CHAP. XIX.
Of the Dissolution of Government.
Sec. 211. HE that will with any
clearness speak of the dissolution of government, ought in the first place to
distinguish between the dissolution of the society and the dissolution of the
government. That which makes the community, and brings men out of the loose
state of nature, into one politic society, is the agreement which every one has
with the rest to incorporate, and act as one body, and so be one distinct
commonwealth. The usual, and almost only way whereby this union is dissolved, is
the inroad of foreign force mak ing a conquest upon them: for in that case, (not
being able to maintain and support themselves, as one intire and independent
body) the union belonging to that body which consisted therein, must necessarily
cease, and so every one return to the state he was in before, with a liberty to
shift for himself, and provide for his own safety, as he thinks fit, in some
other society. Whenever the society is dissolved, it is certain the government
of that society cannot remain. Thus conquerors swords often cut up governments
by the roots, and mangle societies to pieces, separating the subdued or
scattered multitude from the protection of, and dependence on, that society
which ought to have preserved them from violence. The world is too well
instructed in, and too forward to allow of, this way of dissolving of
governments, to need any more to be said of it; and there wants not much
argument to prove, that where the society is dissolved, the government cannot
remain; that being as impossible, as for the frame of an house to subsist when
the materials of it are scattered and dissipated by a whirl-wind, or jumbled
into a confused heap by an earthquake.
Sec. 212. Besides this over-turning from without, governments are dissolved
from within,
First, When the legislative is altered. Civil society being a state of peace,
amongst those who are of it, from whom the state of war is excluded by the
umpirage, which they have provided in their legislative, for the ending all
differences that may arise amongst any of them, it is in their legislative, that
the members of a commonwealth are united, and combined together into one
coherent living body. This is the soul that gives form, life, and unity, to the
common-wealth: from hence the several members have their mutual influence,
sympathy, and connexion: and therefore, when the legislative is broken, or
dissolved, dissolution and death follows: for the essence and union of the
society consisting in having one will, the legislative, when once established by
the majority, has the declaring, and as it were keeping of that will. The
constitution of the legislative is the first and fundamental act of society,
whereby provision is made for the continuation of their union, under the
direction of persons, and bonds of laws, made by persons authorized thereunto,
by the consent and appointment of the people, without which no one man, or
number of men, amongst them, can have authority of making laws that shall be
binding to the rest. When any one, or more, shall take upon them to make laws,
whom the people have not appointed so to do, they make laws without authority,
which the people are not therefore bound to obey; by which means they come again
to be out of subjection, and may constitute to themselves a new legislative, as
they think best, being in full liberty to resist the force of those, who without
authority would impose any thing upon them. Every one is at the disposure of his
own will, when those who had, by the delegation of the society, the declaring of
the public will, are excluded from it, and others usurp the place, who have no
such authority or delegation.
Sec. 213. This being usually brought about by such in the commonwealth who
misuse the power they have; it is hard to consider it aright, and know at whose
door to lay it, without knowing the form of government in which it happens. Let
us suppose then the legislative placed in the concurrence of three distinct
persons.
1. A single hereditary person, having the constant, supreme, executive power,
and with it the power of convoking and dissolving the other two within certain
periods of time.
2. An assembly of hereditary nobility.
3. An assembly of representatives chosen, pro tempore, by the people. Such a
form of government supposed, it is evident,
Sec. 214. First, That when such a single person, or prince, sets up his own
arbitrary will in place of the laws, which are the will of the society, declared
by the legislative, then the legislative is changed: for that being in effect
the legislative, whose rules and laws are put in execution, and required to be
obeyed; when other laws are set up, and other rules pretended, and inforced,
than what the legislative, constituted by the society, have enacted, it is plain
that the legislative is changed. Whoever introduces new laws, not being
thereunto authorized by the fundamental appointment of the society, or subverts
the old, disowns and overturns the power by which they were made, and so sets up
a new legislative.
Sec. 215. Secondly, When the prince hinders the legislative from assembling
in its due time, or from acting freely, pursuant to those ends for which it was
constituted, the legislative is altered: for it is not a certain number of men,
no, nor their meeting, unless they have also freedom of debating, and leisure of
perfecting, what is for the good of the society, wherein the legislative
consists: when these are taken away or altered, so as to deprive the society of
the due exercise of their power, the legislative is truly altered; for it is not
names that constitute governments, but the use and exercise of those powers that
were intended to accompany them; so that he, who takes away the freedom, or
hinders the acting of the legislative in its due seasons, in effect takes away
the legislative, and puts an end to the government.
