepares for, or threatens war, or, at least, seems so to
do, and so still rather draws mischief on, than puts it further off.
A king never makes war, but compelled unto it, and for the preservation
of the public, he never desires to purchase advantage by treason; he
never enters into any war that exposes the commonwealth to more danger
than it affords probable hope of commodity.
A tyrant leaves no design unattempted by which he may fleece his subjects
of their substance, and turn it to his proper benefit, that being continually
troubled in gaining means to live, they may have no leisure, no hope,
how to regain their liberty. On the contrary, the king knows that every
good subject's purse will be ready to supply the commonwealth occasion,
and therefore believes he is possessed of no small treasure, whilst
through his good government his subjects flow in all abundance.
A tyrant extorts unjustly from many to cast prodigally upon two or three
minions, and those unworthy; he imposes on all, and exacts from all,
to furnish their superfluous and riotous expenses: he builds his own,
and followers' fortunes on the ruins of the public: he draws out the
people's blood by the veins of their means, and gives it presently to
carouse to his court-leeches. But a king cuts off from his ordinary
expenses to ease the people's necessities, neglects his private state,
and furnishes with all magnificence the public occasions; briefly is
prodigal of his own blood, to defend and maintain the people committed
to his care.
If a tyrant, as heretofore Tiberius, Nero, Commodus and others, did
suffer his subjects to have some breathing time from unreasonable exactions,
and like sponges to gather some moisture' it is but to squeeze them
out afterwards to his own use: on the contrary, if a king do sometimes
open a vein, and draw some blood, it is for the people's good, and not
to be expended at his own pleasure in any dissolute courses. And therefore,
as the Holy Scripture compares the one to a shepherd, so does it also
resemble the other to a roaring lion, to whom, notwithstanding, the
fox is oftentimes coupled. For a tyrant, as says Cicero, "is culpable
in effect of the greatest injustice that may be imagined, and yet he
carries it so cunningly, that when he most deceives, it is then that
he makes greatest appearance to deal sincerely." And therefore
does he artificially counterfeit religion and devotion, wherein saith
Aristotle, "he expresses one of the most absolute subtleties that
tyrants can possibly practice: he does so compose his countenance to
piety, by that means to terrify the people from conspiring against him;
who they may well imagine to be especially favoured of God, expressing
in all appearance so reverently to serve Him." He feigns also to
be exceedingly affected to the public good; not so much for the love
of it, as for fear of his own safety.
Furthermore, he desires much to be esteemed just and loyal in some affairs,
purposely to deceive and betray more easily in matters of greater consequence:
much like those thieves who maintain themselves by thefts and robberies,
yet cannot long subsist in their trade without exercising some parcel
of justice in their proceedings. He also counterfeits the merciful,
but it is in pardoning of such malefactors, in punishing whereof he
might more truly gain the reputation of a pitiful prince.
To speak in a word, that which the true king is, the tyrant would seem
to be, and knowing that men are wonderfully attracted with, and enamoured
of virtue, he endeavours with much subtlety to make his vices appear
yet masked with some shadow of virtue: but let him counterfeit never
so cunningly, still the fox will be known by his tail: and although
he fawn and flatter like a spaniel, yet his snarling and grinning will
ever betray his currish kind.
Furthermore, as a well-ordered monarchy partakes of the principal commodities
of all other governments, so, on the contrary, where tyranny prevails,
there all the discommodities of confusion are frequent.
A monarchy has in this conformity with an aristocracy, that the most
able and discreet are called to consultations. Tyranny and oligarchy
accord in this, that their councils are composed of the worst and most
corrupted. And as in the council royal, there may in a sort seem many
kings to have interests in the government, so, in the other, on the
contrary, a multitude of tyrants always domineers.
The monarchy borrows of the popular government the assemblies of the
estates, whither are sent for deputies the most sufficient of cities
and provinces, to deliberate on, and determine matters of state: the
tyranny takes this of the ochlocracy, that if she be not able to hinder
the convocation of the estates, yet will she endeavour by factious subtleties
and pernicious practices, that the greatest enemies of order and reformation
of the state be sent to those assemblies, the which we have known practiced
in our times. In this manner assumes the tyrant the countenance of a
king, and tyranny the semblance of a kingdom, and the continuance succeeds
commonly according to the dexterity wherewith it is managed; yet, as
Aristotle says, "we shall hardly read of any tyranny that has outlasted
a hundred years": briefly, the king principally regards the public
utility, and a tyrant's chiefest care is for his private commodity.
But, seeing the condition of men is such, that a king is with much difficulty
to be found, that in all his actions he only agrees at the public good,
and yet cannot long subsist without expression of some special care
thereof, we will conclude that where the commonwealth's advantage is
most preferred, there is both a lawful king and kingdom; and where particular
designs and private ends prevail against the public profit, there questionless
is a tyrant and tyranny.
Thus much concerning tyrants by practice, in the examining whereof we
have not altogether fixed our discourse on the loose disorders of their
wicked and licentious lives, which some say is the character of a bad
man, but not always of a bad prince. If therefore, the reader be not
satisfied with this description, besides the more exact representations
of tyrants which he shall find in histories, he may in these our days
behold an absolute model of many living and breathing tyrants whereof
Aristotle in his time did much complain. Now, at the last we are come
as it were by degrees to the chief and principal point of the question.
We have seen how that kings have been chosen by God, either with relation
to their families or their persons only, and after installed by the
people. In like manner what is the duty of the king, and of the officers
of the kingdom, how far the authority, power, and duty both of the one
and the other extends, and what and how sacred are the covenants and
contracts which are made at the inauguration of kings, and what conditions
are intermixed, both tacit and expressed; finally, who is a tyrant without
title, and who by practice, seeing it is a thing unquestionable that
we are bound to obey a lawful king, which both to God and people carries
himself according to those covenants whereunto he stands obliged, as
it were to God Himself, seeing in a sort he represents his divine Majesty?
It now follows that we treat, how, and by whom a tyrant may be lawfully
resisted, and who are the persons who ought to be chiefly actors therein,
and what course is to be held, that the action may be managed according
to right and reason. We must first speak of him who is commonly called
a tyrant without title. Let us suppose then that some Ninus, having
neither received outrage nor offence, invades a people over whom he
has no colour of pretension: that Caesar seeks to oppress his country,
and the Roman commonwealth: that Popiclus endeavours by murders and
treasons to make the elective kingdom of Polonia to become hereditary
to him and his posterity: or some Bruniehilde draws to herself and her
Protadius the absolute government of France, or Ebronius, taking advantage
of Theoderick's weakness and idleness, gains the entire administration
of the state, and oppresses the people, what shall be our lawful refuge
herein?
