diff --git "a/data/train/2801.txt" "b/data/train/2801.txt" new file mode 100644--- /dev/null +++ "b/data/train/2801.txt" @@ -0,0 +1,10476 @@ + + + + + + + + + + +OCEANA + +By James Harrington + + + + +INTRODUCTION TO OCEANA + +JAMES HARRINGTON, eldest son of Sir Sapcotes Harrington of Exton, in +Rutlandshire, was born in the reign of James I, in January, 1661, five +years before the death of Shakespeare. He was two or three years younger +than John Milton. His great-grandfather was Sir James Harrington, who +married Lucy, daughter of Sir William Sidney, lived with her to their +golden wedding-day, and had eighteen children, through whom he counted +himself, before his death, patriarch in a family that in his own time +produced eight dukes, three marquises, seventy earls, twenty-seven +viscounts, and thirty-six barons, sixteen of them all being Knights of +the Garter. James Harrington's ideal of a commonwealth was the design, +therefore, of a man in many ways connected with the chief nobility of +England. + +Sir Sapcotes Harrington married twice, and had by each of his wives two +sons and two daughters. James Harrington was eldest son by the first +marriage, which was to Jane, daughter of Sir William Samuel of Upton, in +Northamptonshire. James Harrington's brother became a merchant; of his +half-brothers, one went to sea, the other became a captain in the army. + +As a child, James Harrington was studious, and so sedate that it was +said playfully of him he rather kept his parents and teachers in awe +than needed correction; but in after-life his quick wit made him full of +playfulness in conversation. In 1629 he entered Trinity College, Oxford, +as a gentleman commoner. There he had for tutor William Chillingworth, +a Fellow of the college, who after conversion to the Church of Rome had +reasoned his way back into Protestant opinions. Chillingworth became a +famous champion of Protestantism in the question between the Churches, +although many Protestants attacked him as unsound because he would not +accept the Athanasian Creed and had some other reservations. + +Harrington prepared himself for foreign travel by study of modern +languages, but before he went abroad, and while he was still under age, +his father died and he succeeded to his patrimony. The socage tenure of +his estate gave him free choice of his own guardian, and he chose his +mother's mother, Lady Samuel. + +He then began the season of travel which usually followed studies at the +university, a part of his training to which he had looked forward with +especial interest. He went first to Holland, which had been in Queen +Elizabeth's time the battle-ground of civil and religious liberty. +Before he left England he used to say he knew of monarchy, anarchy, +aristocracy, democracy, oligarchy, only as hard words to be looked for +in a dictionary. But his interest in problems of government began to be +awakened while he was among the Dutch. He served in the regiment of +Lord Craven, and afterward in that of Sir Robert Stone; was much at The +Hague; became familiar with the Court of the Prince of Orange, and with +King James's daughter, the Queen of Bohemia, who, with her husband the +Prince Elector, was then a fugitive to Holland. Lord Harrington, who had +once acted as governor to the princess, and won her affection, was James +Harrington's uncle, and she now cordially welcomed the young student of +life for his uncle's sake, and for his own pleasantness of outward wit +and inward gravity of thought. Harrington was taken with him by the +exiled and plundered Prince Elector, when he paid a visit to the Court +of Denmark, and he was intrusted afterward with the chief care of the +prince's affairs in England. + +From Holland, James Harrington passed through Flanders into France, and +thence to Italy. When he came hack to England, some courtiers who were +with him in Rome told Charles I that Harrington had been too squeamish +at the Pope's consecration of wax lights, in refusing to obtain a light, +as others did, by kissing his Holiness's toe. The King told Harrington +that he might have complied with a custom which only signified respect +to a temporal prince. But his Majesty was satisfied with the reply, that +having had the honor to kiss his Majesty's hand, he thought it beneath +him to kiss any other prince's foot. + +Of all places in Italy, Venice pleased Harrington best. He was deeply +interested in the Venetian form of government, and his observations +bore fruit in many suggestions for the administration of the +Commonwealth of Oceana. + +After his return to England, being of age, James Harrington cared +actively for the interests of his younger brothers and sisters. It was +he who made his brother William a merchant. William Harrington throve, +and for his ingenuity in matters of construction he was afterward made +one of the Fellows of the newly formed Royal Society. He took pains over +the training of his sisters, making 110 difference between sisters and +half-sisters, and treating his step-mother as a mother. He filled +his home with loving-kindness, and was most liberal in giving help +to friends. When he was told that he often threw away his bounty on +ungrateful persons, he playfully told his advisers they were mercenary +and that he saw they sold their gifts, since they expected so great a +return as gratitude. + +James Harrington's bent was for the study of life, and he made no active +suit for court employment. But he went to court, where Charles I liked +him, and admitted him as one of his privy chamber extraordinary, in +which character he went with the King in his first expedition against +the Scots. + +Because Charles I knew him and liked him, and because he had shown +himself no partisan of either side in the civil war, though he was +known to be inclined, in the way of abstract opinion, toward a form of +government that was not monarchy, the commissioners appointed in 1646 +to bring Charles from Newcastle named Harrington as one of the King's +attendants. The King was pleased, and Harrington was appointed a groom +of the bedchamber at Holmby. He followed faithfully the fortunes of +the fallen King, never saying even to the King himself a word in +contradiction of his own principles of liberty, and finding nothing +in his principles or in his temper that should prevent him from paying +honor to his sovereign, and seeking to secure for him a happy issue +out of his afflictions. Antony a Wood says that, "His Majesty loved +Harrington's company, and, finding him to be an ingenious man, chose +rather to converse with him than with others of his chamber: they had +often discourses concerning government; but when they happened to talk +of a commonwealth the King seemed not to endure it." + +Harrington used all the influence he had with those in whose power the +King was, to prevent the urging of avoid-able questions that would stand +in the way of such a treaty as they professed to seek during the King's +imprisonment at Carisbrooke. Harrington's friendly interventions on the +King's behalf before the Parliament commissioners at New-port caused +him, indeed, to be suspected; and when the King was removed from +Carisbrooke to Hurst Castle, Harrington was not allowed to remain in his +service. But afterward, when King Charles was being taken to Windsor, +Harrington got leave to bid him farewell at the door of his carriage. As +he was about to kneel, the King took him by the hand and pulled him in. +For a few days lie was left with the King, but an oath was required of +him that he would not assist in, or conceal knowledge of any attempt +to procure, the King's escape. He would not take the oath; and was this +time not only dismissed from the King's service but himself imprisoned, +until Ireton obtained his release. Before the King's death, Harrington +found his way to him again, and he was among those who were with Charles +I upon the scaffold. + +After the King's execution, Harrington was for some time secluded in +his study. Monarchy was gone; some form of commonwealth was to be +established; and he set to work upon the writing of "Oceana," calmly +to show what form of government, since men were free to choose, to him +seemed best. + +He based his work on an opinion he had formed that the troubles of +the time were not due wholly to the intemperance of faction, the +misgovernment of a king, or the stubbornness of a people, but to +change in the balance of property; and he laid the foundations of his +commonwealth in the opinion that empire follows the balance of property. +Then he showed the commonwealth of Oceana in action, with safeguards +against future shiftings of that balance, and with a popular government +in which all offices were filled by men chosen by ballot, who should +hold office for a limited term. Thus there was to be a constant flow of +new blood through the political system, and the representative was to be +kept true as a reflection of the public mind. + +The Commonwealth of Oceana was England. Harrington called Scotland +Marpesia; and Ireland, Panopea. London he called Emporium; the Thames, +Halcionia; Westminster, Hiera; Westminster Hall, Pantheon. The Palace of +St. James was Alma; Hampton Court, Convallium; Windsor, Mount Celia. By +Hemisna, Harrington meant the river Trent. Past sovereigns of England +he renamed for Oceana: William the Conqueror became Turbo; King John, +Adoxus; Richard II, Dicotome; Henry VII, Panurgus; Henry VIII, Coraunus; +Elizabeth, Parthenia; James I, Morpheus. He referred to Hobbes as +Leviathan; and to Francis Bacon, as Verulamius. Oliver Cromwell he +renamed Olphaus Megaletor. + +Harrington's book was seized while printing, and carried to Whitehall. +Harrington went to Cromwell's daughter, Lady Claypole, played with her +three-year-old child while waiting for her, and said to her, when she +came and found him with her little girl upon his lap, "Madam, you have +come in the nick of time, for I was just about to steal this pretty +lady." "Why should you?" "Why shouldn't I, unless you cause your father +to restore a child of mine that lie has stolen?" It was only, he said, +a kind of political romance; so far from any treason against her father +that he hoped she would let him know it was to be dedicated to him. So +the book was restored; and it was published in the time of Cromwell's +Commonwealth, in the year 1656. + +This treatise, which had its origin in the most direct pressure of the +problem of government upon the minds of men continues the course of +thought on which Machiavelli's "Prince" had formed one famous station, +and Hobbes's "Leviathan," another. + +"Oceana," when published, was widely read and actively attacked. One +opponent of its doctrines was Dr. Henry Ferne, afterward Bishop of +Chester. Another was Matthew Wren, eldest son to the Bishop of Ely. +He was one of those who met for scientific research at the house of Dr. +Wilkins, and had, said Harrington, "an excellent faculty of magnifying +a louse and diminishing a commonwealth." + +In 1659, Harrington published an abridgment of his Oceana as "The Art of +Lawgiving," in three books. Other pieces followed, in which he +defended or developed his opinions. He again urged them when Cromwell's +Commonwealth was in its death-throes. Then he fell back upon argument +at nightly meetings of a Rota Club which met in the New Palace Yard, +Westminster. Milton's old pupil, Cyriac Skinner, was one of its members; +and its elections were by ballot, with rotation in the tenure of all +offices. The club was put an end to at the Restoration, when Harrington +retired to his study and amused himself by putting his "System of +Politics" into the form of "Aphorisms." + +On December 28, 1661, James Harrington, then fifty years old, was +arrested and carried to the Tower as a traitor. His Aphorisms were on +his desk, and as they also were to be carried off, he asked only that +they might first be stitched together in their proper order. Why he was +arrested, he was not told. One of his sisters pleaded in vain to the +King. He was falsely accused of complicity in an imaginary plot, of +which nothing could be made by its investigators. No heed was paid +to the frank denials of a man of the sincerest nature, who never had +concealed his thoughts or actions. "Why," he was asked, at his first +examination by Lord Lauderdale, who was one of his kinsmen, "why did +he, as a private man, meddle with politics? What had a private man to +do with government?" His answer was: "My lord, there is not any public +person, nor any magistrate, that has written on politics, worth a +button. All they that have been excellent in this way have been private +men, as private men, my lord, as myself. There is Plato, there is +Aristotle, there is Livy, there is Machiavel. My lord, I can sum up +Aristotle's 'Politics' in a very few words: he says, there is the +Barbarous Monarchy--such a one where the people have 110 votes in making +the laws; he says, there is the Heroic Monarchy--such a one where the +people have their votes in making the laws; and then, he says, there is +Democracy, and affirms that a man cannot be said to have liberty but in +a democracy only." Lord Lauderdale here showing impatience, Harrington +added: "I say Aristotle says so. I have not said so much. And under what +prince was it? Was it not under Alexander, the greatest prince then in +the world? I beseech you, my lord, did Alexander hang up Aristotle? did +he molest him? Livy, for a commonwealth, is one of the fullest authors; +did not he write under Augustus Caesar? Did Caesar hang up Livy? did +he molest him? Machiavel, what a commonwealthsman was he! but he wrote +under the Medici when they were princes in Florence: did they hang up +Machiavel, or did they molest him? I have done no otherwise than as the +greatest politicians: the King will do no otherwise than as the greatest +princes." + +That was too much to hope, even in a dream, of the low-minded Charles +II. Harrington could not obtain even the show of justice in a public +trial. He was kept five months an untried prisoner in the Tower, only +sheltered from daily brutalities by bribe to the lieutenant. When his +habeas corpus had been moved for, it was at first flatly refused; and +when it had been granted, Harrington was smuggled away from the Tower +between one and two o'clock in the morning, and carried on board a ship +that took him to closer imprisonment on St. Nicholas Island, opposite +Plymouth. There his health suffered seriously, and his family obtained +his removal to imprisonment in Plymouth by giving a bond of L5,000 +as sureties against his escape. In Plymouth, Harrington suffered from +scurvy, and at last he became insane. + +When he had been made a complete wreck in body and in mind, his gracious +Majesty restored Harrington to his family. He never recovered health, +but still occupied himself much with his pen, writing, among other +things, a serious argument to prove that they were themselves mad who +thought him so. + +In those last days of his shattered life James Harrington married an old +friend of the family, a witty lady, daughter of Sir Marmaduke Dorrell, +of Buckinghamshire. Gout was added to his troubles; then he was +palsied; and he died at Westminster, at the age of sixty-six, on +September 11, 1677. He was buried in St. Margaret's Church, by the grave +of Sir Walter Raleigh, on the south side of the altar. + +H. M. + + + + + +OCEANA + + + + +PART I. THE PRELIMINARIES + +Showing the Principles of Government + +JANOTTI, the most excellent describer of the Commonwealth of Venice, +divides the whole series of government into two times or periods: the +one ending with the liberty of Rome, which was the course or empire, as +I may call it, of ancient