Sec. 216. Thirdly, When, by the arbitrary power of the prince, the electors,
or ways of election, are altered, without the consent, and contrary to the
common interest of the people, there also the legislative is altered: for, if
others than those whom the society hath authorized thereunto, do chuse, or in
another way than what the society hath prescribed, those chosen are not the
legislative appointed by the people.
Sec. 217. Fourthly, The delivery also of the people into the subjection of a
foreign power, either by the prince, or by the legislative, is certainly a
change of the legislative, and so a dissolution of the government: for the end
why people entered into society being to be preserved one intire, free,
independent society, to be governed by its own laws; this is lost, whenever they
are given up into the power of another.
Sec. 218. Why, in such a constitution as this, the dissolution of the
government in these cases is to be imputed to the prince, is evident; because
he, having the force, treasure and offices of the state to employ, and often
persuading himself, or being flattered by others, that as supreme magistrate he
is uncapable of controul; he alone is in a condition to make great advances
toward such changes, under pretence of lawful authority, and has it in his hands
to terrify or suppress opposers, as factious, seditious, and enemies to the
government: whereas no other part of the legislative, or people, is capable by
themselves to attempt any alteration of the legislative, without open and
visible rebellion, apt enough to be taken notice of, which, when it prevails,
produces effects very little different from foreign conquest. Besides, the
prince in such a form of government, having the power of dissolving the other
parts of the legislative, and thereby rendering them private persons, they can
never in opposition to him, or without his concurrence, alter the legislative by
a law, his conse power, neglects and abandons that charge, so that the laws
already made can no longer be put in execution. This is demonstratively to
reduce all to anarchy, and so effectually to dissolve the government: for laws
not being made for themselves, but to be, by their execution, the bonds of the
society, to keep every part of the body politic in its due place and function;
when that totally ceases, the government visibly ceases, and the people become a
confused multitude, without order or connexion. Where there is no longer the
administration of justice, for the securing of men's rights, nor any remaining
power within the community to direct the force, or provide for the necessities
of the public, there certainly is no government left. Where the laws cannot be
executed, it is all one as if there were no laws; and a government without laws
is, I suppose, a mystery in politics, unconceivable to human capacity, and
inconsistent with human society.
Sec. 219. There is one way more whereby such a government may be dissolved,
and that is: When he who has the supreme executive power neglects and abandons
that charge, so that the laws already made can no longer be put in execution;
this is demonstratively to reduce all to anarchy, and so effectively to dissolve
the government. For laws not being made for themselves, but to be, by their
execution, the bonds of the society to keep every part of the body politic in
its due place and function. When that totally ceases, the government visibly
ceases, and the people become a confused multitude without order or connection.
Where there is no longer the administration of justice for the securing of
men′s rights, nor any remaining power within the community to direct the
force, or provide for the necessities of the public, there certainly is no
government left. Where the laws cannot be executed it is all one as if there
were no laws, and a government without laws is, I suppose, a mystery in politics
inconceivable to human capacity, and inconsistent with human society.
Sec. 220. In these and the like cases, when the government is dissolved, the
people are at liberty to provide for themselves, by erecting a new legislative,
differing from the other, by the change of persons, or form, or both, as they
shall find it most for their safety and good: for the society can never, by the
fault of another, lose the native and original right it has to preserve itself,
which can only be done by a settled legislative, and a fair and impartial
execution of the laws made by it. But the state of mankind is not so miserable
that they are not capable of using this remedy, till it be too late to look for
any. To tell people they may provide for themselves, by erecting a new
legislative, when by oppression, artifice, or being delivered over to a foreign
power, their old one is gone, is only to tell them, they may expect relief when
it is too late, and the evil is past cure. This is in effect no more than to bid
them first be slaves, and then to take care of their liberty; and when their
chains are on, tell them, they may act like freemen. This, if barely so, is
rather mockery than relief; and men can never be secure from tyranny, if there
be no means to escape it till they are perfectly under it: and therefore it is,
that they have not only a right to get out of it, but to prevent it.
Sec. 221. There is therefore, secondly, another way whereby governments are
dissolved, and that is, when the legislative, or the prince, either of them, act
contrary to their trust. First, The legislative acts against the trust reposed
in them, when they endeavour to invade the property of the subject, and to make
themselves, or any part of the community, masters, or arbitrary disposers of the
lives, liberties, or fortunes of the people.
