CHAP. XVII.
Of Usurpation.
Sec. 197. AS conquest may be
called a foreign usurpation, so usurpation is a kind of domestic conquest, with
this difference, that an usurper can never have right on his side, it being no
usurpation, but where one is got into the possession of what another has right
to. This, so far as it is usurpation, is a change only of persons, but not of
the forms and rules of the government: for if the usurper extend his power
beyond what of right belonged to the lawful princes, or governors of the
commonwealth, it is tyranny added to usurpation.
Sec. 198. In all lawful governments, the designation of the persons, who are
to bear rule, is as natural and necessary a part as the form of the government
itself, and is that which had its establishment originally from the people; the
anarchy being much alike, to have no form of government at all, or to agree that
it shall be monarchical, but to appoint no way to design the person that shall
have the power, and be the monarch. Hence all commonwealths, with the form of
government established, have rules also of appointing those who are to have any
share in the public authority, and settled methods of conveying the right to
them. Whoever gets into the exercise of any part of
the power, by other ways than what the laws of the community have prescribed,
hath no right to be obeyed, though the form of the commonwealth be still
preserved; since he is not the person the laws have appointed, and consequently
not the person the people have consented to. Nor can such an usurper, or any
deriving from him, ever have a title, till the people are both at liberty to
consent, and have actually consented to allow, and confirm in him the power he
hath till then usurped.
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