prudence, first discovered to mankind by +God himself in the fabric of the commonwealth of Israel, and afterward +picked out of his footsteps in nature, and unanimously followed by the +Greeks and Romans; the other beginning with the arms of Caesar, which, +extinguishing liberty, were the transition of ancient into modern +prudence, introduced by those inundations of Huns, Goths, Vandals, +Lombards, Saxons, which, breaking the Roman Empire, deformed the whole +face of the world with those ill-features of government, which at this +time are become far worse in these western parts, except Venice, which, +escaping the hands of the barbarians by virtue of its impregnable +situation, has had its eye fixed upon ancient prudence, and is attained +to a perfection even beyond the copy. + +Relation being had to these two times, government (to define it de jure, +or according to ancient prudence) is an art whereby a civil society of +men is instituted and preserved upon the foundation of common right or +interest; or, to follow Aristotle and Livy, it is the empire of laws, +and not of men. + +And government (to define it de facto, or according to modern prudence) +is an art whereby some man, or some few men, subject a city or a nation, +and rule it according to his or their private interest; which, because +the laws in such cases are made according to the interest of a man, or +of some few families, may be said to be the empire of men, and not of +laws. + +The former kind is that which Machiavel (whose books are neglected) is +the only politician that has gone about to retrieve; and that Leviathan +(who would have his book imposed upon the universities) goes about to +destroy. For "it is," says he, "another error of Aristotle's politics +that in a well-ordered commonwealth, not men should govern, but the +laws. What man that has his natural senses, though he can neither write +nor read, does not find himself governed by them he fears, and believes +can kill or hurt him when he obeys not? or, who believes that the law +can hurt him, which is but words and paper, without the hands and swords +of men?" I confess that the magistrate upon his bench is that to the +law which a gunner upon his platform is to his cannon. Nevertheless, I +should not dare to argue with a man of any ingenuity after this manner. +A whole army, though they can neither write nor read, are not afraid +of a platform, which they know is but earth or stone; nor of a cannon, +which, without a hand to give fire to it, is but cold iron; therefore a +whole army is afraid of one man. But of this kind is the ratiocination +of Leviathan, as I shall show in divers places that come in my way, +throughout his whole politics, or worse; as where he says, "of Aristotle +and of Cicero, of the Greeks, and of the Romans, who lived under popular +States, that they derived those rights, not from the principles of +nature, but transcribed them into their books out of the practice of +their own commonwealths, as grammarians describe the rules of language +out of poets." Which is as if a man should tell famous Harvey that he +transcribed his circulation of the blood, not out of the principles of +nature, but out of the anatomy of this or that body. + +To go on therefore with his preliminary discourse, I shall divide it, +according to the two definitions of government relating to Janotti's two +times, in two parts: the first, treating of the principles of government +in general, and according to the ancients; the second, treating of +the late governments of Oceana in particular, and in that of modern +prudence. + +Government, according to the ancients, and their learned disciple +Machiavel, the only politician of later ages, is of three kinds: the +government of one man, or of the better sort, or of the whole people; +which, by their more learned names, are called monarchy, aristocracy, +and democracy. These they hold, through their proneness to degenerate, +to be all evil. For whereas they that govern should govern according +to reason, if they govern according to passion they do that which they +should not do. Wherefore, as reason and passion are two things, so +government by reason is one thing, and the corruption of government by +passion is another thing, but not always another government: as a body +that is alive is one thing, and a body that is dead is another thing, +but not always another creature, though the corruption of one comes at +length to be the generation of another. The corruption then of monarchy +is called tyranny; that of aristocracy, oligarchy and that of democracy, +anarchy. But legislators, having found these three governments at the +best to be naught, have invented another, consisting of a mixture of +them all, which only is good. This is the doctrine of the ancients. + +But Leviathan is positive that they are all deceived, and that there is +no other government in nature than one of the three; as also that the +flesh of them cannot stink, the names of their corruptions being but the +names of men's fancies, which will be understood when we are shown which +of them was Senatus Populusque Romanus. + +To go my own way, and yet to follow the ancients, the principles +of government are twofold: internal, or the goods of the mind; and +external, or the goods of fortune. The goods of the mind are natural or +acquired virtues, as wisdom, prudence, and courage, etc. The goods of +fortune are riches. There be goods also of the body, as health, beauty, +strength; but these are not to be brought into account upon this score, +because if a man or an army acquires victory or empire, it is more from +their discipline, arms, and courage than from their natural health, +beauty, or strength, in regard that a people conquered may have more of +natural strength, beauty, and health, and yet find little remedy. The +principles of government then are in the goods of the mind, or in the +goods of fortune. To the goods of the mind answers authority; to the +goods of fortune, power or empire. Wherefore Leviathan, though he be +right where he says that "riches are power," is mistaken where he +says that "prudence, or the reputation of prudence, is power;" for the +learning or prudence of a man is no more power than the learning or +prudence of a book or author, which is properly authority. A learned +writer may have authority though he has no power; and a foolish +magistrate may have power, though he has otherwise no esteem or +authority. The difference of these two is observed by Livy in Evander, +of whom he says that he governed rather by the authority of others than +by his own power. + +To begin with riches, in regard that men are hung upon these, not of +choice as upon the other, but of necessity and by the teeth; forasmuch +as he who wants bread is his servant that will feed him, if a man thus +feeds a whole people, they are under his empire. + +Empire is of two kinds, domestic and national, or foreign and +provincial. + +Domestic empire is founded upon dominion. Dominion is property, real or +personal; that is to say, in lands, or in money and goods. + +Lands, or the parts and parcels of a territory, are held by the +proprietor or proprietors, lord or lords of it, in some proportion; +and such (except it be in a city that has little or no land, and whose +revenue is in trade) as is the proportion or balance of dominion or +property in land, such is the nature of the empire. + +If one man be sole landlord of a territory, or overbalance the people, +for example, three parts in four, he is grand seignior; for so the Turk +is called from his property, and his empire is absolute monarchy. + +If the few or a nobility, or a nobility with the clergy, be landlords, +or overbalance the people to the like proportion, it makes the Gothic +balance (to be shown at large in the second part of this discourse), +and the empire is mixed monarchy, as that of Spain, Poland, and late of +Oceana. + +And if the whole people be landlords, or hold the lands so divided among +them that no one man, or number of men, within the compass of the few or +aristocracy, overbalance them, the empire (without the interposition of +force) is a commonwealth. + +If force be interposed in any of these three cases, it must either frame +the government to the foundation, or the foundation to the government; +or holding the government not according to the balance, it is not +natural, but violent; and therefore if it be at the devotion of a +prince, it is tyranny; if at the devotion of the few, oligarchy; or +if in the power of the people, anarchy: Each of which confusions, the +balance standing otherwise, is but of short continuance, because against +the nature of the balance, which, not destroyed, destroys that which +opposes it. + +But there be certain other confusions, which, being rooted in the +balance, are of longer continuance, and of worse consequence; as, first, +where a nobility holds half the property, or about that proportion, and +the people the other half; in which case, without altering the balance +there is no remedy but the one must eat out the other, as the people did +the nobility in Athens, and the nobility the people in Rome. Secondly, +when a prince holds about half the dominion, and the people the other +half (which was the case of the Roman emperors, planted partly upon +their military colonies and partly upon the Senate and the people), the +government becomes a very shambles, both of the princes and the people. +Somewhat of this nature are certain governments at this day, which are +said to subsist by confusion. In this case, to fix the balance is to +entail misery; but in the three former, not to fix it is to lose the +government. Wherefore it being unlawful in Turkey that any should +possess land but the Grand Seignior, the balance is fixed by the law, +and that empire firm. Nor, though the kings often sell was the throne +of Oceana known to shake, until the statute of alienations broke the +pillars, by giving way to the nobility to sell their estates. While +Lacedaemon held to the division of land made by Lycurgus, it was +immovable; but, breaking that, could stand no longer. This kind of law +fixing the balance in lands is called agrarian, and was first introduced +by God himself, who divided the land of Canaan to his people by lots, +and is of such virtue that wherever it has held, that government has +not altered, except by consent; as in that unparalleled example of the +people of Israel, when being in liberty they would needs choose a +king. But without an agrarian law, government, whether monarchical, +aristocratical, or popular, has no long lease. + +As for dominion, personal or in money, it may now and then stir up a +Melius or a Manlius, which, if the Commonwealth be not provided with +some kind of dictatorian power, may be dangerous, though it has been +seldom or never successful; because to property producing empire, it +is required that it should have some certain root or foothold, which, +except in land, it cannot have, being otherwise as it were upon the +wing. + +Nevertheless, in such cities as subsist mostly by trade, and have little +or no land, as Holland and Genoa, the balance of treasure may be equal +to that of land in the cases mentioned. + +But Leviathan, though he seems to skew at antiquity, following his +furious master Carneades, has caught hold of the public sword, to which +he reduces all manner and matter of government; as, where he affirms +this opinion (that any monarch receives his power by covenant; that is +to say, upon conditions) "to proceed from the not understanding this +easy truth, that covenants being but words and breath, have no power to +oblige, contain, constrain, or protect any man, but what they have from +the public sword." But as he said of the law, that without this sword +it is but paper, so he might have thought of this sword, that without a +hand it is but cold iron. The hand which holds this sword is the militia +of a nation; and the militia of a nation is either an army in the field, +or ready for the field upon occasion. But an army is a beast that has a +great belly, and must be fed: wherefore this will come to what pastures +you have, and what pastures you have will come to the balance of +property, without which the public sword is but a name or mere spitfrog. +Wherefore, to set that which Leviathan says of arms and of contracts a +little straighter, he that can graze this beast with the great belly, +as the Turk does his Timariots, may well deride him that imagines he +received his power by covenant, or is obliged to any such toy. It being +in this case only that covenants are but words and breath. But if the +property of the nobility, stocked with their tenants and retainers, be +the pasture of that beast, the ox knows his master's crib; and it is +impossible for a king in such a constitution to reign otherwise than by +covenant; or if he break it, it is words that come to blows. + +"But," says he, "when an assembly of men is made sovereign, then no man +imagines any such covenant to have part in the institution." But what +was that by Publicola of appeal to the people, or that whereby the +people had their tribunes? "Fie," says he, "nobody is so dull as to say +that the people of Rome made a covenant with the Romans, to hold the +sovereignty on such or such conditions, which, not performed, the Romans +might depose the Roman people." In which there be several remarkable +things; for he holds the Commonwealth of Rome to have consisted of one +assembly, whereas it consisted of the Senate and the people; that they +were not upon covenant, whereas every law enacted by them was a covenant +between them; that the one assembly was made sovereign, whereas the +people, who only were sovereign, were such from the beginning, as +appears by the ancient style of their covenants or laws--"The Senate has +resolved, the people have decreed," that a council being made sovereign, +cannot be made such upon conditions, whereas the Decemvirs being a +council that was made sovereign, was made such upon conditions; that all +conditions or covenants making a sovereign being made, are void; whence +it must follow that, the Decemviri being made, were ever after the +lawful government of Rome, and that it was unlawful for the Commonwealth +of Rome to depose the Decemvirs; as also that Cicero, if he wrote +otherwise out of his commonwealth, did not write out of nature. But to +come to others that see more of this balance. + +You have Aristotle full of it in divers places, especially where he +says, that "immoderate wealth, as where one man or the few have greater +possessions than the equality or the frame of the commonwealth will +bear, is an occasion of sedition, which ends for the greater part in +monarchy and that for this cause the ostracism has been received in +divers places, as in Argos and Athens. But that it were better to +prevent the growth in the beginning, than, when it has got head, to seek +the remedy of such an evil." + +Machiavel has missed it very narrowly and more dangerously for not fully +perceiving that if a commonwealth be galled by the gentry it is by their +overbalance, he speaks of the gentry as hostile to popular governments, +and of popular governments as hostile to the gentry; and makes us +believe that the people in such are so enraged against them, that where +they meet a gentleman they kill him: which can never be proved by any +one example, unless in civil war, seeing that even in Switzerland the +gentry are not only safe, but in honor. But the balance, as I have laid +it down, though unseen by Machiavel, is that which interprets him, and +that which he confirms by his judgment in many others as well as in +this place, where he concludes, "That he who