Sec. 222. The reason why men enter into society, is the preservation of their
property; and the end why they chuse and authorize a legislative, is, that there
may be laws made, and rules set, as guards and fences to the properties of all
the members of the society, to limit the power, and moderate the dominion, of
every part and member of the society: for since it can never be supposed to be
the will of the society, that the legislative should have a power to destroy
that which every one designs to secure, by entering into society, and for which
the people submitted themselves to legislators of their own making; whenever the
legislators endeavour to take away, and destroy the property of the people, or
to reduce them to slavery under arbitrary power, they put themselves into a
state of war with the people, who are thereupon absolved from any farther
obedience, and are left to the common refuge, which God hath provided for all
men, against force and violence. Whensoever therefore the legislative shall
transgress this fundamental rule of society; and either by ambition, fear, folly
or corruption, endeavour to grasp themselves, or put into the hands of any
other, an absolute power over the lives, liberties, and estates of the people;
by this breach of trust they forfeit the power the people had put into their
hands for quite contrary ends, and it devolves to the people, who. have a right
to resume their original liberty, and, by the establishment of a new
legislative, (such as they shall think fit) provide for their own safety and
security, which is the end for which they are in society. What I have said here,
concerning the legislative in general, holds true also concerning the supreme
executor, who having a double trust put in him, both to have a part in the
legislative, and the supreme execution of the law, acts against both, when he
goes about to set up his own arbitrary will as the law of the society. He acts
also contrary to his trust, when he either employs the force, treasure, and
offices of the society, to corrupt the representatives, and gain them to his
purposes; or openly preengages the electors, and prescribes to their choice,
such, whom he has, by sollicitations, threats, promises, or otherwise, won to
his designs; and employs them to bring in such, who have promised before-hand
what to vote, and what to enact. Thus to regulate candidates and electors, and
new-model the ways of election, what is it but to cut up the government by the
roots, and poison the very fountain of public security? for the people having
reserved to themselves the choice of their representatives, as the fence to
their properties, could do it for no other end, but that they might always be
freely chosen, and so chosen, freely act, and advise, as the necessity of the
common-wealth, and the public good should, upon examination, and mature debate,
be judged to require. This, those who give their votes before they hear the
debate, and have weighed the reasons on all sides, are not capable of doing. To
prepare such an assembly as this, and endeavour to set up the declared abettors
of his own will, for the true representatives of the people, and the law-makers
of the society, is certainly as great a breach of trust, and as perfect a
declaration of a design to subvert the government, as is possible to be met
with. To which, if one shall add rewards and punishments visibly employed to the
same end, and all the arts of perverted law made use of, to take off and destroy
all that stand in the way of such a design, and will not comply and consent to
betray the liberties of their country, it will be past doubt what is doing. What
power they ought to have in the society, who thus employ it contrary to the
trust went along with it in its first institution, is easy to determine; and one
cannot but see, that he, who has once attempted any such thing as this, cannot
any longer be trusted.
Sec. 223. To this perhaps it will be said, that the people being ignorant,
and always discontented, to lay the foundation of government in the unsteady
opinion and uncertain humour of the people, is to expose it to certain ruin; and
no government will be able long to subsist, if the people may set up a new
legislative, whenever they take offence at the old one. To this I answer, Quite
the contrary. People are not so easily got out of their old forms, as some are
apt to suggest. They are hardly to be prevailed with to amend the acknowledged
faults in the frame they have been accustomed to. And if there be any original
defects, or adventitious ones introduced by time, or corruption; it is not an
easy thing to get them changed, even when all the world sees there is an
opportunity for it. This slowness and aversion in the people to quit their old
constitutions, has, in the many revolutions which have been seen in this
kingdom, in this and former ages, still kept us to, or, after some interval of
fruitless attempts, still brought us back again to our old legislative of king,
lords and commons: and whatever provocations have made the crown be taken from
some of our princes heads, they never carried the people so far as to place it
in another line.
Sec. 224. But it will be said, this hypothesis lays a ferment for frequent
rebellion. To which I answer,
First, No more than any other hypothesis: for when the people are made
miserable, and find themselves exposed to the ill usage of arbitrary power, cry
up their governors, as much as you will, for sons of Jupiter; let them be sacred
and divine, descended, or authorized from heaven; give them out for whom or what
you please, the same will happen. The people generally ill treated, and contrary
to right, will be ready upon any occasion to ease themselves of a burden that
sits heavy upon them. They will wish, and seek for the opportunity, which in the
change, weakness and accidents of human affairs, seldom delays long to offer
itself. He must have lived but a little while in the world, who has not seen
examples of this in his time; and he must have read very little, who cannot
produce examples of it in all sorts of governments in the world.