First, the law of nature teaches and commands us to maintain and defend
our lives and liberties, without which life is scant worth the enjoying,
against all injury and violence. Nature has imprinted this by instinct
in dogs against wolves, in bulls against lions, betwixt pigeons and
sparrowhawks, betwixt pullen and kites, and yet much more in man against
man himself, if man become a beast: and therefore he who questions the
lawfulness of defending oneself, does, as much as in him lies, question
the law of nature. To this must be added the law of nations, which distinguishes
possessions and dominions, fixes limits, and makes out confines, which
every man is bound to defend against all invaders. And, therefore, it
is no less lawful to resist Alexander the Great, if without any right
or being justly provoked, he invades a country with a mighty navy, as
well as Diomedes the pirate who scours the seas in a small vessel. For
in this case Alexander's right is no more than Diomedes' but only he
has more power to do wrong, and not so easily to be compelled to reason
as the other. Briefly, one may as well Oppose Alexander in pillaging
a country, as a thief in purloining a cloak; as well him when he seeks
to batter down the walls of a city, as a robber who offers to break
into a private house.
There is, besides this, the civil law, or municipal laws of several
countries which governs the societies of men, by certain rules, some
in one manner, some in another; some submit themselves to the government
of one man, some to more; others are ruled by a whole commonalty, some
absolutely exclude women from the royal throne, others admit them; these
here choose their king descended of such a family, those there make
election of whom they please, besides other customs practiced amongst
several nations. If, therefore, any offer either by fraud or force to
violate this law, we are all bound to resist him, because he wrongs
that society to which we owe all that we have, and would ruin our country,
to the preservation whereof all men by nature, by law and by solemn
oath, are strictly obliged: insomuch that fear or negligence, or bad
purposes, make us omit this duty, we may justly be accounted breakers
of the laws, betrayers of our country, and contemners of religion. Now
as the laws of nature, of nations, and the Civil commands us to take
arms against such tyrants; so, is there not any manner of reason that
should persuade us to the contrary; neither is there any oath, covenant,
or obligation, public or private, of power justly to restrain us; therefore
the meanest private man may resist and lawfully oppose such an intruding
tyrant. The law Julia, which condemns to death those who raise rebellion
against their country or prince, has here no place; for he is no prince,
who, without any lawful title invades the commonwealth or confines of
another; nor he a rebel, who by arms defends his country; but rather
to this had relation the oath which all the youth of Athens were accustomed
to take in the temple of Aglaura, "I will fight for religion, for
the laws, for the altars, and for our possessions, either alone, or
with others; and will do the utmost of my endeavour to leave to posterity
our country, at the least, in as good estate as I found it." To
as little purpose can the laws made against seditious persons be alleged
here; for he is seditious who undertakes to defend the people, in opposition
of order and public discipline; but he is no raiser, but a suppressor
of sedition, who restrains within the limits of reason the subverter
of his country's welfare, and public discipline.
On the contrary, to this has proper relation the law of tyrannicide,
which honours the living with great and memorable recompenses, and the
dead with worthy epitaphs, and glorious statues, that have been their
country's liberators from tyrants; as Harmodius and Aristogitor. at
Athens, Brutus and Cassius in Rome, and Aratus of Sycione. To these
by a public decree were erected statues, because they delivered their
countries from the tyrannies of Pisistratus, of Caesar, and of Nicocles.
The which was of such respect amongst the ancients, that Xerxes having
made himself master of the city of Athens, caused to be transported
into Persia the statues of Harmodius and Aristogiton; afterwards Seleucus
caused them to be returned into their former place: and as in their
passage they came by Rhodes, those famous citizens entertained them
with public and stupendous solemnities, and during their abode there,
they placed them in the choicest sacresties of their gods. But the law
made against forsakers and traitors, takes absolutely hold on those
who are negligent and careless to deliver their country oppressed with
tyranny, and condemns them to the same punishment as those cowardly
soldiers, who, when they should fight, either counterfeit sickness,
or cast off their arms and run away. Every one, therefore, both in general
and particular, ought to yield their best assistance unto this: as in
a public fire, to bring both hooks, and buckets, and water; we must
not ceremoniously expect that the captain of the watch be first called,
nor till the governor of the town be come into the streets; but let
every man draw water and climb to the house-top; it is necessary for
all men that the fire be quenched. For if whilst the Gaules with much
silence and vigilancy seek to scale and surprise the capital, the soldiers
be drowsy with their former pains, the watch buried in sleep, the dogs
fail to bark, then must the geese play the sentinels, and with their
cackling noise, give an alarm. And the soldiers and watch shall be degraded,
yea, and put to death. The geese for perpetual remembrance of this deliverance,
shall be always fed in the capital, and much esteemed.
This, of which we have spoken, is to be understood of a tyranny not
yet firmly rooted, to wit, whilst a tyrant conspires, machinates, and
lays his plots and practices. But if he be once so possessed of the
state, and that the people, being subdued, promise and swear obedience;
the commonwealth being oppressed, resign their authority into their
hands; and that the kingdom in some formal manner consent to the changing
of their laws; for so much certainty as then, he has gained a title
which before he wanted and seems to be as well a legal as actual possessor
thereof, although this yoke were laid on the people's neck by compulsion,
yet must they quietly and peaceably rest in the will of the Almighty,
who, at His pleasure transfers kingdoms from one nation to another;
otherways there should be no kingdom, whose jurisdiction might not be
disputed. And it may well chance, that he who before was a tyrant without
title, having obtained the title of a king, may free himself from any
tyrannous imputation, by governing those under him with equity and moderation.
Therefore then, as the people of Jurie, under the authority of King
Ezechias, did lawfully resist the invasion of Senacherib the Assyrian;
so, on the contrary was Zedechias and all his subjects worthily punished,
because that without any just occasion, after they had done homage and
sworn fealty to Nebuchadnezar, they rose in rebellion against him. For,
after promise of performance, it is too late to repent. And, as in battles
every one ought to give testimony of his velour, but, being taken prisoner,
must faithfully observe covenants, so it is requisite, that the people
maintain their rights by all possible means; but, if it chance that
they be brought into the subjection of another's will, they must then
patiently support the dominion of the victor. So did Pompey, Cato, and
Cicero and others, perform the parts of good patriots then when they
took arms against Caesar, seeking to alter the government of the state;
neither can those be justly excused, whose base fear hindered the happy
success of Pompey and his partakers' noble designs. Augustus himself
is said to have reproved one who railed on Cato, affirming that he carried
himself worthily and exceedingly affected to the greatness of his country,
in courageously opposing the alteration which his contraries sought
to introduce in the government of the state, seeing all innovations
of that nature are ever authors of much trouble and confusion.