will go about to make a +commonwealth where there be many gentlemen, unless he first destroys +them, undertakes an impossibility. And that he who goes about to +introduce monarchy where the condition of the people is equal, shall +never bring it to pass, unless he cull out such of them as are the most +turbulent and ambitious, and make them gentlemen or noblemen, not in +name but in effect; that is, by enriching them with lands, castles, and +treasures, that may gain them power among the rest, and bring in the +rest to dependence upon themselves, to the end that, they maintaining +their ambition by the prince, the prince may maintain his power by +them." + +Wherefore, as in this place I agree with Machiavel, that a nobility +or gentry, overbalancing a popular government, is the utter bane and +destruction of it; so I shall show in another, that a nobility or +gentry, in a popular government, not overbalancing it, is the very life +and soul of it. + +By what has been said, it should seem that we may lay aside further +disputes of the public sword, or of the right of the militia; which, be +the government what it will, or let it change how it can, is inseparable +from the overbalance in dominion: nor, if otherwise stated by the law +or custom (as in the Commonwealth of Rome, where the people having the +sword, the nobility came to have the overbalance), avails it to +any other end than destruction. For as a building swaying from the +foundation must fall, so it fares with the law swaying from reason, and +the militia from the balance of dominion. And thus much for the balance +of national or domestic empire, which is in dominion. + +The balance of foreign or provincial empire is of a contrary nature. A +man may as well say that it is unlawful for him who has made a fair and +honest purchase to have tenants, as for a government that has made a +just progress and enlargement of itself to have provinces. But how a +province may be justly acquired appertains to another place. In this +I am to show no more than how or upon what kind of balance it is to be +held; in order whereto I shall first show upon what kind of balance +it is not to be held. It has been said, that national or independent +empire, of what kind soever, is to be exercised by them that have +the proper balance of dominion in the nation; wherefore provincial or +dependent empire is not to be exercised by them that have the balance of +dominion in the province, because that would bring the government +from provincial and dependent, to national and independent. Absolute +monarchy, as that of the Turks, neither plants its people at home nor +abroad, otherwise than as tenants for life or at will; wherefore its +national and provincial government is all one. But in governments that +admit the citizen or subject to dominion in lands, the richest are they +that share most of the power at home; whereas the richest among +the provincials, though native subjects, or citizens that have been +transplanted, are least admitted to the government abroad; for men, like +flowers or roots being transplanted, take after the soil wherein they +grow. Wherefore the Commonwealth of Rome, by planting colonies of its +citizens within the bounds of Italy, took the best way of propagating +itself, and naturalizing the country; whereas if it had planted such +colonies without the bounds of Italy it would have alienated the +citizens, and given a root to liberty abroad, that might have sprung up +foreign or savage, and hostile to her: wherefore it never made any such +dispersion of itself and its strength, till it was under the yoke of +the Emperors, who, disburdening themselves of the people, as having less +apprehension of what they could do abroad than at home, took a contrary +course. + +The Mamelukes (which, till any man show me the contrary, I shall presume +to have been a commonwealth consisting of an army, whereof the common +soldier was the people, the commissioned officer the Senate, and the +general the prince) were foreigners, and by nation Circassians, that +governed Egypt; wherefore these never durst plant themselves upon +dominion, which growing naturally up into the national interest, must +have dissolved the foreign yoke in that province. + +The like in some sort may be said of Venice, the government whereof is +usually mistaken; for Venice, though it does not take in the people, +never excluded them. This commonwealth, the orders whereof are the +most democratical or popular of all others, in regard of the exquisite +rotation of the Senate, at the first institution took in the whole +people; they that now live under the government without participation of +it, are such as have since either voluntarily chosen so to do, or +were subdued by arms. Wherefore the subject of Venice is governed by +provinces, and the balance of dominion not standing, as has been said, +with provincial government; as the Mamelukes durst not cast their +government upon this balance in their provinces, lest the national +interest should have rooted out the foreign, so neither dare the +Venetians take in their subjects upon this balance, lest the foreign +interest should root out the national (which is that of the 3,000 +now governing), and by diffusing the commonwealth throughout her +territories, lose the advantage of her situation, by which in great +part it subsists. And such also is the government of the Spaniard in the +Indies, to which he deputes natives of his own country, not admitting +the creoles to the government of those provinces, though descended from +Spaniards. + +But if a prince or a commonwealth may hold a territory that is foreign +in this, it may be asked why he may not hold one that is native in +the like manner? To which I answer, because he can hold a foreign by a +native territory, but not a native by a foreign; and as hitherto I +have shown what is not the provincial balance, so by this answer it may +appear what it is, namely, the overbalance of a native territory to +a foreign; for as one country balances itself by the distribution +of property according to the proportion of the same, so one country +overbalances another by advantage of divers kinds. For example, the +Commonwealth of Rome overbalanced her provinces by the vigor of a +more excellent government opposed to a crazier. Or by a more exquisite +militia opposed to one inferior in courage or discipline. The like was +that of the Mamelukes, being a hardy people, to the Egyptians, that were +a soft one. And the balance of situation is in this kind of wonderful +effect; seeing the King of Denmark, being none of the most potent +princes, is able at the Sound to take toll of the greatest; and as +this King, by the advantage of the land, can make the sea tributary, so +Venice, by the advantage of the sea, in whose arms she is impregnable, +can make the land to feed her gulf. For the colonies in the Indies, +they are yet babes that cannot live without sucking the breasts of their +mother cities, but such as I mistake if when they come of age they do +not wean themselves; which causes me to wonder at princes that delight +to be exhausted in that way. And so much for the principles of power, +whether national or provincial, domestic or foreign; being such as are +external, and founded in the goods of fortune. + +I come to the principles of authority, which are internal, and founded +upon the goods of the mind. These the legislator that can unite in his +government with those of fortune, comes nearest to the work of God, +whose government consists of heaven and earth; which was said by Plato, +though in different words, as, when princes should be philosophers, or +philosophers princes, the world would be happy. And says Solomon: "There +is an evil which I have seen under the sun, which proceeds from the +ruler (enimvero neque nobilem, neque ingenuum, nec libertinum quidem +armis praeponere, regia utilitas est). Folly is set in great dignity, +and the rich (either in virtue and wisdom, in the goods of the mind, +or those of fortune upon that balance which gives them a sense of the +national interest) sit in low places. I have seen servants upon horses, +and princes walking as servants upon the earth." Sad complaints, that +the principles of power and of authority, the goods of the mind and +of fortune, do not meet and twine in the wreath or crown of empire! +Wherefore, if we have anything of piety or of prudence, let us raise +ourselves out of the mire of private interest to the contemplation of +virtue, and put a hand to the removal of "this evil from under the sun;" +this evil against which no government that is not secured can be good; +this evil from which the government that is secure must be perfect. +Solomon tells us that the cause of it is from the ruler, from those +principles of power, which, balanced upon earthly trash, exclude the +heavenly treasures of virtue, and that influence of it upon government +which is authority. We have wandered the earth to find out the balance +of power; but to find out that of authority we must ascend, as I said, +nearer heaven, or to the image of God, which is the soul of man. + +The soul of man (whose life or motion is perpetual contemplation or +thought) is the mistress of two potent rivals, the one reason, the other +passion, that are in continual suit; and, according as she gives up her +will to these or either of them, is the felicity or misery which man +partakes in this mortal life. + +For, as whatever was passion in the contemplation of a man, being +brought forth by his will into action, is vice and the bondage of sin; +so whatever was reason in the contemplation of a man, being brought +forth by his will into action, is virtue and the freedom of soul. + +Again, as those actions of a man that were sin acquire to himself +repentance or shame, and affect others with scorn or pity, so those +actions of a man that are virtue acquire to himself honor, and upon +others authority. + +Now government is no other than the soul of a nation or city: wherefore +that which was reason in the debate of a commonwealth being brought +forth by the result, must be virtue; and forasmuch as the soul of a +city or nation is the sovereign power, her virtue must be law. But the +government whose law is virtue, and whose virtue is law, is the same +whose empire is authority, and whose authority is empire. + +Again, if the liberty of a man consists in the empire of his reason, the +absence whereof would betray him to the bondage of his passions, then +the liberty of a commonwealth consists in the empire of her laws, the +absence whereof would betray her to the lust of tyrants. And these I +conceive to be the principles upon which Aristotle and Livy (injuriously +accused by Leviathan for not writing out of nature) have grounded their +assertion, "that a commonwealth is an empire of laws and not of men." +But they must not carry it so. "For," says he, "the liberty whereof +there is so frequent and honorable mention in the histories and +philosophy of the ancient Greeks and Romans, and the writings and +discourses of those that from them have received all their learning in +the politics, is not the liberty of particular men, but the liberty +of the commonwealth." He might as well have said that the estates of +particular men in a commonwealth are not the riches of particular men, +but the riches of the commonwealth; for equality of estates causes +equality of power, and equality of power is the liberty, not only of the +commonwealth, but of every man. + +But sure a man would never be thus irreverent with the greatest authors, +and positive against all antiquity without some certain demonstration of +truth--and what is it? Why, "there is written on the turrets of the city +of Lucca in great characters at this day the word LIBERTAS; yet no man +can thence infer that a particular man has more liberty or immunity from +the service of the commonwealth there than in Constantinople. Whether +a commonwealth be monarchical or popular the freedom is the same." The +mountain has brought forth, and we have a little equivocation! For to +say that a Lucchese has no more liberty or immunity from the laws of +Lucca than a Turk has from those of Constantinople; and to say that a +Lucchese has no more liberty or immunity by the laws of Lucca, than a +Turk has by those of Constantinople, are pretty different speeches. The +first may be said of all governments alike; the second scarce of any +two; much less of these, seeing it is known that, whereas the greatest +Bashaw is a tenant, as well of his head as of his estate, at the will +of his lord, the meanest Lucchese that has land is a freeholder of +both, and not to be controlled but by the law, and that framed by every +private man to no other end (or they may thank themselves) than to +protect the liberty of every private man, which by that means comes to +be the liberty of the commonwealth. + +But seeing they that make the laws in commonwealths are but men, the +main question seems to be, how a commonwealth comes to be an empire of +laws, and not of men? or how the debate or result of a commonwealth is +so sure to be according to reason; seeing they who debate, and they who +resolve, be but men? "And as often as reason is against a man, so often +will a man be against reason." + +This is thought to be a shrewd saying, but will do no harm; for be it so +that reason is nothing but interest, there be divers interests, and so +divers reasons. + +As first, there is private reason, which is the interest of a private +man. + +Secondly, there is reason of state, which is the interest (or error, +as was said by Solomon) of the ruler or rulers, that is to say, of the +prince, of the nobility, or of the people. + +Thirdly there is that reason, which is the interest of mankind, or of +the whole. "Now if we see even in those natural agents that want sense, +that as in themselves they have a law which directs them in the means +whereby they tend to their own perfection, so likewise that another law +there is, which touches them as they are sociable parts united into one +body, a law which binds them each to serve to others' good, and all to +prefer the good of the whole, before whatsoever their own particular; as +when stones, or heavy things, forsake their ordinary wont or centre, +and fly upward, as if they heard themselves commanded to let go the good +they privately wish, and to relieve the present distress of nature in +common." There is a common right, law of nature, or interest of the +whole, which is more excellent, and so acknowledged to be by the agents +themselves, than the right or interest of the parts only. "Wherefore, +though it may be truly said that the creatures are naturally carried +forth to their proper utility or profit, that ought not to be taken +in too general a sense; seeing divers of them abstain from their own +profit, either in regard of those of the same kind, or at least of their +young." + +Mankind then must either be less just than the creature, or acknowledge +also his common interest to be common right. And if reason be nothing +else but interest, and the interest of mankind be the right interest, +then the reason of mankind must be right reason. Now compute well; for +if the interest of popular government come the nearest to the interest +of mankind, then the reason of popular government must come the nearest +to right reason. + +But it may be said that the difficulty remains yet; for be the interest +of popular government right reason, a man does not look upon reason as +it is right or wrong in itself, but as it makes for him or against him. +Wherefore, unless you can show such orders of a government as, like +those of God in nature, shall be able to constrain this or that creature +to shake off that inclination which is more peculiar to it, and take up +that which regards the common good or interest, all this is to no more +end than to persuade every man in a popular government not to carve +himself of that which he desires most, but to be mannerly at the +public table, and give the best from himself to decency and the common +interest. But that such orders may be established as may, nay must, give +the upper hand in all cases to common right or interest, notwithstanding +the nearness of that which sticks to every man in private, and this in +a way of equal certainty and facility, is known even to girls, being no +other than those that are of common practice with them in divers cases. +For example, two of them have a cake yet undivided, which was given +between them: that each of them therefore might have that which is due, +"Divide," says one to the other, "and I will choose; or let me divide, +and you shall choose." If this be but once agreed upon, it is enough; +for the divident, dividing unequally, loses, in regard that the other +takes the better half. Wherefore she divides equally, and so both have +right. "Oh, the depth of the wisdom of God." And yet "by the mouths of +babes and sucklings has He set forth His strength;" that which great +philosophers are disputing upon in vain is brought to light by two +harmless girls, even the whole mystery of a commonwealth, which lies +only in dividing and choosing. Nor has God (if his works in nature be +understood) left so much to mankind to dispute upon as who shall divide +and who choose, but distributed them forever into two orders, whereof +the one has the natural right of dividing, and the other of choosing. + +For example: A commonwealth is but a civil society of men: let us take +any number of men (as twenty) and immediately make a commonwealth. +Twenty men (if they be not all idiots, perhaps if they be) can never +come so together but there will be such a difference in them that about +a third will be wiser, or at least less foolish than all the rest; these +upon acquaintance, though it be but small, will be discovered, and, as +stags that have the largest heads, lead the herd; for while the six, +discoursing and arguing one with another, show the eminence of their +parts, the fourteen discover things that they never thought on; or are +cleared in divers truths which had formerly perplexed them. Wherefore, +in matter of common concernment, difficulty, or danger, they hang upon +their lips, as children upon their fathers; and the influence thus +acquired by the six, the eminence of whose parts are found to be a stay +and comfort to the fourteen, is the authority of the fathers. Wherefore +this can be no other than a natural aristocracy diffused by God +throughout the whole body of mankind to this end and purpose; and +therefore such as the people have not only a natural but a positive +obligation to make use of as their guides; as where the people of Israel +are commanded to "take wise men, and understanding, and known among +their tribes, to be made rulers over them." The six then approved of, +as in the present case, are the senate, not by hereditary right, or in +regard of the greatness of their estates only, which would tend to +such power as might force or draw the people, but by election for their +excellent parts, which tends to the advancement of the influence of +their virtue or authority that leads the people. Wherefore the office of +the senate is not to be commanders, but counsellors, of the people; and +that which is proper to counsellors is first to debate, and afterward +to give advice in the business whereupon they have debated, whence the +decrees of the senate are never laws, nor so called; and these being +maturely framed, it is their duty to propose in the case to the people. +Wherefore the senate is no more than the debate of the commonwealth. But +to debate is to discern or put a difference between things that, being +alike, are not the same; or it is separating and weighing this reason +against that, and that reason against this, which is dividing. + +The senate then having divided, who shall choose? Ask the girls: for if +she that divided must have chosen also, it had been little worse for +the other in case she had not divided at all, but kept the whole cake to +herself, in regard that being to choose, too, she divided accordingly. +Wherefore if the senate have any further power than to divide, the +commonwealth can never be equal. But in a commonwealth consisting of +a single council, there is no other to choose than that which divided; +whence it is, that such a council fails not to scramble--that is, to +be factious, there being no other dividing of the cake in that case but +among themselves. + +Nor is there any remedy but to have another council to choose. The +wisdom of the few may be the light of mankind; but the interest of +the few is not the profit of mankind nor of a commonwealth. Wherefore, +seeing we have granted interest to be reason, they must not choose lest +it put out their light. But as the council dividing consists of the +wisdom of the commonwealth, so the assembly or council choosing should +consist of the interest of the commonwealth: as the wisdom of the +commonwealth is in the aristocracy, so the interest of the commonwealth +is in the whole body of the people. And whereas this, in case the +commonwealth consist of a whole nation, is too unwieldy a body to be +assembled, this council is to consist of such a representative as may be +equal, and so constituted, as can never contract any other interest +than that of the whole people; the manner whereof, being such as is best +shown by exemplification, I remit to the model. But in the present case, +the six dividing, and the fourteen choosing, must of necessity take in +the whole interest of the twenty. + +Dividing and choosing, in the language of a commonwealth, is debating +and resolving; and whatsoever, upon debate of the senate, is proposed +to the people, and resolved by them, is enacted by the authority of the +fathers, and by the power of the people, which concurring, make a law. + +But the law being made, says Leviathan, "is but words and paper without +the hands and swords of men;" wherefore as these two orders of a +commonwealth, namely, the senate and the people, are legislative, so of +necessity there must be a third to be executive of the laws made, and +this is the magistracy. In which order, with the rest being wrought up +by art, the commonwealth consists of "the senate proposing, the people +resolving, and the magistracy executing," whereby partaking of the +aristocracy as in the senate, of the democracy as in the people, and of +monarchy as in the magistracy, it is complete. Now there being no other +commonwealth but this in art or nature, it is no wonder if Machiavel +has shown us that the ancients held this only to be good; but it seems +strange to me that they should hold that there could be any other, for +if there be such a thing as pure monarchy, yet that there should be such +a one as pure aristocracy or pure democracy is not in my understanding. +But the magistracy, both in number and function, is different in +different commonwealths. Nevertheless there is one condition of it that +must be the same in every one, or it dissolves the commonwealth where it +is wanting. And this is no less than that, as the hand of the magistrate +is the executive power of the law, so the head of the magistrate is +answerable to the people, that his execution be according to the law; by +which Leviathan may see that the hand or sword that executes the law is +in it and not above it. + +Now whether I have rightly transcribed these principles of a +commonwealth out of nature, I shall appeal to God and to the world--to +God in the fabric of the Commonwealth of Israel, and to the world in +the universal series of ancient prudence. But in regard the same +commonwealths will be opened at large in the Council of legislators, I +shall touch them for the present but slightly, beginning with that of +Israel. + +The Commonwealth of Israel consisted of the Senate, the people, and the +magistracy. + +The people by their first division, which was genealogical, were +contained under their thirteen tribes, houses, or families; whereof the +first-born in each was prince of his tribe, and had the leading of it: +the tribe of Levi only, being set apart to serve at the altar, had no +other prince but the high-priest. In their second division they were +divided locally by their agrarian, or the distribution of the land +of Canaan to them by lot, the tithe of all remaining to Levi; whence, +according to their local division, the tribes are reckoned but twelve. + +The assemblies of the people thus divided were methodically gathered by +trumpets to the congregation: which was, it should seem, of two sorts. +For if it were called with one trumpet only, the princes of the tribes +and the elders only assembled; but if it were called with two, the whole +people gathered themselves to the congregation, for so it is rendered +by the English; but in the Greek it is called Ecclesia, or the Church of +God, and by the Talmudist the great "Synagogue." The word Ecclesia +was also anciently and properly used for the civil congregations, or +assemblies of the people in Athens, Lacedaemon, and Ephesus, where it +is so called in Scripture, though it be otherwise rendered by the +translators, not much as I conceive to their commendation, seeing by +that means they have lost us a good lesson, the apostles borrowing that +name for their spiritual congregations, to the end that we might +see they intended the government of the church to be democratical or +popular, as is also plain in the rest of their constitutions. + +The church or congregation of the people of Israel assembled in a +military manner, and had the result of the commonwealth, or the power of +confirming all their laws, though proposed even by God himself; as +where they make him king, and where they reject or depose him as civil +magistrate, and elect Saul. It is manifest that he gives no such example +to a legislator in a popular government as to deny or evade the power of +the people, which were a contradiction; but though he deservedly blames +the ingratitude of the people in that action, he commands Samuel, being +next under himself supreme magistrate, "to hearken to their voice" +(for where the suffrage of the people goes for nothing, it is no +commonwealth), and comforts him, saying, "They have not rejected thee, +but they have rejected me that I should not reign over them." But to +reject him that he should not reign over them, was as civil magistrate +to depose him. The power therefore which the people had to depose even +God himself as he was civil magistrate, leaves little doubt but that +they had power to have rejected any of those laws confirmed by them +throughout the Scripture, which, to omit the several parcels, are +generally contained under two heads: those that were made by covenant +with the people in the land of Moab, and those which were made by +covenant with the people in Horeb; which two, I think, amount to the +whole body of the Israelitish laws. + +But if all and every one of the laws of Israel being proposed by God, +were no otherwise enacted than by covenant with the people, then that +only which was resolved by the people of Israel was their law; and so +the result of that commonwealth was in the people. Nor had the people +the result only in matter of law, but the power in some cases of +judicature; as also the right of levying war, cognizance in matter +of religion, and the election of their magistrates, as the judge or +dictator, the king, the prince: which functions were exercised by the +Synagoga magna, or Congregation of Israel, not always in one manner, for +sometimes they were performed by the suffrage of the people, viva voce, +sometimes by the lot only, and at others by the ballot, or by a mixture +of the lot with the suffrage, as in the case of Eldad and Medad, which I +shall open with the Senate. + +The Senate of Israel, called in the old Testament the Seventy Elders, +and in the New the Sanhedrim (which word is usually translated "the +Council"), was appointed by God, and consisted of seventy elders besides +Moses, which were at first elected by the people, but in what manner is +rather intimated than shown. Nevertheless, because I cannot otherwise +understand the passage concerning Eldad and Medad, of whom it is said +"that they were of them that were written, but went not up to the +tabernacle," then with the Talmudists I conceive that Eldad and Medad +had the suffrage of the tribes, and so were written as competitors for +magistracy; but coming afterward to the lot, failed of it, and therefore +went not up to the tabernacle, or place of confirmation by God, or to +the session-house of the Senate, with the Seventy upon whom the lot fell +to be senators; for the session-house of the Sanhedrim was first in the +court of the tabernacle, and afterward in that of the Temple, where it +came to be called the stone chamber or pavement. If this were the ballot +of Israel, that of Venice is the same transposed; for in Venice the +competitor is chosen as it were by the lot, in regard that the electors +are so made, and the magistrate is chosen by the "suffrage of the great +Council or assembly of the people." But the Sanhedrim of Israel being +thus constituted, Moses, for his time, and after him his successor sat +in the midst of it as prince or archon, and at his left hand the orator +or father of the Senate; the rest, or the bench, coming round with +either horn like a crescent, had a scribe attending upon the tip of it. + +This Senate, in regard the legislator of Israel was infallible, and the +laws given by God such as were not fit to be altered by men, is much +different in the exercise of their power from all other senates, except +that of the Areopagus in Athens, which also was little more than a +supreme judicatory, for it will hardly, as I conceive, be found that +the Sanhedrim proposed to the people till the return of the children of +Israel out of captivity under Esdras, at which time there was a new law +made--namely, for a kind of excommunication, or rather banishment, which +had never been before in Israel. Nevertheless it is not to be thought +that the Sanhedrim had not always that right, which from the time of +Esdras is more frequently exercised, of proposing to the people, but +that they forebore it in regard of the fulness and infallibility of the +law already made, whereby it was needless. Wherefore the function +of this Council, which is very rare in a senate, was executive, and +consisted in the administration of the law made; and whereas the Council +itself is often understood in Scripture by the priest and the Levite, +there is no more in that save only that the priests and the Levites, +who otherwise had no power at all, being in the younger years of this +commonwealth, those that were best studied in the laws were the most +frequently elected into the Sanhedrim. For the courts, consisting of +three-and-twenty elders sitting in the gates of every city, and the +triumvirates of judges constituted almost in every village, which were +parts of the executive magistracy subordinate to the Sanhedrim, I shall +take them at better leisure, and in the larger discourse; but these +being that part of this commonwealth which was instituted by Moses upon +the advice of Jethro the priest of Midian (as I conceive a heathen), are +to me a sufficient warrant even from God himself, who confirmed them, +to make further use of human prudence, wherever I find it bearing a +testimony to itself, whether in