Sec. 225. Secondly, I answer, such revolutions happen not upon every little
mismanagement in public affairs. Great mistakes in the ruling part, many wrong
and inconvenient laws, and all the slips of human frailty, will be born by the
people without mutiny or murmur. But if a long train of abuses, prevarications
and artifices, all tending the same way, make the design visible to the people,
and they cannot but feel what they lie under, and see whither they are going; it
is not to be wondered, that they should then rouze themselves, and endeavour to
put the rule into such hands which may secure to them the ends for which
government was at first erected; and without which, ancient names, and specious
forms, are so far from being better, that they are much worse, than the state of
nature, or pure anarchy; the inconveniencies being all as great and as near, but
the remedy farther off and more difficult.
Sec. 226. Thirdly, I answer, that this doctrine of a power in the people of
providing for their safety a-new, by a new legislative, when their legislators
have acted contrary to their trust, by invading their property, is the best
fence against rebellion, and the probablest means to hinder it: for rebellion
being an opposition, not to persons, but authority, which is founded only in the
constitutions and laws of the government; those, whoever they be, who by force
break through, and by force justify their violation of them, are truly and
properly rebels: for when men, by entering into society and civil-government,
have excluded force, and introduced laws for the preservation of property,
peace, and unity amongst themselves, those who set up force again in opposition
to the laws, do rebellare, that is, bring back again the state of war, and are
properly rebels: which they who are in power, (by the pretence they have to
authority, the temptation of force they have in their hands, and the flattery of
those about them) being likeliest to do; the properest way to prevent the evil,
is to shew them the danger and injustice of it, who are under the greatest
temptation to run into it.
Sec. 227. In both the fore-mentioned cases, when either the legislative is
changed, or the legislators act contrary to the end for which they were
constituted; those who are guilty are guilty of rebellion: for if any one by
force takes away the established legislative of any society, and the laws by
them made, pursuant to their trust, he thereby takes away the umpirage, which
every one had consented to, for a peaceable decision of all their controversies,
and a bar to the state of war amongst them. They, who remove, or change the
legislative, take away this decisive power, which no body can have, but by the
appointment and consent of the people; and so destroying the authority which the
people did, and no body else can set up, and introducing a power which the
people hath not authorized, they actually introduce a state of war, which is
that of force without authority: and thus, by removing the legislative
established by the society, (in whose decisions the people acquiesced and
united, as to that of their own will) they untie the knot, and expose the people
a-new to the state of war, And if those, who by force take away the legislative,
are rebels, the legislators themselves, as has been shewn, can be no less
esteemed so; when they, who were set up for the protection, and preservation of
the people, their liberties and properties, shall by force invade and endeavour
to take them away; and so they putting themselves into a state of war with those
who made them the protectors and guardians of their peace, are properly, and
with the greatest aggravation, rebellantes, rebels.
Sec. 228. But if they, who say it lays a foundation for rebellion, mean that
it may occasion civil wars, or intestine broils, to tell the people they are
absolved from obedience when illegal attempts are made upon their liberties or
properties, and may oppose the unlawful violence of those who were their
magistrates, when they invade their properties contrary to the trust put in
them; and that therefore this doctrine is not to be allowed, being so
destructive to the peace of the world: they may as well say, upon the same
ground, that honest men may not oppose robbers or pirates, because this may
occasion disorder or bloodshed. If any mischief come in such cases, it is not to
be charged upon him who defends his own right, but on him that invades his
neighbours. If the innocent honest man must quietly quit all he has, for peace
sake, to him who will lay violent hands upon it, I desire it may be considered,
what a kind of peace there will be in the world, which consists only in violence
and rapine; and which is to be maintained only for the benefit of robbers and
oppressors. VVho would not think it an admirable peace betwix the mighty and the
mean, when the lamb, without resistance, yielded his throat to be torn by the
imperious wolf? Polyphemus's den gives us a perfect pattern of such a peace, and
such a government, wherein Ulysses and his companions had nothing to do, but
quietly to suffer themselves to be devoured. And no doubt Ulysses, who was a
prudent man, preached up passive obedience, and exhorted them to a quiet
submission, by representing to them of what concernment peace was to mankind;
and by shewing the inconveniences might happen, if they should offer to resist
Polyphemus, who had now the power over them.
Sec. 229. The end of government is the good of mankind; and which is best for
mankind, that the people should be always exposed to the boundless will of
tyranny, or that the rulers should be sometimes liable to be opposed, when they
grow exorbitant in the use of their power, and employ it for the destruction,
and not the preservation of the properties of their people?
Sec. 230. Nor let any one say, that mischief can arise from hence, as often
as it shall please a busy head, or turbulent spirit, to desire the alteration of
the government. It is true, such men may stir, whenever they please; but it will
be only to their own just ruin and perdition: for till the mischief be grown
general, and the ill designs of the rulers become visible, or their attempts
sensible to the greater part, the people, who are more disposed to suffer than
right themselves by resistance, are not apt to stir. The examples of particular
injustice, or oppression of here and there an unfortunate man, moves them not.