Furthermore, no man can justly reprehend Brutus, Cassius, and the rest
who killed Caesar before his tyrannical authority had taken any firm
rooting. And so there were statues of brass erected in honour of them
by public decree at Athens, and placed by those of Harmodius and Aristogiton,
then when, after the despatching of Caesar, they retired from Rome,
to avoid Marc Antonie and Augustus their revenge. But Cinna was certainly
guilty of sedition, who, after a legal transferring of the people's
power into the hands of Augustus, is said to have conspired against
him. Likewise, when the Pepins sought to take the crown of France from
the Merovingians; as also when those of the line of Capet endeavoured
to supplant the Pepins, any might lawfully resist them without incurring
the crime of sedition. But when, by public counsel and the authority
of the estates, the kingdom was transferred from one family to another,
it was then unlawful to oppose it. The same may be said, if a woman
possess herself of the kingdom, which the Salic law absolutely prohibits,
or if one seek to make a kingdom merely elective, hereditary to his
offspring, while those laws stand in force, and are unrepealed by the
authority of the general estates, who represent the body of the people.
Neither is it necessary in this respect, to have regard whether faction
is the greater, more powerful or more illustrious. Always those are
the greater number who are led by passion, than those who are ruled
by reason, and therefore tyranny has more servants than the commonwealth.
But Rome is there, according to the saying of Pompey, where the senate
is, and the senate is where there is obedience to the laws, love of
liberty, and studious carefulness for the country's preservation. And
therefore, though Brennus may seem to be master of Rome, yet, notwithstanding,
is Rome at Veii with Camillus, who prepares to deliver Rome from bondage.
It behoves, therefore, all true Romans to repair to Camillus, and assist
his enterprise with the utmost of their power and endeavours. Although
Themistocles, and all his able and worthiest companions leave Athens,
and put to sea with a navy of two hundred galleys, notwithstanding,
it cannot be said that any of these men are banished Athens, but rather,
as Themistocles answered, "These two hundred galleys are more useful
for us, than the greatest city of all Greece; for that they are armed,
and prepared for the defence of those who endeavour to maintain and
uphold the public state."
But to come to other examples: it follows not that the church of God
must needs be always in that place where the ark of the covenant is;
for the Philistines may carry the ark into the temples of their idols.
It is no good argument, that because we see the Roman eagles waving
in ensigns, and hear their legions named, that therefore presently we
conclude that the army of the Roman commonwealth is there present; for
there is only and properly the power of the state where they are assembled
to maintain the liberty of the country against the ravenous oppression
of tyrants, to enfranchise the people from servitude, and to suppress
the impudency of insulting flatterers, who abuse the prince's weakness
by oppressing his subjects for the advantage of their own fortunes,
and contain ambitious minds from enlarging their desires beyond the
limits of equity and moderation. Thus much concerning tyrants without
title.
But for tyrants by practice, whether they at first gained their authority
by the sword, or were legally invested therewith by a general consent,
it behoves us to examine this point with much wary circumspection. In
the first place we must remember that all princes are born men, and
therefore reason and passion are as hardly to be separated in them,
as the soul is from the body whilst the man lives. We must not then
expect princes absolute in perfection, but rather repute ourselves happy
if those who govern us be indifferently good. And therefore, although
the prince observe not exact mediocrity in state affairs; if sometimes
passion overrule his reason, if some careless omission make him neglect
the public utility; or if he do not always carefully execute justice
with equality, or repulse not with ready velour an invading enemy; he
must not therefore be presently declared a tyrant. And certainly, seeing
he rules not as a god over men, nor as men over beasts, but is a man
composed of the same matter, and of the same nature with the rest: as
we would questionless judge that prince unreasonably insolent, who should
insult over and abuse his subjects, as if they were brute beasts; so
those people are doubtless as much void of reason, who imagine a prince
should be complete in perfection, or expect divine abilities in a nature
so frail and subject to imperfections. But if a prince purposely ruin
the commonwealth, if he presumptuously pervert and resist legal proceedings
or lawful rights, if he make no reckoning of faith, covenants, justice
nor piety, if he prosecute his subjects as enemies; briefly, if he express
all or the chiefest of those wicked practices we have formerly spoken
of; then we may certainly declare him a tyrant, who is as much an enemy
both to God and men. We do not therefore speak of a prince less good,
but of one absolutely bad; not of one less wise, but of one malicious
and treacherous; not of one less able judiciously to discuss legal differences,
but of one perversely bent to pervert justice and equity; not of an
unwarlike, but of one furiously disposed to ruin the people, and ransack
the state.
For the wisdom of a senate, the integrity of a judge, the velour of
a captain, may peradventure enable a weak prince to govern well. But
a tyrant could be content that all the nobility, the counsellors of
state, the commanders for the wars, had but one head that he might take
it off at one blow: those being the proper objects of his distrust and
fear, and by consequence the principal subjects on whom he desires to
execute his malice and cruelty. A foolish prince, although (to speak
according to right and equity) he ought to be deposed, yet may he perhaps
in some sort be borne withal. But a tyrant the more he is tolerated,
the more he becomes intolerable.
Furthermore, as the princes pleasure is not always law, so many times
it is not expedient that the people do all that which may lawfully be
done; for it may oftentimes chance that the medicine proves more dangerous
than the disease. Therefore it becomes wise men to try all ways before
they come to blows, to use all other remedies before they suffer the
sword to decide the controversy. If then, those who represent the body
of the people, foresee any innovation or machination against the state,
or that it be already embarked into a course of perdition; their duty
is, first to admonish the prince, and not to attend, that the disease
by accession of time and accidents becomes unrecoverable. For tyranny
may be properly resembled unto a fever hectic, the which at the first
is easy to be cured, but with much difficulty to be known; but after
it is sufficiently known, it becomes incurable. Therefore small beginnings
are to be carefully observed, and by those whom it concerns diligently
prevented.