heathen commonwealths or others; and the +rather, because so it is, that we who have the holy Scriptures, and in +them the original of a commonwealth, made by the same hand that made +the world, are either altogether blind or negligent of it; while the +heathens have all written theirs, as if they had had no other copy; as, +to be more brief in the present account of that which you shall have +more at large hereafter: + +Athens consisted of the Senate of the Bean proposing, of the Church or +Assembly of the people resolving, and too often debating, which was the +ruin of it; as also of the Senate of the Areopagus, the nine archons, +with divers other magistrates, executing. + +Lacedaemon consisted of the Senate proposing, of the Church or +congregation of the people resolving only, and never debating, which was +the long life of it; and of the two kings, the court of the ephors, with +divers other magistrates, executing. + +Carthage consisted of the Senate proposing and sometimes resolving too, +of the people resolving and sometimes debating too, for which fault she +was reprehended by Aristotle; and she had her suffetes, and her hundred +men, with other magistrates, executing. + +Rome consisted of the Senate proposing, the concio or people resolving, +and too often debating, which caused her storms; as also of the consuls, +censors, aediles, tribunes, praetors, quaestors, and other magistrates, +executing. + +Venice consists of the Senate, or pregati, proposing, and sometimes +resolving too, of the great Council or Assembly of the people, in whom +the result is constitutively; as also of the doge, the signory, the +censors, the dieci, the quazancies, and other magistrates, executing. + +The proceeding of the Commonwealths of Switzerland and Holland is of a +like nature, though after a more obscure manner; for the sovereignties, +whether cantons, provinces, or cities, which are the people, send +their deputies, commissioned and instructed by themselves (wherein they +reserve the result in their own power), to the provincial or general +convention, or Senate, where the deputies debate, but have no other +power of result than what was conferred upon them by the people, or +is further conferred by the same upon further occasion. And for +the executive part they have magistrates or judges in every canton, +province, or city, besides those which are more public, and relate to +the league, as for adjusting controversies between one canton, province, +or city and another, or the like between such persons as are not of the +same canton, province, or city. + +But that we may observe a little further how the heathen politicians +have written, not only out of nature, but as it were out of Scripture: +as in the Commonwealth of Israel, God is said to have been king, so +the commonwealth where the law is king, is said by Aristotle to be "the +kingdom of God." And where by the lusts or passions of men a power is +set above that of the law deriving from reason, which is the dictate of +God, God in that sense is rejected or deposed that he should not reign +over them, as he was in Israel. And yet Leviathan will have it that "by +reading of these Greek and Latin [he might as well in this sense have +said Hebrew] authors, young men, and all others that are unprovided +of the antidote of solid reason, receiving a strong and delightful +impression of the great exploits of war achieved by the conductors +of their armies, receive withal a pleasing idea of all they have done +besides, and imagine their great prosperity not to have proceeded from +the emulation of particular men, but from the virtue of their popular +form of government, not considering the frequent seditions and civil +wars produced by the imperfection of their polity." Where, first, +the blame he lays to the heathen authors, is in his sense laid to the +Scripture; and whereas he holds them to be young men, or men of no +antidote that are of like opinions, it should seem that Machiavel, +the sole retriever of this ancient prudence, is to his solid reason a +beardless boy that has newly read Livy. And how solid his reason is, may +appear where he grants the great prosperity of ancient commonwealths, +which is to give up the controversy. For such an effect must have some +adequate cause, which to evade he insinuates that it was nothing else +but the emulation of particular men, as if so great an emulation could +have been generated without as great virtue, so great virtue without +the best education, and best education without the best law, or the best +laws any otherwise than by the excellency of their polity. + +But if some of these commonwealths, as being less perfect in their +polity than others, have been more seditious, it is not more an argument +of the infirmity of this or that commonwealth in particular, than of the +excellency of that kind of polity in general, which if they, that have +not altogether reached, have nevertheless had greater prosperity, what +would befall them that should reach? + +In answer to which question let me invite Leviathan, who of all other +governments gives the advantage to monarchy for perfection, to a better +disquisition of it by these three assertions. + +The first, that the perfection of government lies upon such a libration +in the frame of it, that no man or men in or under it can have the +interest, or, having the interest, can have the power to disturb it with +sedition. + +The second, that monarchy, reaching the perfection of the kind, reaches +not to the perfection of government, but must have some dangerous flaw +in it. + +The third, that popular government, reaching the perfection of the kind, +reaches the perfection of government, and has no flaw in it. + +The first assertion requires no proof. + +For the proof of the second, monarchy, as has been shown, is of two +kinds: the one by arms, the other by a nobility and there is no +other kind in art or nature; for if there have 'been anciently some +governments called kingdoms, as one of the Goths in Spain, and another +of the Vandals in Africa, where the King ruled without a nobility and +by a council of the people only it is expressly said by the authors that +mention them that the, kings were but the captains, and that the people +not only gave them laws, but deposed them as often as they pleased. +Nor is it possible in reason that it should be otherwise in like cases; +wherefore these were either no monarchies, or had greater flaws in them +than any other. + +But for a monarchy by arms, as that of the Turk (which, of all models +that ever were, comes up to the perfection of the kind), it is not in +the wit or power of man to cure it of this dangerous flaw, that the +Janizaries have frequent interest and perpetual power to raise sedition, +and to tear the magistrate, even the prince himself, in pieces. +Therefore the monarchy of Turkey is no perfect government. + +And for a monarchy by nobility, as of late in Oceana (which of all other +models, before the declination of it, came up to the perfection in +that kind), it was not in the power or wit of man to cure it of that +dangerous flaw; that the nobility had frequent interest and perpetual +power by their retainers and tenants to raise sedition; and (whereas the +Janizaries occasion this kind of calamity no sooner than they make an +end of it) to levy a lasting war, to the vast effusion of blood, and +that even upon occasions wherein the people, but for their dependence +upon their lords, had no concernment, as in the feud of the Red and +White. The like has been frequent in Spain, France, Germany, and other +monarchies of this kind; wherefore monarchy by a nobility is no perfect +government. + +For the proof of the third assertion: Leviathan yields it to me, that +there is no other commonwealth but monarchical or popular; wherefore +if no monarchy be a perfect government, then either there is no perfect +government, or it must be popular, for which kind of constitution I have +something more to say than Leviathan has said or ever will be able to +say for monarchy. As, + +First, that it is the government that was never conquered by any +monarch, from the beginning of the world to this day, for if the +commonwealths of Greece came under the yoke of the Kings of Macedon, +they were first broken by themselves. + +Secondly, that it is the government that has frequently led mighty +monarchs in triumph. + +Thirdly, that it is the government, which, if it has been seditious, it +has not been so from any imperfection in the kind, but in the particular +constitution; which, wherever the like has happened, must have been +unequal. + +Fourthly, that it is the government, which, if it has been anything +near equal, was never seditious; or let him show me what sedition has +happened in Lacedaemon or Venice. + +Fifthly, that it is the government, which, attaining to perfect +equality, has such a libration in the frame of it, that no man living +can show which way any man or men, in or under it, can contract any such +interest or power as should be able to disturb the commonwealth with +sedition, wherefore an equal commonwealth is that only which is without +flaw and contains in it the full perfection of government. But to +return. + +By what has been shown in reason and experience, it may appear, that +though commonwealths in general be governments of the senate proposing, +the people resolving, and the magistracy executing, yet some are not so +good at these orders as others, through some impediment or defect in +the frame, balance, or capacity of them, according to which they are of +divers kinds. + +The first division of them is into such as are single, as Israel, +Athens, Lacedaemon, etc.; and such as are by leagues, as those of the +Achaeans, AEtolians, Lycians, Switz, and Hollanders. + +The second (being Machiavel's) is into such as are for preservation, as +Lacedaemon and Venice, and such as are for increase, as Athens and +Rome; in which I can see no more than that the former takes in no more +citizens than are necessary for defence, and the latter so many as are +capable of increase. + +The third division (unseen hitherto) is into equal and Unequal, and this +is the main point, especially as to domestic peace and tranquillity; for +to make a commonwealth unequal, is to divide it into parties, which sets +them at perpetual variance, the one party endeavoring to preserve their +eminence and inequality and the other to attain to equality; whence +the people of Rome derived their perpetual strife with the nobility and +Senate. But in an equal commonwealth there can be no more strife than +there can be overbalance in equal weights; wherefore the Commonwealth +of Venice, being that which of all others is the most equal in the +constitution, is that wherein there never happened any strife between +the Senate and the people. + +An equal commonwealth is such a one as is equal both in the balance or +foundation, and in the superstructure; that is to say, in her agrarian +law and in her rotation. + +An equal agrarian is a perpetual law, establishing and preserving the +balance of dominion by such a distribution, that no one man or number of +men, within the compass of the few or aristocracy, can come to overpower +the whole people by their possessions in lands. + +As the agrarian answers to the foundation, so does rotation to the +superstructures. + +Equal rotation is equal vicissitude in government, or succession +to magistracy conferred for such convenient terms, enjoying equal +vacations, as take in the whole body by parts, succeeding others, +through the free election or suffrage of the people. + +The contrary, whereunto is prolongation of magistracy, which, trashing +the wheel of rotation, destroys the life or natural motion of a +commonwealth. + +The election or suffrage of the people is most free, where it is made or +given in such a manner that it can neither oblige nor disoblige another, +nor through fear of an enemy, or bashfulness toward a friend, impair a +man's liberty. + +Wherefore, says Cicero, the tablet or ballot of the people of Rome (who +gave their votes by throwing tablets or little pieces of wood secretly +into urns marked for the negative or affirmative) was a welcome +constitution to the people, as that which, not impairing the assurance +of their brows, increased the freedom of their judgment. I have not +stood upon a more particular description of this ballot, because that of +Venice exemplified in the model is of all others the most perfect. + +An equal commonwealth (by that which has been said) is a government +established upon an equal agrarian, arising into the superstructures or +three orders, the Senate debating and proposing, the people resolving, +and the magistracy executing, by an equal rotation through the suffrage +of the people given by the ballot. For though rotation may be without +the ballot, and the ballot without rotation, yet the ballot not only as +to the ensuing model includes both, but is by far the most equal +way; for which cause under the name of the ballot I shall hereafter +understand both that and rotation too. + +Now having reasoned the principles of an equal commonwealth, I should +come to give an instance of such a one in experience, if I could find +it; but if this work be of any value, it lies in that it is the first +example of a commonwealth that is perfectly equal. For Venice, though +it comes the nearest, yet is a commonwealth for preservation; and such +a one, considering the paucity of citizens taken in, and the number +not taken in, is externally unequal; and though every commonwealth that +holds provinces must in that regard be such, yet not to that degree. +Nevertheless, Venice internally, and for her capacity, is by far the +most equal, though it has not, in my judgment, arrived at the full +perfection of equality; both because her laws supplying the defect of +an agrarian are not so clear nor effectual at the foundation, nor +her superstructures, by the virtue of her ballot or rotation, exactly +librated; in regard that through the paucity of her citizens her +greater magistracies are continually wheeled through a few hands, as is +confessed by Janotti, where he says, that if a gentleman comes once +to be Savio di terra ferma, it seldom happens that he fails from +thenceforward to be adorned with some one of the greater magistracies, +as Savi di mare, Savi di terra ferma, Savi Grandi, counsellors, those +of the decemvirate or dictatorian council, the aurogatori, or censors, +which require no vacation or interval. Wherefore if this in Venice, or +that in Lacedaemon, where the kings were hereditary, and the Senators +(though elected by the people) for life, cause no inequality (which is +hard to be conceived) in a commonwealth for preservation, or such a one +as consists of a few citizens; yet is it manifest that it would cause +a very great one in a commonwealth for increase, or consisting of the +many, which, by engrossing the magistracies in a few hands, would be +obstructed in their rotation. + +But there be who say (and think it a strong objection) that, let a +commonwealth be as equal as you can imagine, two or three men when all +is done will govern it; and there is that in it which, notwithstanding +the pretended sufficiency of a popular State, amounts to a plain +confession of the imbecility of that policy, and of the prerogative of +monarchy; forasmuch as popular governments in difficult cases have had +recourse to dictatorian power, as in Rome. + +To which I answer, that as truth is a spark to which objections are like +bellows, so in this respect our commonwealth shines; for the eminence +acquired by suffrage of the people in a commonwealth, especially if +it be popular and equal, can be ascended