But if they universally have a persuation, grounded upon manifest evidence, that
designs are carrying on against their liberties, and the general course and
tendency of things cannot but give them strong suspicions of the evil intention
of their governors, who is to be blamed for it? Who can help it, if they, who
might avoid it, bring themselves into this suspicion? Are the people to be
blamed, if they have the sense of rational creatures, and can think of things no
otherwise than as they find and feel them? And is it not rather their fault, who
put things into such a posture, that they would not have them thought to be as
they are? I grant, that the pride, ambition, and turbulency of private men have
sometimes caused great disorders in commonwealths, and factions have been fatal
to states and kingdoms. But whether the mischief hath oftener begun in the
peoples wantonness, and a desire to cast off the lawful authority of their
rulers, or in the rulers insolence, and endeavours to get and exercise an
arbitrary power over their people; whether oppression, or disobedience, gave the
first rise to the disorder, I leave it to impartial history to determine. This I
am sure, whoever, either ruler or subject, by force goes about to invade the
rights of either prince or people, and lays the foundation for overturning the
constitution and frame of any just government, is highly guilty of the greatest
crime, I think, a man is capable of, being to answer for all those mischiefs of
blood, rapine, and desolation, which the breaking to pieces of governments bring
on a country. And he who does it, is justly to be esteemed the common enemy and
pest of mankind, and is to be treated accordingly.
Sec. 231. That subjects or foreigners, attempting by force on the properties
of any people, may be resisted with force, is agreed on all hands. But that
magistrates, doing the same thing, may be resisted, hath of late been denied: as
if those who had the greatest privileges and advantages by the law, had thereby
a power to break those laws, by which alone they were set in a better place than
their brethren: whereas their offence is thereby the greater, both as being
ungrateful for the greater share they have by the law, and breaking also that
trust, which is put into their hands by their brethren.
Sec. 232. Whosoever uses force without right, as every one does in society,
who does it without law, puts himself into a state of war with those against
whom he so uses it; and in that state all former ties are cancelled, all other
rights cease, and every one has a right to defend himself, and to resist the
aggressor. This is so evident, that Barclay himself, that great assertor of the
power and sacredness of kings, is forced to confess, That it is lawful for the
people, in some cases, to resist their king; and that too in a chapter, wherein
he pretends to shew, that the divine law shuts up the people from all manner of
rebellion. Whereby it is evident, even by his own doctrine, that, since they may
in some cases resist, all resisting of princes is not rebellion. His words are
these.
Quod siquis dicat, Ergone populus tyrannicae crudelitati & furori jugulum
semper praebebit? Ergone multitude civitates suas fame, ferro, & flamma vastari,
seque, conjuges, & liberos fortunae ludibrio & tyranni libidini exponi, inque
omnia vitae pericula omnesque miserias & molestias a rege deduci patientur? Num
illis quod omni animantium generi est a natura tributum, denegari debet, ut sc.
vim vi repellant, seseq; ab injuria, tueantur? Huic breviter responsum sit,
Populo universo negari defensionem, quae juris naturalis est, neque ultionem
quae praeter naturam est adversus regem concedi debere. Quapropter si rex non in
singulares tantum personas aliquot privatum odium exerceat, sed corpus etiam
reipublicae, cujus ipse caput est, i.e. totum populum, vel insignem aliquam ejus
partem immani & intoleranda saevitia seu tyrannide divexet; populo, quidem hoc
casu resistendi ac tuendi se ab injuria potestas competit, sed tuendi se tantum,
non enim in principem invadendi: & restituendae injuriae illatae, non recedendi
a debita reverentia propter acceptam injuriam. Praesentem denique impetum
propulsandi non vim praeteritam ulciscenti jus habet. Horum enim alterum a
natura est, ut vitam scilicet corpusque tueamur. Alterum vero contra naturam, ut
inferior de superiori supplicium sumat. Quod itaque populus malum, antequam
factum sit, impedire potest, ne fiat, id postquam factum est, in regem authorem
sceleris vindicare non potest: populus igitur hoc amplius quam privatus quispiam
habet: quod huic, vel ipsis adversariis judicibus, excepto Buchanano, nullum
nisi in patientia remedium superest. Cum ille si intolerabilis tyrannus est
(modicum enim ferre omnino debet) resistere cum reverentia possit, Barclay
contra Monarchom. 1. iii. c. 8.