If the prince therefore persist in his violent courses, and contemn
frequent admonitions, addressing his designs only to that end, that
he may oppress at his pleasure, and effect his own desires without fear
or restraint; he then doubtless makes himself liable to that detested
crime of tyranny: and whatsoever either the law, or lawful authority
permits against a tyrant, may be lawfully practiced against him. Tyranny
is not only a will, but the chief, and as it were the complement and
abstract of vices. A tyrant subverts the state, pillages the people,
lays stratagems to entrap their lives, breaks promise with all, scoffs
at the sacred obligations of a solemn oath, and therefore is he so much
more vile than the vilest of usual malefactors. By how much offences
committed against a generality, are worthy of greater punishment than
those which concern only particular and private persons. If thieves
and those who commit sacrilege be declared infamous; nay, if they justly
suffer corporal punishment by death, can we invent any that may be worthily
equivalent for so outrageous a crime?
Furthermore, we have already proved, that all kings receive their royal
authority from the people, that the whole people considered in one body
is above and greater than the king; and that the king and emperor are
only the prime and supreme governors and ministers of the kingdom and
empire, but the people the absolute lord and owner thereof. It therefore
necessarily follows, that a tyrant is in the same manner guilty of rebellion
against the majesty of the people, as the lord of a fee, who feloniously
transgresses the conditions of his investitures, and is liable to the
same punishment, yea, and certainly deserves much more greater than
the equity of those laws inflicts on the delinquents. Therefore as Bartolus
says, "He may either be deposed by those who are lords in sovereignty
over him, or else justly punished according to the law Julia, which
condemns those who offer violence to the public." The body of the
people must needs be the sovereign of those who represent it, which
in some places are the electors, palatines, peers; in other, the assembly
of the general estates. And, if the tyranny have gotten such sure footing,
as there is no other means but force to remove him, then it is lawful
for them to call the people to arms, to enroll and raise forces, and
to employ the utmost of their power, and use against him all advantages
and stratagems of war, as against the enemy of the commonwealth, and
the disturber of the public peace. Briefly, the same sentence may be
justly pronounced against him, as was against Manlius Capitolinus at
Rome. "Thou west to me, Manlius, when thou didst tumble down the
Gaules that scaled the capital: but since thou art now become an enemy,
like one of them, thou shalt be precipitated down from the same place
from whence thou formerly tumbled those enemies."
The officers of the kingdom cannot for this be rightly taxed of sedition;
for in a sedition there must necessarily concur but two parts, or sides,
the which peremptorily contest together, so that it is necessary that
the one be in the right, and the other in the wrong. That part undoubtedly
has the right on their side, which defends the laws, and strives to
advance the public profit of the kingdom. And those, on the contrary,
are questionless in the wrong, who break the laws, and protect those
who violate justice, and oppress the commonwealth. Those are certainly
in the right way, as said Bartolus, "who endeavour to suppress
tyrannical government, and those in the wrong, who oppose lawful authority."
And that must ever be accounted just, which is intended only for the
public benefit, and that unjust, which aims chiefly at private commodity.
Therefore Thomas Aquinas says, "That a tyrannical rule, having
no proper address for the public welfare, but only to satisfy a private
will, with increase of particular profit to the ruler, cannot in any
reasonable construction be accounted lawful, and therefore the disturbance
of such a government cannot be esteemed seditious, much less traitorous";
for that offence has proper relation only to a lawful prince, who, indeed,
is an inanimated or speaking law; therefore, seeing that he who employs
the utmost of his means and power to annihilate the laws, and quell
their virtue and vigour, can no ways be justly intituled therewith.
So neither, likewise, can those who oppose and take arms against him,
be branded with so notorious a crime. Also this offence is committed
against the commonwealth; but for so much as the commonwealth is there
only where the laws are in force, and not where a tyrant devours the
state at his own pleasure and liking, he certainly is quit of that crime
which ruins the majesty of the public state, and those questionless
are worthily protectors and preservers of the commonwealth, who, confident
in the lawfulness of their authority, and summoned hereunto by their
duty, do courageously resist the unjust proceedings of the tyrant.
And in this their action, we must not esteem them as private men and
subjects, but as the representative body of the people, yea, and as
the sovereignty itself, which demands of his minister an account of
his administration. Neither can we in any good reason account the officers
of the kingdom disloyal, who in this manner acquit themselves of their
charge.
There is ever, and in all places, a mutual and reciprocal obligation
between the people and the prince; the one promises to be a good and
wise prince, the other to obey faithfully, provided he govern justly.
The people therefore are obliged to the prince under condition, the
prince to the people simply and purely. Therefore, if the prince fail
in his promise, the people are exempt from obedience, the contract is
made void, the right of obligation of no force. Then the king if he
govern unjustly is perjured, and the people likewise forsworn if they
obey not his lawful commands. But that people are truly acquit from
all perfidiousness, who publicly renounce the unjust dominion of a tyrant,
or he, striving unjustly by strong hand to continue the possession,
do constantly endeavour to expulse him by force of arms.
It is therefore permitted the officers of a kingdom, either all, or
some good number of them, to suppress a tyrant; and it is not only lawful
for them to do it, but their duty expressly requires it; and, if they
do it not, they can by no excuse colour their baseness. For the electors,
palatines, peers, and other officers of state, must not think they were
established only to make pompous paradoes and shows, when they are at
the coronation of the king, habited in their robes of state, as if there
were some masque or interlude to be represented; or as if they were
that day to act the parts of Roland, Oliver, or Renaldo, and such other
personages on a stage, or to counterfeit and revive the memory of the
knights of the round table; and after the dismissing of that day's assembly,
to suppose they have sufficiently acquitted themselves of their duty,
until a recess of the like solemnity Those solemn rites and ceremonies
were not instituted for vain ostentation, nor to pass, as in a dumb
show, to please the spectators, nor in children's sports, as it is with
Horace, to create a king in jest; but those grandees must know, that
as well for office and duty, as for honour, they are called to the performance
of those rites, and that in them, the commonwealth is committed and
recommended to the king, as to her supreme and principal tutor and protector,
and to them as co-adjutors and assistants to him: and therefore, as
the tutors or guardians (yea, even those who are appointed by way of
honour) are chosen to have care of and observe the actions and importments
of him who holds the principal rank in the tutorship, and to look how
he carries himself in the administration of the goods of his pupil.