by no other steps than the +universal acknowledgment of virtue: and where men excel in virtue, the +commonwealth is stupid and unjust, if accordingly they do not excel in +authority. Wherefore this is both the advantage of virtue, which has her +due encouragement, and of the commonwealth, which has her due services. +These are the philosophers which Plato would have to be princes, the +princes which Solomon would have to be mounted, and their steeds are +those of authority, not empire; or, if they be buckled to the chariot of +empire, as that of the dictatorian power, like the chariot of the +sun, it is glorious for terms and vacations or intervals. And as a +commonwealth is a government of laws and not of men, so is this the +principality of virtue, and not of man; if that fail or set in one, it +rises in another who is created his immediate successor. And this takes +away that vanity from under the sun, which is an error proceeding more +or less from all other rulers under heaven but an equal commonwealth. + +These things considered, it will be convenient in this place to speak a +word to such as go about to insinuate to the nobility or gentry a fear +of the people, or to the people a fear of the nobility or gentry; as if +their interests were destructive to each other. When indeed an army may +as well consist of soldiers without officers, or of officers without +soldiers, as a commonwealth, especially such a one as is capable of +greatness, of a people without a gentry, or of a gentry without a +people. Wherefore this, though not always so intended, as may appear +by Machiavel, who else would be guilty, is a pernicious error. There is +something first in the making of a commonwealth, then in the governing +of it, and last of all in the leading of its armies, which, though there +be great divines, great lawyers, great men in all professions, seems to +be peculiar only to the genius of a gentleman. + +For so it is in the universal series of story, that if any man has +founded a commonwealth, he was first a gentleman. Moses had his +education by the daughter of Pharaoh; Theseus and Solon, of noble birth, +were held by the Athenians worthy to be kings; Lycurgus was of the royal +blood; Romulus and Numa princes; Brutus and Publicola patricians; +the Gracchi, that lost their lives for the people of Rome and the +restitution of that commonwealth, were the sons of a father adored with +two triumphs, and of Cornelia the daughter of Scipio, who being demanded +in marriage by King Ptolemy, disdained to become the Queen of Egypt. And +the most renowned Olphaus Megaletor, sole legislator, as you will see +anon, of the Commonwealth of Oceana, was derived from a noble family; +nor will it be any occasion of scruple in this case, that Leviathan +affirms the politics to be no ancienter than his book "De Cive." Such +also as have got any fame in the civil government of a commonwealth, or +by the leading of its armies, have been gentlemen; for so in all other +respects were those plebeian magistrates elected by the people of Rome, +being of known descents and of equal virtues, except only that they were +excluded from the name by the usurpation of the patricians. Holland, +through this defect at home, has borrowed princes for generals, and +gentlemen of divers nations for commanders: and the Switzers, if they +have any defect in this kind, rather lend their people to the colors +of other princes, than make that noble use of them at home which should +assert the liberty of mankind. For where there is not a nobility to +hearten the people, they are slothful, regardless of the world, and of +the public interest of liberty, as even those of Rome had been without +their gentry: wherefore let the people embrace the gentry in peace, as +the light of their eyes; and in war, as the trophy of their arms; and if +Cornelia disdained to be Queen of Egypt, if a Roman consul looked down +from his tribunal upon the greatest king, let the nobility love and +cherish the people that afford them a throne so much higher in a +commonwealth, in the acknowledgment of their virtue, than the crowns of +monarchs. + +But if the equality of a commonwealth consist in the equality first +of the agrarian, and next of the rotation, then the inequality of a +commonwealth must consist in the absence or inequality of the agrarian, +or of the rotation, or of both. + +Israel and Lacedaemon, which commonwealths (as the people of this, in +Josephus, claims kindred of that) have great resemblance, were each of +them equal in their agrarian, and unequal in their rotation, especially +Israel, where the Sanhedrim, or Senate, first elected by the people, as +appears by the words of Moses, took upon them ever after, without any +precept of God, to substitute their successors by ordination; which +having been there of civil use, as excommunication, community of goods, +and other customs of the Essenes, who were many of them converted, came +afterward to be introduced into the Christian Church. And the election +of the judge, suffes, or dictator, was irregular, both for the occasion, +the term, and the vacation of that magistracy. As you find in the book +of Judges, where it is often repeated, that in those days there was no +king in Israel--that is, no judge; and in the first of Samuel, where Eli +judged Israel forty years, and Samuel, all his life. In Lacedaemon the +election of the Senate being by suffrage of the people, though for life, +was not altogether so unequal, yet the hereditary right of kings, were +it not for the agrarian, had ruined her. + +Athens and Rome were unequal as to their agrarian, that of Athens being +infirm, and this of Rome none at all; for if it were more anciently +carried it was never observed. Whence, by the time of Tiberius Gracchus, +the nobility had almost eaten the people quite out of their lands, +which they held in the occupation of tenants and servants, whereupon the +remedy being too late, and too vehemently applied, that commonwealth was +ruined. + +These also were unequal in their rotation, but in a contrary manner. +Athens, in regard that the Senate (chosen at once by lot, not by +suffrage, and changed every year, not in part, but in the whole) +consisted not of the natural aristocracy, nor sitting long enough to +understand or to be perfect in their office, had no sufficient authority +to restrain the people from that perpetual turbulence in the end, which +was their ruin, notwithstanding the efforts of Nicias, who did all a man +could do to help it. But as Athens, by the headiness of the people, so +Rome fell by the ambition of the nobility, through the want of an equal +rotation; which, if the people had got into the Senate, and timely +into the magistracies (whereof the former was always usurped by the +patricians, and the latter for the most part) they had both carried and +held their agrarian, and that had rendered that commonwealth immovable. + +But let a commonwealth be equal or unequal, it must consist, as has been +shown by reason and all experience, of the three general orders; that is +to say, of the Senate debating and proposing, of the people resolving, +and of the magistracy executing. Wherefore I can never wonder enough +at Leviathan, who, without any reason or example, will have it that a +commonwealth consists of a single person, or of a single assembly; nor +can I sufficiently pity those "thousand gentlemen, whose minds, which +otherwise would have wavered, he has framed (as is affirmed by himself) +in to a conscientious obedience (for so he is pleased to call it) of +such a government." + +But to finish this part of the discourse, which I intend for as +complete an epitome of ancient prudence, and in that of the whole art of +politics, as I am able to frame in so short a time: + +The two first orders, that is to say, the Senate and the people, are +legislative, whereunto answers that part of this science which by +politicians is entitled "of laws;" and the third order is executive, +to which answers that part of the same science which is styled "of the +frame and course of courts or judicatories." A word to each of these +will be necessary. + +And first for laws: they are either ecclesiastical or civil, such as +concern religion or government. + +Laws, ecclesiastical, or such as concern religion, according to +the universal course of ancient prudence, are in the power of the +magistrate; but, according to the common practice of modern prudence, +since the papacy, torn out of his hands. + +But, as a government pretending to liberty, and yet suppressing +liberty of conscience (which, because religion not according to a +man's conscience can to him be none at all, is the main) must be a +contradiction, so a man that, pleading for the liberty of private +conscience, refuses liberty to the national conscience, must be absurd. + +A commonwealth is nothing else but the national conscience. And if the +conviction of a man's private conscience produces his private religion, +the conviction of the national conscience must produce a national +religion. Whether this be well reasoned, as also whether these two +may stand together, will best be shown by the examples of the ancient +commonwealths taken in their order. + +In that of Israel the government of the national religion appertained +not to the priests and Levites, otherwise than as they happened to be +of the Sanhedrim, or Senate, to which they had no right at all but +by election. It is in this capacity therefore that the people are +commanded, under pain of death, "to hearken to them, and to do according +to the sentence of the law which they should teach;" but in Israel the +law ecclesiastical and civil was the same, therefore the Sanhedrim, +having the power of one, had the power of both. But as the national +religion appertained to the jurisdiction of the Sanhedrim, so the +liberty of conscience appertained, from the same date, and by the same +right, to the prophets and their disciples; as where it is said, "I will +raise up a prophet; and whoever will not hearken to my words which he +shall speak in my name, I will require it of him." The words relate to +prophetic right, which was above all the orders of this commonwealth; +whence Elijah not only refused to obey the King, but destroyed his +messengers with fire. And whereas it was not lawful by the national +religion to sacrifice in any other place than the Temple, a prophet was +his own temple, and might sacrifice where he would, as Elijah did in +Mount Carmel. By this right John the Baptist and our Saviour, to whom it +more particularly related, had their disciples, and taught the people, +whence is derived our present right of gathered congregations; +wherefore the Christian religion grew up according to the orders of +the Commonwealth of Israel, and not against them. Nor was liberty of +conscience infringed by this government, till the civil liberty of +the same was lost, as under Herod, Pilate, and Tiberius, a three-piled +tyranny. + +To proceed, Athens preserved her religion, by the testimony of Paul, +with great superstition: if Alcibiades, that atheistical fellow had not +showed them a pair of heels, they had shaven off his head for shaving +their Mercuries, and making their gods look ridiculously upon them +without beards. Nevertheless, if Paul reasoned with them, they loved +news, for which he was the more welcome; and if he converted Dionysius +the Areopagite, that is, one of the senators, there followed neither any +hurt to him, nor loss of honor to Dionysius. And for Rome, if Cicero, +in his most excellent book "De Natura Deorum," overthrew the national +religion of that commonwealth, he was never the further from being +consul. But there is a meanness and poorness in modern prudence, not +only to the damage of civil government, but of religion itself; for +to make a man in matter of religion, which admits not of sensible +demonstration (jurare in verba magistri), engage to believe no otherwise +than is believed by my lord bishop, or Goodman Presbyter is a pedantism +that has made the sword to be a rod in the hands of schoolmasters; by +which means, whereas the Christian religion is the furthest of any +from countenancing war, there never was a war of religion but since +Christianity, for which we are beholden to the Pope; for the Pope not +giving liberty of conscience to princes and commonwealths, they cannot +give that to their subjects which they have not themselves, whence +both princes and subjects, either through his instigation or their own +disputes, have introduced that execrable custom, never known in the +world before, of fighting for religion, and denying the magistrate to +have any jurisdiction concerning it, whereas the magistrate's losing the +power of religion loses the liberty of conscience, which in that case +has nothing to protect it. But if the people be otherwise taught, +it concerns them to look about them, and to distinguish between the +shrieking of the lapwing and the voice of the turtle. + +To come to civil laws. If they stand one way and the balance another, +it is the case of a government which of necessity must be new modelled; +wherefore your lawyers, advising you upon the like occasions to fit your +government to their laws, are no more to be regarded than your tailor +if he should desire you to fit your body to his doublet. There is +also danger in the plausible pretence of reforming the law, except the +government be first good, in which case it is a good tree, and (trouble +not yourselves overmuch) brings not forth evil fruit; otherwise, if +the tree be evil, you can never reform the fruit, or if a root that is +naught bring forth fruit of this kind that seems to be good, take the +more heed, for it is the ranker poison. It was nowise probable, if +Augustus had not made excellent laws, that the bowels of Rome could have +come to be so miserably eaten out by the tyranny of Tiberius and his +successors. The best rule as to your laws in general is that they be +few. Rome, by the testimony of Cicero, Was best governed under those of +the twelve tables; and by that of Tacitus, Plurimoe leges, corruptissima +respublica. You will be told that where the laws be few they leave much +to arbitrary power; but where they be many, they leave more, the laws +in this case, according to Justinian and the best lawyers, being as +litigious as the suitors. Solon made few, Lycurgus fewer, laws; and +commonwealths have the fewest at this day of all other governments. + +Now to conclude this part with a word de judiciis, or of the +constitution or course of courts; it is a discourse not otherwise +capable of being well managed but by particular examples, both the +constitution and course of courts being divers in different governments, +but best beyond compare in Venice, where they regard not so much the +arbitrary power of their courts as the constitution of them, whereby +that arbitrary power being altogether unable to or do hurt to +business, produces and must produce the quickest despatch, and the most +righteous dictates of justice that are perhaps in human nature. The +manner I shall not stand in this place to describe, because it is +exemplified at large in the judicature of the people of Oceana. And +thus much of ancient prudence, and the first branch of this preliminary +discourse. + +THE SECOND PART OF THE PRELIMINARIES + +In the second part I shall endeavor to show the rise, progress, and +declination of modern prudence. + +The date of this kind of policy is to be computed, as was shown, from +those inundations of Goths, Vandals, Huns, and Lombards that overwhelmed +the Roman Empire. But as there is no appearance in the bulk or +constitution of modern prudence, that it should ever have been able to +come up and