In English thus:
Sec. 233. But if any one should ask, Must the people then always lay
themselves open to the cruelty and rage of tyranny? Must they see their cities
pillaged, and laid in ashes, their wives and children exposed to the tyrant's
lust and fury, and themselves and families reduced by their king to ruin, and
all the miseries of want and oppression, and yet sit still? Must men alone be
debarred the common privilege of opposing force with force, which nature allows
so freely to all other creatures for their preservation from injury? I answer:
Self-defence is a part of the law of nature; nor can it be denied the community,
even against the king himself: but to revenge themselves upon him, must by no
means be allowed them; it being not agreeable to that law. Wherefore if the king
shall shew an hatred, not only to some particular persons, but sets himself
against the body of the common-wealth, whereof he is the head, and shall, with
intolerable ill usage, cruelly tyrannize over the whole, or a considerable part
of the people, in this case the people have a right to resist and defend
themselves from injury: but it must be with this caution, that they only defend
themselves, but do not attack their prince: they may repair the damages
received, but must not for any provocation exceed the bounds of due reverence
and respect. They may repulse the present attempt, but must not revenge past
violences: for it is natural for us to defend life and limb, but that an
inferior should punish a superior, is against nature. The mischief which is
designed them, the people may prevent before it be done; but when it is done,
they must not revenge it on the king, though author of the villany. This
therefore is the privilege of the people in general, above what any private
person hath; that particular men are allowed by our adversaries themselves
(Buchanan only excepted) to have no other remedy but patience; but the body of
the people may with respect resist intolerable tyranny; for when it is but
moderate, they ought to endure it.
Sec. 234. Thus far that great advocate of monarchical power allows of
resistance.
Sec. 235. It is true, he has annexed two limitations to it, to no purpose:
First, He says, it must be with reverence.
Secondly, It must be without retribution, or punishment; and the reason he
gives is, because an inferior cannot punish a superior.
First, How to resist force without striking again, or how to strike with
reverence, will need some skill to make intelligible. He that shall oppose an
assault only with a shield to receive the blows, or in any more respectful
posture, without a sword in his hand, to abate the confidence and force of the
assailant, will quickly be at an end of his resistance, and will find such a
defence serve only to draw on himself the worse usage. This is as ridiculous a
way of resisting, as juvenal thought it of fighting; ubi tu pulsas, ego vapulo
tantum. And the success of the combat will be unavoidably the same he there
describes it:
— Libertas pauperis haec est:
Pulsatus rogat, & pugnis concisus, adorat,
Ut liceat paucis cum dentibus inde reverti.
This will always be the event of such an imaginary resistance, where men may
not strike again. He therefore who may resist, must be allowed to strike. And
then let our author, or any body else, join a knock on the head, or a cut on the
face, with as much reverence and respect as he thinks fit. He that can reconcile
blows and reverence, may, for aught I know, desire for his pains, a civil,
respectful cudgeling where-ever he can meet with it.
Secondly, As to his second, An inferior cannot punish a superior; that is
true, generally speaking, whilst he is his superior. But to resist force with
force, being the state of war that levels the parties, cancels all former
relation of reverence, respect, and superiority: and then the odds that remains,
is, that he, who opposes the unjust agressor, has this superiority over him,
that he has a right, when he prevails, to punish the offender, both for the
breach of the peace, and all the evils that followed upon it. Barclay therefore,
in another place, more coherently to himself, denies it to be lawful to resist a
king in any case. But he there assigns two cases, whereby a king may un-king
himself. His words are,
Quid ergo, nulline casus incidere possunt quibus populo sese erigere atque in
regem impotentius dominantem arma capere & invadere jure suo suaque authoritate
liceat? Nulli certe quamdiu rex manet. Semper enim ex divinis id obstat, Regem
honorificato; & qui potestati resistit, Dei ordinationi resisit: non alias
igitur in eum populo potestas est quam si id committat propter quod ipso jure
rex esse desinat. Tunc enim se ipse principatu exuit atque in privatis
constituit liber: hoc modo populus & superior efficitur, reverso ad eum sc. jure
illo quod ante regem inauguratum in interregno habuit. At sunt paucorum generum
commissa ejusmodi quae hunc effectum pariunt. At ego cum plurima animo
perlustrem, duo tantum invenio, duos, inquam, casus quibus rex ipso facto ex
rege non regem se facit & omni honore & dignitate regali atque in subditos
potestate destituit; quorum etiam meminit Winzerus. Horum unus est, Si regnum
disperdat, quemadmodum de Nerone fertur, quod is nempe senatum populumque
Romanum, atque adeo urbem ipsam ferro flammaque vastare, ac novas sibi sedes
quaerere decrevisset. Et de Caligula, quod palam denunciarit se neque civem
neque principem senatui amplius fore, inque animo habuerit interempto utriusque
ordinis electissimo quoque Alexandriam commigrare, ac ut populum uno ictu
interimeret, unam ei cervicem optavit. Talia cum rex aliquis meditator & molitur
serio, omnem regnandi curam & animum ilico abjicit, ac proinde imperium in
subditos amittit, ut dominus servi pro derelicto habiti dominium.