So likewise are the former ordained to have an eye to the courses of
the king, for, with an equivalent authority, as the others for the pupil,
so are they to hinder and prevent the damage and detriment of the people,
the king being properly reputed as the prime guardian, and they his
co-adjutors.
In like manner, as the faults of the principal tutor who manages the
affairs are justly imputed to the co-adjoints in the tutorship, if when
they ought and might, they did not discover his errors, and cause him
to be despoiled, especially failing in the main points of his charge,
to wit, in not communicating unto them the affairs of his administration,
in dealing unfaithfully in his place, in doing anything to the dishonour
or detriment of his pupil, in embezzling of his goods or estate, or
if he bean enemy to his pupil: briefly, if either in regard of the worthlessness
of his person, or weakness of his judgment, he be unable well to discharge
so weighty a charge, so also, are the peers and principal officers of
the kingdom accountable for the government thereof, and must both prevent,
and if occasion require, suppress the tyranny of the prince, as also
supply with their care and diligence, his inability and weakness.
Finally, if a tutor omitting or neglecting to do all that for his pupil,
which a discreet father of a family would and might conveniently perform,
cannot well be excused, and the better acquitting himself of his charge,
has others as concealers and associates, joined with him to oversee
his actions; with much more reason may and ought the officers of the
crown to restrain the violent irruptions of that prince, who, instead
of a father, becomes an enemy to his people; seeing, to speak properly,
they are as well accountable for his actions wherein the public has
interests, as for their own.
Those officers must also remember, that the king holds truly the first
place in the administration of the state, but they the second, and so
following according to their ranks; not that they should follow his
courses, if he transgress the laws of equity and justice; not that if
he oppress the commonwealth, they should connive to his wickedness.
For the commonwealth was as well committed to their care as to his,
so that it is not sufficient for them to discharge their own duty in
particular, but it behoves them also to contain the prince within the
limits of reason; briefly, they have both jointly and severally promised
with solemn oaths, to advance and procure the profit of a commonwealth,
although then that he forswore himself; yet may not they imagine that
they are quit of their promise, no more than the bishops and patriarchs,
if they suffer an heretical pope to ruin the church; yea, they should
esteem themselves so much the more obliged to the observing their oath,
by how much they find him wilfully disposed to rush on in his perfidious
courses. But, if there be collusion betwixt him and them, they are prevaricators;
if they dissemble, they may justly be called forsakers and traitors;
if they deliver not the commonwealth from tyranny, they may be truly
ranked in the number of tyrants; as on the contrary they are protectors,
tutors, and in a sort kings, if they keep and maintain the state safe
and entire, which is also recommended to their care and custody.
Although these things are sufficiently certain of them selves, yet may
they be in some sort confirmed by examples. The kings of Canaan who
pressed the people of Israel with a hard, both corporal and spiritual,
servitude (prohibiting them all meetings and use of arms) were certainly
tyrants by practice, although they had some pretext of title. For Eglon
and Jabin had peaceably reigned almost the space of twenty years. God
stirred up extraordinarily Ehud, who, by a politic stratagem killed
Eglon, and Deborah who overthrew the army of Jabin, and by his service
delivered the people from the servitude of tyrants, not that it was
unlawful for the ordinary magistrates, the princes of the tribes, and
such other officers to have performed it, for Deborah does reprove the
sluggish idleness of some, and flatly detests the disloyalty of others,
for that they failed to perform their duty herein.
But it pleased God, taking commiseration of the distress of his people,
in this manner to supply the defects of the ordinary magistrates.
Rehoboam, the son of Solomon, refused to disburden the people of some
unnecessary imposts and burdens; and being petitioned by the people
in the general assembly of the states, he grew insolent, and relying
on the counsel of his minions, arrogantly threatens to lay heavier burdens
on them hereafter. No man can doubt, but that according to the tenure
of the contract, first passed between the king and the people, the prime
and principal officers of the kingdom had authority to repress such
insolence. They were only blameable in this, that they did that by faction
and division, which should more properly have been done in the general
assembly of the states; in like manner, in that they transferred the
sceptre from Judah (which was by God only confined to that tribe) into
another lineage; and also (as it chances in other affairs) for that
they did ill and disorderly manage a just and lawful cause. Profane
histories are full of such examples in other kingdoms.
Brutus, general of the soldiers, and Lucretius, governor of the city
of Rome, assembled the people against Tarquinius Superbus, and by their
authority thrust him from the royal throne: nay, which is more, his
goods were confiscated; whereby it appears that if Tarquinius had been
apprehended, undoubtedly he should have been according to the public
laws, corporally punished.
The true causes why Tarquinius was deposed, were because he altered
the custom, whereby the king was obliged to advise with the senate on
all weighty affairs, that he made war and peace according to his own
fancy; that he treated confederacies without demanding counsel and consent
from the people or senate; that he violated the laws whereof he was
made guardian; briefly that he made no reckoning to observe the contracts
agreed between the former kings, and the nobility and people of Rome.
For the Roman emperors, I am sure you remember the sentence pronounced
by the senate against Nero, wherein he was judged an enemy to the commonwealth,
and his body condemned to be ignominiously cast on the dung hill. And
that other pronounced against Vitellius, which adjudged him to be shamefully
dismembered, and in that miserable estate trailed through the city,
and at last put to death. Another against Maximinius, who was despoiled
of the empire; and Maximus and Albinus established in his place by the
senate. There might also be added many others drawn from unquestionable
historians.
The Emperor Trajan held not himself exempt from laws, neither desired
he to be spared if he became a tyrant; for in delivering the sword unto
the great provost of the empire, he says unto him: "If I command
as I should, use this sword for me: but if I do otherways, unsheathe
it against me." In like manner the French by the authority of the
states, and solicited "hereunto by the officers of the kingdom,
deposed Childerick the First, Sigisbert, Theodorick, and Childerick
the Third for their tyrannies, and chose others of another family to
sit on the royal throne. Yea, they deposed some because of their idleness
and want of judgment, who exposed the state in prey to panders, courtesans,
flatterers, and such other unworthy mushrooms of the court, who governed
all things at their pleasure; taking from such rash phaetons the bridle
of government, lest the whole body of the state and people should be
consumed through their unadvised folly.