grapple with the ancient, so something of necessity must +have interposed whereby this came to be enervated, and that to receive +strength and encouragement. And this was the execrable reign of the +Roman emperors taking rise from (that felix scelus) the arms of +Caesar, in which storm the ship of the Roman Commonwealth was forced +to disburden itself of that precious freight, which never since could +emerge or raise its head but in the Gulf of Venice. + +It is said in Scripture, "Thy evil is of thyself, O Israel!" to which +answers that of the moralists, "None is hurt but by himself," as also +the whole matter of the politics; at present this example of the Romans, +who, through a negligence committed in their agrarian laws, let in the +sink of luxury, and forfeited the inestimable treasure of liberty for +themselves and their posterity. + +Their agrarian laws were such whereby their lands ought to have been +divided among the people, either without mention of a colony, in which +case they were not obliged to change their abode; or with mention and +upon condition of a colony, in which case they were to change their +abode, and leaving the city, to plant themselves upon the lands so +assigned. The lands assigned, or that ought to have been assigned, in +either of these ways, were of three kinds: such as were taken from the +enemy and distributed to the people; or such as were taken from the +enemy, and, under color of being reserved to the public use, were +through stealth possessed by the nobility; or such as were bought with +the public money to be distributed. Of the laws offered in these cases, +those which divided the lands taken from the enemy, or purchased with +the public money, never occasioned any dispute; but such as drove at +dispossessing the nobility of their usurpations, and dividing the common +purchase of the sword among the people, were never touched but they +caused earthquakes, nor could they ever be obtained by the people; or +being obtained, be observed by the nobility, who not only preserved +their prey, but growing vastly rich upon it, bought the people by +degrees quite out of those shares that had been conferred upon them. +This the Gracchi coming too late to perceive found the balance of the +commonwealth to be lost; but putting the people (when they had least +force) by forcible means upon the recovery of it, did ill, seeing +it neither could nor did tend to any more than to show them by worse +effects that what the wisdom of their leaders had discovered was true. +For quite contrary to what has happened in Oceana, where, the balance +falling to the people, they have overthrown the nobility, that nobility +of Rome, under the conduct of Sylla, overthrew the people and the +commonwealth; seeing Sylla first introduced that new balance which was +the foundation of the succeeding monarchy, in the plantation of military +colonies, instituted by his distribution of the conquered lands, not now +of enemies, but of citizens, to forty-seven legions of his soldiers; +so that how he came to be perpetual dictator, or other magistrates to +succeed him in like power, is no miracle. + +These military colonies (in which manner succeeding emperors continued, +as Augustus by the distribution of the veterans, whereby he had overcome +Brutus and Cassius to plant their soldiery) consisted of such as I +conceive were they that are called milites beneficiarii; in regard that +the tenure of their lands was by way of benefices, that is, for life, +and upon condition of duty or service in the war upon their own +charge. These benefices Alexander Severus granted to the heirs of the +incumbents, but upon the same conditions. And such was the dominion by +which the Roman emperors gave their balance. But to the beneficiaries, +as was no less than necessary for the safety of the prince, a matter of +8,000 by the example of Augustus were added, which departed not from +his sides, but were his perpetual guard, called Pretorian bands; though +these, according to the incurable flaw already observed in this kind of +government, became the most frequent butchers of their lords that are +to be found in story. Thus far the Roman monarchy is much the same with +that at this day in Turkey, consisting of a camp and a horse-quarter; a +camp in regard of the Spahis and Janizaries, the perpetual guard of the +prince, except they also chance to be liquorish after his blood; and a +horse-quarter in regard of the distribution of his whole land to tenants +for life, upon condition of continual service, or as often as they shall +be commanded at their own charge by timars, being a word which they +say signifies benefices, that it shall save me a labor of opening the +government. + +But the fame of Mahomet and his prudence is especially founded in this, +that whereas the Roman monarchy, except that of Israel, was the most +imperfect, the Turkish is the most perfect that ever was. Which +happened in that the Roman (as the Israelitish of the Sanhedrim and +the congregation) had a mixture of the Senate and the people; and the +Turkish is pure. And that this was pure, and the other mixed, happened +not through the wisdom of the legislators, but the different genius of +the nations; the people of the Eastern parts, except the Israelites, +which is to be attributed to their agrarian, having been such as scarce +ever knew any other condition than that of slavery; and these of the +Wester having ever had such a relish of liberty, as through what despair +soever could never be brought to stand still while the yoke was putting +on their necks, but by being fed with some hopes of reserving to +themselves some part of their freedom. + +Wherefore Julius Caesar (saith Suetonius) contented himself in naming +half the magistrates, to leave the rest to the suffrage of the people. +And Maecenas, though he would not have Augustus to give the people their +liberty, would not have him take it quite away. Whence this empire, +being neither hawk nor buzzard, made a flight accordingly; and the +prince being perpetually tossed (having the avarice of the soldiery on +this hand to satisfy upon the people, and the Senate and the people on +the other to be defended from the soldiery), seldom died any other +death than by one horn of this dilemma, as is noted more at large by +Machiavel. + +But the Pretorian bands, those bestial executioners of their captain's +tyranny upon others, and of their own upon him, having continued from +the time of Augustus, were by Constantine the Great (incensed against +them for taking part with his adversary Maxentius) removed from their +strong garrison which they held in Rome, and distributed into divers +provinces. The benefices of the soldiers that were hitherto held for +life and upon duty, were by this prince made hereditary, so that +the whole foundation whereupon this empire was first built being now +removed, shows plainly that the emperors must long before this have +found out some other way of support; and this was by stipendiating the +Goths, a people that, deriving their roots from the northern parts of +Germany, or out of Sweden, had, through their victories obtained against +Domitian, long since spread their branches to so near a neighborhood +with the Roman territories that they began to overshadow them. For the +emperors making use of them in their armies, as the French do at this +day of the Switz, gave them that under the notion of a stipend, which +they received as tribute, coming, if there were any default in the +payment, so often to distrain for it, that in the time of Honorius +they sacked Rome, and possessed themselves of Italy. And such was the +transition of ancient into modern prudence, or that breach, which being +followed in every part of the Roman Empire with inundations of Vandals, +Huns, Lombards, Franks, Saxons, overwhelmed ancient languages, learning, +prudence, manners, cities, changing the names of rivers, countries, +seas, mountains, and men; Camillus, Caesar, and Pompey, being come to +Edmund, Richard, and Geoffrey. + +To open the groundwork or balance of these new politicians: "Feudum," +says Calvin the lawyer, "is a Gothic word of divers significations; +for it is taken either for war, or for a possession of conquered lands, +distributed by the victor to such of his captains and soldiers as had +merited in his wars, upon condition to acknowledge him to be their +perpetual lord, and themselves to be his subjects." + +Of these there were three kinds or orders: the first of nobility +distinguished by the titles of dukes, marquises, earls, and these +being gratified with the cities, castles, and villages of the conquered +Italians, their feuds participated of royal dignity, and were called +regalia, by which they had right to coin money, create magistrates, take +toll, customs, confiscations, and the like. + +Feuds of the second order were such as, with the consent of the King, +were bestowed by these feudatory princes upon men of inferior quality, +called their barons, on condition that next to the King they should +defend the dignities and fortunes of their lords in arms. + +The lowest order of feuds were such, as being conferred by those of the +second order upon private men, whether noble not noble, obliged them in +the like duty to their superiors; the were called vavasors. And this is +the Gothic balance, by which all the kingdoms this day in Christendom +were at first erected; for which cause, if I had time, I should open in +this place the Empire of Germany, and the Kingdoms of France, Spain, and +Poland; but so much as has been said being sufficient for the discovery +of the principles of modern prudence in general, I shall divide the +remainder of my discourse, which is more particular, into three parts: + +The first, showing the constitution of the late monarchy of Oceana; + +The second, the dissolution of the same; and + +The third, the generation of the present commonwealth. + +The constitution of the late monarchy of Oceana is to be considered +in relation to the different nations by whom it has been successively +subdued and governed. The first of these were the Romans, the second the +Teutons, the third the Scandians, and the fourth the Neustrians. + +The government of the Romans, who held it as a province, I shall omit, +because I am to speak of their provincial government in another place, +only it is to be remembered here, that if we have given over running up +and down naked, and with dappled hides, learned to write and read, and +to be instructed with good arts, for all these we are beholden to the +Romans, either immediately or mediately by the Teutons; for that +the Teutons had the arts from no other hand is plain enough by their +language, which has yet no word to signify either writing or reading, +but what is derived from the Latin. Furthermore, by the help of these +arts so learned, we have been capable of that religion which we have +long since received; wherefore it seems to me that we ought not to +detract from the memory of the Romans, by whose means we are, as it +were, of beasts become men, and by whose means we might yet of obscure +and ignorant men (if we thought not too well of ourselves) become a wise +and a great people. + +The Romans having governed Oceana provincially, the Teutons were the +first that introduced the form of the late monarchy. To these succeeded +the Scandians, of whom (because their reign was short, as also because +they made little alteration in the government as to the form) I shall +take no notice. But the Teutons going to work upon the Gothic balance, +divided the whole nation into three sorts of feuds, that of ealdorman, +that of king's thane, and that of middle thane. + +When the kingdom was first divided into precincts will be as hard to +show as when it began first to be governed. It being impossible that +there should be any government without some division. The division that +was in use with the Teutons was by counties, and every county had either +its ealdorman or high reeve. The title of ealdorman came in time to +eorl, or erl, and that of high reeve to high sheriff. + +Earl of the shire or county denoted the king's thane, or tenant by grand +sergeantry or knight's service, in chief or in capite; his possessions +were sometimes the whole territory from whence he had his denomination, +that is, the whole county; sometimes more than one county, and sometimes +less, the remaining part being in the crown. He had also sometimes a +third, or some other customary part of the profits of certain cities, +boroughs, or other places within his earldom. For an example of the +possessions of earls in ancient times, Ethelred had to him and his heirs +the whole Kingdom of Mercia, containing three or four counties; and +there were others that had little less. + +King's thane was also an honorary title, to which he was qualified +that had five hides of land held immediately of the King by service of +personal attendance; insomuch that if a churl or countryman had thriven +to this proportion, having a church, a kitchen, a bell-house (that is, +a hall with a bell in it to call his family to dinner), a borough-gate +with a seat (that is, a porch) of his own, and any distinct office in +the King's court, then was he the King's thane. But the proportion of a +hide-land, otherwise called caruca, or a plough-land, is difficult to +be understood, because it was not certain; nevertheless it is generally +conceived to be so much as may be managed with one plough, and would +yield the maintenance of the same, with the appurtenances in all kinds. + +The middle thane was feudal, but not honorary; he was also called a +vavasor, and his lands a vavasory, which held of some mesne lord, and +not immediately of the King. + +Possessions and their tenures, being of this nature, show the balance +of the Teuton monarchy, wherein the riches of earls were so vast that to +arise from the balance of their dominion to their power, they were +not only called reguli, or little kings, but were such indeed; their +jurisdiction being of two sorts, either that which was exercised by them +in the court of their countries, or in the high court of the kingdom. + +In the territory denominating an earl, if it were all his own, the +courts held, and the profits of that jurisdiction were to his own +use and benefit. But if he had but some part of his county, then his +jurisdiction and courts, saving perhaps in those possessions that were +his own, were held by him to the King's use and benefit; that is, he +commonly supplied the office which the sheriffs regularly executed in +counties that had no earls, and whence they came to be called viscounts. +The court of the county that had an earl was held by the earl and the +bishop of the diocese, after the manner of the sheriffs' turns to this +day; by which means both the ecclesiastical and temporal laws were given +in charge together to the country. The causes of vavasors or vavasories +appertained to the cognizance of this court, where wills were proved, +judgment and execution given, cases criminal and civil determined. + +The King's thanes had the like jurisdiction in their thane lands as +lords in their manors, where they also kept courts. + +Besides these in particular, both the earls and King's thanes, together +with the bishops, abbots, and vavasors, or middle thanes, had in the +high court or parliament in the kingdom a more public jurisdiction, +consisting first of deliberative power for advising upon and assenting +to new laws; secondly, giving counsel in matters of state and thirdly, +of judicature upon suits and complaints. I shall not omit to enlighten +the obscurity of these times, in which there is little to be found of +a methodical constitution of this high