Sec. 236. Alter casus est, Si rex in alicujus clientelam se contulit, ac
regnum quod liberum a majoribus & populo traditum accepit, alienae ditioni
mancipavit. Nam tunc quamvis forte non ea mente id agit populo plane ut
incommodet: tamen quia quod praecipuum est regiae dignitatis amifit, ut summus
scilicet in regno secundum Deum sit, & solo Deo inferior, atque populum etiam
totum ignorantem vel invitum, cujus libertatem sartam & tectam conservare
debuit, in alterius gentis ditionem & potestatem dedidit; hac velut quadam regni
ab alienatione effecit, ut nec quod ipse in regno imperium habuit retineat, nec
in eum cui collatum voluit, juris quicquam transferat; atque ita eo facto
liberum jam & suae potestatis populum relinquit, cujus rei exemplum unum annales
Scotici suppeditant. Barclay contra Monarchom. 1. iii. c. 16.
Which in English runs thus:
Sec. 237. What then, can there no case happen wherein the people may of
right, and by their own authority, help themselves, take arms, and set upon
their king, imperiously domineering over them? None at all, whilst he remains a
king. Honour the king, and he that resists the power, resists the ordinance of
God; are divine oracles that will never permit it, The people therefore can
never come by a power over him, unless he does something that makes him cease to
be a king: for then he divests himself of his crown and dignity, and returns to
the state of a private man, and the people become free and superior, the power
which they had in the interregnum, before they crowned him king, devolving to
them again. But there are but few miscarriages which bring the matter to this
state. After considering it well on all sides, I can find but two. Two cases
there are, I say, whereby a king, ipso facto, becomes no king, and loses all
power and regal authority over his people; which are also taken notice of by
Winzerus.
The first is, If he endeavour to overturn the government, that is, if he have
a purpose and design to ruin the kingdom and commonwealth, as it is recorded of
Nero, that he resolved to cut off the senate and people of Rome, lay the city
waste with fire and sword, and then remove to some other place. And of Caligula,
that he openly declared, that he would be no longer a head to the people or
senate, and that he had it in his thoughts to cut off the worthiest men of both
ranks, and then retire to Alexandria: and he wisht that the people had but one
neck, that he might dispatch them all at a blow, Such designs as these, when any
king harbours in his thoughts, and seriously promotes, he immediately gives up
all care and thought of the common-wealth; and consequently forfeits the power
of governing his subjects, as a master does the dominion over his slaves whom he
hath abandoned.
Sec. 238. The other case is, When a king makes himself the dependent of
another, and subjects his kingdom which his ancestors left him, and the people
put free into his hands, to the dominion of another: for however perhaps it may
not be his intention to prejudice the people; yet because he has hereby lost the
principal part of regal dignity, viz. to be next and immediately under God,
supreme in his kingdom; and also because he betrayed or forced his people, whose
liberty he ought to have carefully preserved, into the power and dominion of a
foreign nation. By this, as. it were, alienation of his kingdom, he himself
loses the power he had in it before, without transferring any the least right to
those on whom he would have bestowed it; and so by this act sets the people
free, and leaves them at their own disposal. One example of this is to be found
in the Scotch Annals.