Amongst others, Theodoret was degraded because of Ebroinus, Dagobert
for Plectude and Thibaud his pander, with some others: the estates esteeming
the command of an effeminate prince, as insupportable as that of a woman,
and as unwillingly supporting the yoke of tyrannous ministers managing
affairs in the name of a loose and unworthy prince, as the burden of
a tyrant alone. To be brief, no more suffering themselves to be governed
by one possessed by a devil, than they would by the devil himself. It
is not very long since the estates compelled Lewis the Eleventh (a prince
as subtle and it may be as wilful as any) to receive thirty-six overseers,
by whose advice he was bound to govern the affairs of state. The descendants
from Charlemagne substituted in the place of the Merovingians for the
government of the kingdom, or those of Capet, supplanting the Charlemains
by order of the estates, and reigning at this day, have no other nor
better right to the crown, than what we have formerly described; and
it has ever been according to law permitted the whole body of the people,
represented by the council of the kingdom, which are commonly called
the assembly of the states, to depose and establish princes, according
to the necessities of the commonwealth. According to the same rule we
read that Adolph was removed from the Empire of Germany A.D. 1296, because
for covetousness without any just occasion, he invaded the kingdom of
France, in favour of the English, and Wenceslaus was also deposed in
the year of our Lord 1400 Yet were not these princes exceeding bad ones,
but of the number of those who are accounted less ill. Isabella, the
wife of Edward the Second, King of England, assembled the Parliament
against her husband, who was there deposed, both because he tyrannized
in general over his subjects; as also for that he cut off the heads
of many noble men, without any just or legal proceeding. It is not long
since Christian lost the crown of Denmark, Henry that of Sweden, Mary
Stuart that of Scotland, for the same or near resembling occasions.
And the most worthy histories relate divers alterations and changes
which have happened in like manner, in the kingdoms of Polonia, Hungary,
Spain, Portugal, Bohemia, and others.
But what shall we say of the pope himself? It is generally held that
the cardinals, because they do elect him, or if they fail in their duty,
the patriarchs who are next in rank to them, may upon certain occasions
maugre the pope, call a council, yea, and in it judge him; as when by
some notorious offence he scandalizes the universal church. If he be
incorrigible, if reformation be as necessary in the head as the members,
if contrary to his oath he refuse to call a general council. And we
read for certain, that divers popes have been deposed by general councils.
But if they obstinately abuse their authority, there must (saith Baldus)
first be used verbal admonitions; secondly, herbal medicaments or remedies;
thirdly, stones or compulsion; for where virtue and fair means have
not power to persuade, there force and terror must be put in use to
compel. Now, if according to the opinions of most of the learned, by
decrees of councils, and by custom in like occasions, it plainly appears,
that the council may depose the pope, who, notwithstanding, vaunts himself
to be the king of kings, and as much in dignity above the emperor, as
the sun is above the moon, assuming to himself power to depose kings
and emperors when he pleases: who will make any doubt or question, that
the general assembly of the estates of any kingdom, who are the representative
body thereof, may not only degrade and disthronize a tyrant; but also,
even disauthorize and depose a king, whose weakness or folly is hurtful
or pernicious to the state.
But let us suppose, that in this our ship of state, the pilot is drunk,
the most of his associates are asleep, or after large and unreasonable
tippling together, they regard their eminent danger in approaching a
rock with idle and negligent jollity; the ship in the mean season instead
of following her right course, that might serve for the best advantage
of the owners' profit, is ready rather to split herself. What should
then a master's mate, or some other under officer do, who is vigilant
and careful to perform his duty? Shall it be thought sufficient for
him to pinch or punch them who are asleep, without daring in the meantime
to put his helping hand to preserve the vessel which runs on a course
to destruction, lest he should be thought to intermeddle with that which
he has no authority nor warrant to do? What mad discretion, nay, rather
notorious impiety were this? Seeing then that tyranny, as Plato says,
"is a drunken frenzy or frantic drunkenness," if the prince
endeavour to ruin the commonwealth, and the principal officers concur
with him in his bad purposes, or at the least are lulled in a dull and
drowsy dream of security and the people (being indeed the true and absolute
owner and lord of the state) be, through the pernicious negligence and
fraudulent connivancy of those officers, brought to the very brim of
danger and destruction, and that there be, notwithstanding, amongst
those unworthy ministers of state, some one who does studiously observe
the deceitful and dangerous encroachments of tyranny, and from his soul
detests it, what opposition do we suppose best befits such a one to
make against it? Shall he consent himself to admonish his associates
of their duty, who to their utmost ability endeavour the contrary? Besides,
that such an advertisement is commonly accompanied with too much danger,
and the condition of the times considered, the very soliciting of reformation
will be held as a capital crime: so that in so doing he may be not unfitly
resembled to one, who, being in the midst of a desert, environed with
thieves, should neglect all means of defence, and after he had cast
away his arms, in an eloquent and learned discourse commend justice,
and extol the worth and dignity of the laws This would be truly according
to the proverb, "To run mad with reason." What then? Shall
he be dull and deaf to the groans and cries of the people? Shall he
stand still and be silent when he sees the thieves enter? Shall he only
hold his hands in his bosom, and with a demure countenance, idly bewail
the miserable condition of the times? If the laws worthily condemn a
soldier, who, for fear of the enemies, counterfeits sickness, because
in so doing he expresses both disloyalty and treachery, what punishment
can we invent sufficient for him, who either maliciously or basely betrays
those whose protection and defence he has absolutely undertaken and
sworn? Nay, rather than let such a one cheerfully call one and command
the mariners to the performance of their duty: let him carefully and
constantly take order that the commonwealth be not endamaged, and if
need so require, even in despite of the king, preserve the kingdom,
without which the kingly title were idle and frivolous, and if by no
other means it can be affected, let him take the king and bind him hand
and foot, that so he may be more conveniently cured of his frenzy and
madness.
For as we have already said, all the administration of the kingdom is
not by the people absolutely resigned into the hands of the king; as
neither the bishopric nor care of the universal church, is totally committed
to the pope: but also to the care and custody of all the principal officers
of the kingdom. Now, for the preserving of peace and concord amongst
those who govern, and for the preventing of jealousies, factions, and
distrusts amongst men of equal rank and dignity, the king was created
prime and principal superintendent in the government of the commonwealth.
The king swears that his most special care shall be for the welfare
of the kingdom; and the officers of the crown take all the same oath.