Sec. 239. In these cases Barclay, the great champion of absolute monarchy, is
forced to allow, that a king may be resisted, and ceases to be a king. That is,
in short, not to multiply cases, in whatsoever he has no authority, there he is
no king, and may be resisted: for wheresoever the authority ceases, the king
ceases too, and becomes like other men who have no authority. And these two
cases he instances in, differ little from those above mentioned, to be
destructive to governments, only that he has omitted the principle from which
his doctrine flows: and that is, the breach of trust, in not preserving the form
of government agreed on, and in not intending the end of government itself,
which is the public good and preservation of property. When a king has dethroned
himself, and put himself in a state of war with his people, what shall hinder
them from prosecuting him who is no king, as they would any other man, who has
put himself into a state of war with them, Barclay, and those of his opinion,
would do well to tell us. This farther I desire may be taken notice of out of
Barclay, that he says, The mischief that is designed them, the people may
prevent before it be clone: whereby he allows resistance when tyranny is but in
design. Such designs as these (says he) when any king harbours in his thoughts
and seriously promotes, he immediately gives up all care and thought of the
common-wealth; so that, according to him, the neglect of the public good is to
be taken as an evidence of such design, or at least for a sufficient cause of
resistance. And the reason of all, he gives in these words, Because he betrayed
or forced his people, whose liberty he ought carefully to have preserved. What
he adds, into the power and dominion of a foreign nation, signifies nothing, the
fault and forfeiture lying in the loss of their liberty, which he ought to have
preserved, and not in any distinction of the persons to whose dominion they were
subjected. The peoples right is equally invaded, and their liberty lost, whether
they are made slaves to any of their own, or a foreign nation; and in this lies
the injury, and against this only have they the right of defence. And there are
instances to be found in all countries, which shew, that it is not the change of
nations in the persons of their governors, but the change of government, that
gives the offence. Bilson, a bishop of our church, and a great stickler for the
power and prerogative of princes, does, if I mistake not, in his treatise of
Christian subjection, acknowledge, that princes may forfeit their power, and
their title to the obedience of their subjects; and if there needed authority in
a case where reason is so plain, I could send my reader to Bracton, Fortescue,
and the author of the Mirrour, and others, writers that cannot be suspected to
be ignorant of our government, or enemies to it. But I thought Hooker alone
might be enough to satisfy those men, who relying on him for their
ecclesiastical polity, are by a strange fate carried to deny those principles
upon which he builds it. Whether they are herein made the tools of cunninger
workmen, to pull down their own fabric, they were best look. This I am sure,
their civil policy is so new, so dangerous, and so destructive to both rulers
and people, that as former ages never could bear the broaching of it; so it may
be hoped, those to come, redeemed from the impositions of these Egyptian
under-task-masters, will abhor the memory of such servile flatterers, who,
whilst it seemed to serve their turn, resolved all government into absolute
tyranny, and would have all men born to, what their mean souls fitted them for,
slavery.
Sec. 240. Here, it is like, the common question will be made, Who shall be
judge, whether the prince or legislative act contrary to their trust? This,
perhaps, ill-affected and factious men may spread amongst the people, when the
prince only makes use of his due prerogative. To this I reply, The people shall
be judge; for who shall be judge whether his trustee or deputy acts well, and
according to the trust reposed in him, but he who deputes him, and must, by
having deputed him, have still a power to discard him, when he fails in his
trust? If this be reasonable in particular cases of private men, why should it
be otherwise in that of the greatest moment, where the welfare of millions is
concerned, and also where the evil, if not prevented, is greater, and the
redress very difficult, dear, and dangerous?
Sec. 241. But farther, this question, (Who shall be judge?) cannot mean, that
there is no judge at all: for where there is no judicature on earth, to decide
controversies amongst men, God in heaven is judge. He alone, it is true, is
judge of the right. But every man is judge for himself, as in all other cases,
so in this, whether another hath put himself into a state of war with him, and
whether he should appeal to the Supreme Judge, as leptha did.
Sec. 242. If a controversy arise betwixt a prince and some of the people, in
a matter where the law is silent, or doubtful, and the thing be of great
consequence, I should think the proper umpire, in such a case, should be the
body of the people: for in cases where the prince hath a trust reposed in him,
and is dispensed from the common ordinary rules of the law; there, if any men
find themselves aggrieved, and think the prince acts contrary to, or beyond that
trust, who so proper to judge as the body of the people, (who, at first, lodged
that trust in him) how far they meant it should extend? But if the prince, or
whoever they be in the administration, decline that way of determination, the
appeal then lies no where but to heaven; force between either persons, who have
no known superior on earth, or which permits no appeal to a judge on earth,
being properly a state of war, wherein the appeal lies only to heaven; and in
that state the injured party must judge for himself, when he will think fit to
make use of that appeal, and put himself upon it.
Sec. 243. To conclude, The power that every individual gave the society, when
he entered into it, can never revert to the individuals again, as long as the
society lasts, but will always remain in the community; because without this
there can be no community, no common-wealth, which is contrary to the original
agreement: so also when the society hath placed the legislative in any assembly
of men, to continue in them and their successors, with direction and authority
for providing such successors, the legislative can never revert to the people
whilst that government lasts; because having provided a legislative with power
to continue for ever, they have given up their political power to the
legislative, and cannot resume it. But if they have set limits to the duration
of their legislative, and made this supreme power in any person, or assembly,
only temporary; or else, when by the miscarriages of those in authority, it is
forfeited; upon the forfeiture, or at the determination of the time set, it
reverts to the society, and the people have a right to act as supreme, and
continue the legislative in themselves; or erect a new form, or under the old
form place it in new hands, as they think good.
FINIS.
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