If then the king, or divers of them falsifying their faith, ruin the
commonwealth, or abandon her in her greatest necessity, must the rest
also fashion themselves to their base courses, and quit all care of
the state's safety; as if the bad example of their companions absolved
them from their oath of fidelity? Nay, rather on the contrary, in seeing
them neglect their promise, they shall best advantage the commonwealth
in carefully observing theirs: chiefly because for this reason they
were instituted, as in the steads of ephori, or public controllers,
and for that every thing gains the better estimation of just and right
in that it is mainly and principally addressed to that end for which
it was first ordained.
Furthermore, if divers have jointly vowed one and the same thing, is
the obligation of the one annihilated by the perjury of the other? If
many become bound for one and the same sum, can the bankrupting of one
of the obligees quit the rest of their engagement? If divers tutors
administer ill the goods of their pupil, and that there be one amongst
them who makes conscience of his actions, can the bad dealing of his
companions acquit him? Nay, rather on the contrary, he cannot free himself
from the infamy of perjury, if to the utmost of his power he do not
truly discharge his trust, and perform his promise: neither can the
others' deficiency be excused, in the bad managing of the tutorship,
if they likewise accuse not the rest who were joined with them in the
administration, for it is not only the principal tutor who may call
to an account those who are suspected to have unjustly or indiscreetly
ordered the affairs of their pupil, but even those who were formerly
removed may also upon just occasion discharge and remove the delinquents
therein. Therefore those who are obliged to serve a whole empire and
kingdom, as the constables, marshals, peers and others, or those who
have particular obligations to some provinces or cities, which make
a part or portion of the kingdom, as dukes, marquises, earls, sheriffs,
mayors, and the rest, are bound by the duty of their place, to succour
the commonwealth, and to free it from the burden of tyrants, according
to the rank and place which they hold of the people next after the king.
The first ought to deliver the whole kingdom from tyrannous oppression;
the other, as tutors, that part of the kingdom whose protection they
have undertaken; the duty of the former is to suppress the tyrant, that
of the latter, to drive him from their confines. Wherefore Mattathias,
being a principal man in the state, when some basely connived, others
perniciously consorted with Antiochus, the tyrannous oppressor of the
Jewish kingdom, he courageously opposing the manifest oppression both
of church and state, encourages the people to the taking of arms, with
these words, "Let us restore the decayed estate of our people,
and let us fight for our people, and for the sanctuary." Whereby
it plainly appears, that not for religion only, but even for our country
and our possessions, we may fight and take arms against a tyrant, as
this Antiochus was. For the Machabites are not by any questioned, or
reprehended for conquering the kingdom, and expelling the tyrant, but
in that they attributed to themselves the royal dignity, which only
belongs by God's special appointment, to the tribe of Judah.
Humane histories are frequently stored with examples of this kind. Arbactus,
governor of the Medes, killed effeminate Sardanapalus, spinning amongst
women, and sportingly distributing all the treasures of the kingdom
amongst those his loose companions. Vindex and Galba quit the party
of Nero, yea, though the senate connived, and in a sort supported his
tyranny, and drew with them Gallia and Spain, being the provinces whereof
they were governors.
But amongst all, the decree of the senate of Sparta is most notable,
and ought to pass as an undeniable maxim amongst all nations. The Spartans
being lords of the city Byzantium, sent Olearchus thither for governor
and commander for the wars; who took corn from the citizens, and distributed
it to his soldiers. In the meantime the families of the citizens died
for hunger, Anaxilaus, a principal man of the city, disdaining that
tyrannous usage, entered into treaty with Alcibiades to deliver up the
town, who shortly after was received into it. Anaxilaus, being accused
at Sparta for the delivery of Byzantium, pleaded his cause himself,
and was there acquit by the judges; for (said they) "Wars are to
be made with families, and not with nature, nothing being more repugnant
to nature, than that those who are bound to defend a city, should be
more cruel to the inhabitants, than their enemies who besiege them."
This was the opinion of the Lacedemonians, certainly just rulers. Neither
can he be accounted a just king, who approves not this sentence of absolution;
for those who desire to govern according to the due proportion of equity
and reason, take into consideration, as well what the law inflicts on
tyrants, as also, what are the proper rights and bounds, both of the
patrician and plebeian orders. But we must yet proceed a little further.
There is not so mean a mariner, but must be ready to prevent the shipwreck
of the vessel, when either the negligence or wilfulness of the pilot
casts it into danger. Every magistrate is bound to relieve, and as much
as in him lies, to redress the miseries of the commonwealth, if he shall
see the prince, or the principal officers of state, his associates,
by their weakness or wickedness, to hazard the ruin thereof; briefly,
he must either free the whole kingdom, or at least that portion especially
recommended to his care, from their imminent and encroaching tyranny.
But has this duty proper relation to every one? Shall it be permitted
to Hendonius Sabinus, to Ennus Suranus, or to the fencer Spartanus;
or to be brief, to a mere private person to present the bonnet to slaves,
put arms into the hands of subjects, or to join battle with the prince,
although he oppress the people with tyranny? No, certainly, the commonwealth
was not given in charge to particular persons, considered one by one;
but, on the contrary, particulars even as papists are recommended to
the care of the principal officers and magistrates; and therefore they
are not bound to defend the commonwealth, which cannot defend themselves.
God nor the people have not put the sword into the hands of particular
persons; therefore, if without commandment they draw the sword, they
are seditious, although the cause seem never so just.
Furthermore, the prince is not established by private and particular
persons, but by all in general considered in one entire body; whereupon
it follows, that they are bound to attend the commandment of all, to
wit, of those who are the representative body of a kingdom, or of a
province, or of a city, or at the least of some one of them, before
they undertake anything against the prince.
For, as a pupil cannot bring an action, but, being avowed in the name
of his tutor, although the pupil be indeed the true proprietor of the
estate, and the tutor only owner with reference to the charge committed
unto him; so likewise the people may not enterprise actions of such
nature, but by the command of those into whose hands they have resigned
their power and authority, whether they be ordinary magistrates, or
extraordinary, created in the assembly of the estates; whom, if I may
so say, for that purpose, they have girded with their sword, and invested
with authority, both to govern and defend them, established in the same
kind as the pretor at Rome, who determined all differences between masters
and their servants, to the end that if any controversy happened between
the king and the subjects, they should be judges and preservers of the
right, lest the subjects should assume power to themselves to be judges
in their own causes. And therefore if they were oppressed with tributes
and unreasonable imposts; if anything were attempted contrary to covenant
and oath, and no magistrate opposed those unjust proceedings; they must
rest quiet, and suppose that many times the best physicians, both to
prevent and cure some grievous disease, do appoint both letting blood,
evacuation of humours, and lancing of the flesh; and that the affairs
of this world are of that nature, that with much difficulty, one evil
cannot be remedied without the adventuring, if not the suffering of
another; nor any good be achieved without great pains.
They have the example of the people of Israel, who, during the reign
of Solomon, refused not to pay those excessive taxes imposed on them,
both for the building of the temple, and fortifying of the kingdom,
because by a general consent they were granted for the promulgation
of the glory of God, and for an ornament and defence of the public state.
They have also the example of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, who,
though he were King of Kings, notwithstanding, because he conversed
in this world in another quality, to wit, of a private and particular
man, paid willingly tribute. If the magistrates themselves manifestly
favour the tyranny, or at the least do not formally oppose it; let private
men remember the saying of Job, "That for the sins of the people
God permits hypocrites to reign," whom it is impossible either
to convert or subvert, if men repent not of their ways, to walk in obedience
to God's commandments; so that there are no other weapons to be used,
but bended knees and humble hearts. Briefly, let them bear with bad
princes, and pray for better, persuading themselves that an outragious
tyranny is to be supported as patiently, as some exceeding damage done
by the violence of tempests, or some excessive overflowing waters, or
some such natural accidents unto the fruits of the earth, if they like
not better to change their habitations, by retiring themselves into
some other countries. So David fled into the mountains, and attempted
nothing against the tyrant Saul, because the people had not declared
him any public magistrate of the kingdom.
Jesus Christ, whose kingdom was not of this world, fled into Egypt,
and so freed himself from the paws of the tyrant. Saint Paul, teaching
of the duty of particular Christian men, and not of magistrates, teaches
that Nero must be obeyed. But if all the principal officers of state,
or divers of them, or but one, endeavour to suppress a manifest tyranny,
or if a magistrate seek to free that province, or portion of the kingdom
from oppression, which is committed to his care and custody, provided
under colour of freedom he bring not in a new tyranny, then must all
men with joint courage and alacrity run to arms, and take part with
him or them, and assist with body and goods, as if God Himself from
heaven had proclaimed wars, and meant to join battle against tyrants,
and by all ways and means endeavour to deliver their country and commonwealth
from their tyrannous oppression. For as God does oftentimes chastise
a people by the cruelty of tyrants, so also does He many times punish
tyrants by the hands of the people. It being a most true saying, verified
in all ages: "For the iniquities, violences, and wickedness of
princes, kingdoms are translated from one nation to another; but tyranny
was never of any durable continuance."
The centurions and men at arms did freely and courageously execute the
commandments of the high priest Jehoiada, in suppressing the tyranny
of Athalia. In like manner all the faithful and generous Israelites
took part and joined with the Machabites, as well to re-establish the
true service of God, as also to free and deliver the state from the
wicked and unjust oppression of Antiochus, and God blessed with happy
success their just and commendable enterprise. What then, cannot God
when He pleases stir up particular and private persons, to ruin a mighty
and powerful tyranny? He that gives power and ability to some even out
of the dust, without any title or colourable pretext of lawful authority,
to rise to the height of rule and dominion, and in it tyrannize and
afflict the people for their transgressions; cannot He also even from
the meanest multitude raise a liberator? He who enthralled and subjected
the people of Israel to Jabin, and to Eglon, did he not deliver and
enfranchise them by the hand of Ehud, Barack and Deborah, whilst the
magistrates and officers were dead in a dull and negligent ecstasy of
security? What then shall hinder? You may say the same God, who in these
days sends us tyrants to correct us, that he may not also extraordinarily
send correctors of tyrants to deliver us ? What if Ahab cut off good
men, if Jezebel suborn false witnesses against Naboth, may not a Jehu
be raised to exterminate the whole line of Ahab, to revenge the death
of Naboth, and to cast the body of Jezebel to be torn and devoured of
dogs? Certainly, as I have formerly answered, the Almighty is ever mindful
of His justice, and maintains it as inviolably as His mercy.
But for as much as in these latter times, those miraculous testimonies
by which God was wont to confirm the extraordinary vocation of those
famous worthies, are now wanting for the most part: let the people be
advised, that in seeking to cross the sea dry foot, they take not some
impostor for their guide, who may lead them headlong to destruction
(as we may read happened to the Jews); and that in seeking freedom from
tyranny, he who was the principal instrument to disenthral them, become
not himself a more insupportable tyrant than the former. Briefly, lest
endeavouring to advantage the commonwealth, they introduce not a common
misery upon all the undertakers participating therein with divers States
of Italy, who, seeking to suppress the present evil, added an accession
of greater and more intolerable servitude.
Finally, that we may come to some period of this third question; princes
are chosen by God, and established by the people. As all particulars
considered one by one, are inferior to the prince; so the whole body
of the people and officers of state, who represent that body, are the
princes' superiors. In the receiving and inauguration of a prince, there
are covenants and contracts passed between him and the people, which
are tacit and expressed, natural or civil; to wit, to obey him faithfully
whilst he commands justly, that he serving the commonwealth, all men
shall serve him, that whilst he governs according to law, all shall
be submitted to his government, etc. The officers of the kingdom are
the guardians and protectors of these covenants and contracts. He who
maliciously or wilfully violates these conditions, is questionless a
tyrant by practice. And therefore the officers of state may judge him
according to the laws. And if he support his tyranny by strong hands,
their duty binds them, when by no other means it can be effected by
force of arms to suppress him.
Of these officers there be two kinds, those who have generally undertaken
the protection of the kingdom; as the constable, marshals, peers, palatines,
and the rest, every one of whom, although all the rest do either connive
or consort with the tyranny, are bound to oppose and repress the tyrant;
and those who have undertaken the government of any province, city,
or part of the kingdom, as dukes, marquesses, earls, consuls, mayors,
sheriffs, etc., they may according to right, expel and drive tyranny
and tyrants from their cities, confines, and governments.
But particular and private persons may not unsheathe the sword against
tyrants by practice, because they were not established by particulars,
but by the whole body of the people. But for tyrants, who, without title
intrude themselves for so much as there is no contract or agreement
between them and the people, it is indifferently permitted all to oppose
and depose them; and in this rank of tyrants may those be ranged, who,
abusing the weakness and sloth of a lawful prince, tyrannously insult
over his subjects. Thus much for this, to which for a more full resolution
may be added that which has been formerly discoursed in the second question.
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