court, by the addition of an +argument, which I conceive to bear a strong testimony to itself, though +taken out of a late writing that conceals the author. "It is well +known," says he, "that in every quarter of the realm a great many +boroughs do yet send burgesses to the parliament which nevertheless be +so anciently and so long since decayed and gone to naught, that they +cannot be showed to have been of any reputation since the Conquest, much +less to have obtained any such privilege by the grant of any succeeding +king: wherefore these must have had this right by more ancient usage, +and before the Conquest, they being unable now to show whence they +derived it." + +This argument, though there be more, I shall pitch upon as sufficient to +prove: First, that the lower sort of the people had right to session +in Parliament during the time of the Teutons. Secondly, that they were +qualified to the same by election in their boroughs, and if knights of +the shire, as no doubt they are, be as ancient in the counties. Thirdly +if it be a good argument to say that the commons during the reign of the +Teutons were elected into Parliament because they are so now, and no man +can show when this custom began, I see not which way it should be an ill +one to say that the commons during the reign of the Teutons constituted +also a distinct house because they do so now, unless any man can show +that they did ever sit in the same house with the lords. Wherefore +to conclude this part, I conceive for these, and other reasons to be +mentioned hereafter, that the Parliament of the Teutons consisted of the +King, the lords spiritual and temporal, and the commons of the nation, +notwithstanding the style of divers acts of Parliament, which runs, +as that of Magna Charta, in the King's name only, seeing the same was +nevertheless enacted by the King, peers, and commons of the land, as is +testified in those words by a subsequent act. + +The monarchy of the Teutons had stood in this posture about 220 years; +when Turbo, Duke of Neustria, making his claim to the crown of one of +their kings that died childless, followed it with successful arms, and, +being possessed of the kingdom, used it as conquered, distributing the +earldoms, thane-lands, bishoprics, and prelacies of the whole realm +among his Neustrians. From this time the earl came to be called comes, +consul, and dux, though consul and dux grew afterward out of use; the +King's thanes came to be called barons, and their lands baronies; +the middle thane holding still of a mesne lord, retained the name of +vavasor. + +The earl or comes continued to have the third part of the pleas of the +county paid to him by the sheriff or vice--comes, now a distinct officer +in every county depending upon the King; saving that such earls as had +their counties to their own use were now counts-palatine, and had under +the King regal jurisdiction; insomuch that they constituted their own +sheriffs, granted pardons, and issued writs in their own names; nor did +the King's writ of ordinary justice run in their dominions till a late +statute, whereby much of this privilege was taken away. + +For barons they came from henceforth to be in different times of three +kinds: barons by their estates and tenures, barons by writ, and barons +created by letters-patent. From Turbo the first to Adoxus the seventh +king from the Conquest, barons had their denomination from their +possessions and tenures. And these were either spiritual or temporal; +for not only the thanelands, but the possessions of bishops, as also of +some twenty six abbots, and two priors, were now erected into baronies, +whence the lords spiritual that had suffrage in the Teuton Parliament as +spiritual lords came to have it in the Neustrian Parliament as barons, +and were made subject, which they had not formerly been, to knights' +service in chief. Barony coming henceforth to signify all honorary +possessions as well of earls as barons, and baronage to denote all +kinds of lords as well spiritual as temporal having right to sit +in Parliament, the baronies in this sense were sometimes more, and +sometimes fewer, but commonly about 200 or 250, containing in them a +matter of 60,000 feuda militum, or knights' fees, whereof some 28,000 +were in the clergy. + +It is ill-luck that no man can tell what the land of a knight's +fee, reckoned in some writs at L40 a year, and in others at L10, was +certainly worth, for by such a help we might have exactly demonstrated +the balance of this government. But, says Coke, it contained twelve +plough-lands, and that was thought to be the most certain account. But +this again is extremely uncertain; for one plough out of some land that +was fruitful might work more than ten out of some other that was +barren. Nevertheless, seeing it appears by Bracton, that of earldoms and +baronies it was wont to be said that the whole kingdom was composed, as +also that these, consisting of 60,000 knights' fees, furnished 60,000 +men for the King's service, being the whole militia of this monarchy, +it cannot be imagined that the vavasories or freeholds in the people +amounted to any considerable proportion. Wherefore the balance and +foundation of this government were in the 60,000 knights' fees, and +these being possessed by the 250 lords, it was a government of the few, +or of the nobility, wherein the people might also assemble, but could +have no more than a mere name. And the clergy, holding a third of the +whole nation, as is plain by the Parliament-roll, it is an absurdity +(seeing the clergy of France came first through their riches to be a +state of that kingdom) to acknowledge the people to have been a state +of this realm, and not to allow it to the clergy, who were so much more +weighty in the balance, which is that of all other whence a state or +order in a government is denominated. Wherefore this monarchy consisted +of the King, and of the three ordines regni, or estates, the lords +spiritual and temporal, and the commons; it consisted of these, I say, +as to the balance, though, during the reign of some of these kings, not +as to the administration. + +For the ambition of Turbo, and some of those that more immediately +succeeded him, to be absolute princes, strove against the nature of +their foundation, and, inasmuch as he had divided almost the whole +realm among his Neustrians, with some encouragement for a while. But +the Neustrians, while they were but foreign plants, having no security +against the natives, but in growing up by their princes' sides, were no +sooner well rooted in their vast dominions than they came up according +to the infallible consequence of the balance domestic, and, contracting +the national interest of the baronage, grew as fierce in the vindication +of the ancient rights and liberties of the same, as if they had been +always natives: whence, the kings being as obstinate on the one side for +their absolute power, as these on the other for their immunities, grew +certain wars, which took their denomination from the barons. + +This fire about the middle of the reign of Adoxus began to break out. +And whereas the predecessors of this King had divers times been forced +to summon councils resembling those of the Teutons, to which the lords +only that were barons by dominion and tenure had hitherto repaired, +Adoxus, seeing the effects of such dominion, began first not to call +such as were barons by writ (for that was according to the practice of +ancient times), but to call such by writs as were otherwise no barons; +by which means, striving to avoid the consequence of the balance, in +coming unwillingly to set the government straight, he was the first that +set it awry. For the barons in his reign, and his successors, having +vindicated their ancient authority, restored the Parliament with all +the rights and privileges of the same, saving that from thenceforth the +kings had found out a way whereby to help themselves against the mighty +by creatures of their own, and such as had no other support but by their +favor.. By which means this government, being indeed the masterpiece of +modern prudence, has been cried up to the skies, as the only invention +whereby at once to maintain the sovereignty of a prince and the +liberty of the people. Whereas, indeed, it has been no other than a +wrestling-match, wherein the nobility, as they have been stronger, have +thrown the King, or the King, if he has been stronger, has thrown the +nobility; or the King, where he has had a nobility, and could bring +them to his party has thrown the people, as in France and Spain; or +the people, where they have had no nobility, or could get them to be of +their party, have thrown the King, as in Holland, and of later times in +Oceana. + +But they came not to this strength, but by such approaches and degrees +as remain to be further opened. For whereas the barons by writ, as the +sixty-four abbots and thirty-six priors that were so called, were but +pro temp ore, Dicotome, being the twelfth king from the Conquest, began +to make barons by letters-patent, with the addition of honorary pensions +for the maintenance of their dignities to them and their heirs; so that +they were hands in the King's purse and had no shoulders for his throne. +Of these, when the house of peers came once to be full, as will be seen +hereafter, there was nothing more empty. But for the present, the throne +having other supports, they did not hurt that so much as they did +the King; for the old barons, taking Dicotome's prodigality to such +creatures so ill that they deposed him, got the trick of it, and never +gave over setting up and pulling down their kings according to their +various interests, and that faction of the White and Red, into which +they have been thenceforth divided, till Panurgus, the eighteenth king +from the Conquest, was more by their favor than his right advanced to +the crown. This King, through his natural subtlety, reflecting at once +upon the greatness of their power, and the inconstancy of their favor, +began to find another flaw in this kind of government, which is also +noted by Machiavel namely, that a throne supported by a nobility is not +so hard to be ascended as kept warm. Wherefore his secret jealousy, lest +the dissension of the nobility, as it brought him in might throw him +out, made him travel in ways undiscovered by them, to ends as little +foreseen by himself, while to establish his own safety, he, by mixing +water with their wine, first began to open those sluices that have since +overwhelmed not the King only, but the throne. For whereas a nobility +strikes not at the throne, without which they cannot subsist, but at +some king that they do not like, popular power strikes through the King +at the throne, as that which is incompatible with it. Now that Panurgus, +in abating the power of the nobility, was the cause whence it came to +fall into the hands of the people, appears by those several statutes +that were made in his reign, as that for population, those against +retainers, and that for alienations. + +By the statute of population, all houses of husbandry that were used +with twenty acres of ground and upward, were to be maintained and kept +up forever with a competent proportion of land laid to them, and in no +wise, as appears by a subsequent statute, to be severed. By which means +the houses being kept up, did of necessity enforce dwellers; and the +proportion of land to be tilled being kept up, did of necessity enforce +the dweller not to be a beggar or cottager, but a man of some substance, +that might keep hinds and servants and set the plough a-going. This +did mightily concern, says the historian of that prince, the might and +manhood of the kingdom, and in effect amortize a great part of the lands +to the hold and possession of the yeomanry or middle people, who living +not in a servile or indigent fashion, were much unlinked from dependence +upon their lords, and living in a free and plentiful manner, became +a more excellent infantry, but such a one upon which the lords had so +little power, that from henceforth they may be computed to have been +disarmed. + +And as they had lost their infantry after this manner, so their cavalry +and commanders were cut off by the statute of retainers; for whereas it +was the custom of the nobility to have younger brothers of good houses, +mettled fellows, and such as were knowing in the feats of arms about +them, they who were longer followed with so dangerous a train, escaped +not such punishments as made them take up. + +Henceforth the country lives and great tables of the nobility, which +no longer nourished veins that would bleed for them, were fruitless and +loathsome till they changed the air, and of princes became courtiers; +where their revenues, never to have been exhausted by beef and mutton, +were found narrow, whence followed racking of rents, and at length sale +of lands, the riddance through the statute of alienations being rendered +far more quick and facile than formerly it had been through the new +invention of entails. + +To this it happened that Coraunus, the successor of that King, +dissolving the abbeys, brought, with the declining state of the +nobility, so vast a prey to the industry of the people, that the balance +of the commonwealth was too apparently in the popular party to be +unseen by the wise Council of Queen Parthenia, who, converting her reign +through the perpetual love tricks that passed between her and her people +into a kind of romance, wholly neglected the nobility. And by these +degrees came the House of Commons to raise that head, which since has +been so high and formidable to their princes that they have looked +pale upon those assemblies. Nor was there anything now wanting to the +destruction of the throne, but that the people, not apt to see their own +strength, should be put to feel it; when a prince, as stiff in disputes +as the nerve of monarchy was grown slack, received that unhappy +encouragement from his clergy which became his utter ruin, while +trusting more to their logic than the rough philosophy of his +Parliament, it came to an irreparable breach; for the house of peers, +which alone had stood in this gap, now sinking down between the King and +the commons, showed that Crassus was dead and the isthmus broken. But +a monarchy, divested of its nobility, has no refuge under heaven but an +army. Wherefore the dissolution of this government caused the war, not +the war the dissolution of this government. + +Of the King's success with his arms it is not necessary to give any +further account than that they proved as ineffectual as his nobility; +but without a nobility or an army (as has been shown) there can be no +monarchy. Wherefore what is there in nature that can arise out of these +ashes but a popular government, or a new monarchy to be erected by the +victorious army? + +To erect a monarchy, be it never so new, unless like Leviathan you can +hang it, as the country-fellow speaks, by geometry (for what else is it +to say, that every other man must give up his will to the will of +this one man without any other foundation?), it must stand upon old +principles--that is, upon a nobility or an army planted on a due balance +of dominion. Aut viam inveniam aut faciam, was an adage of Caesar, and +there is no standing for a monarchy unless it finds this balance, or +makes it. If it finds it, the work is done to its hand; for, where there +is inequality of estates, there must be inequality of power; and where +there is inequality of power, there can be no commonwealth. To make it, +the sword must extirpate out of dominion all other roots of power, and +plant an army upon that ground. An army may be planted nationally or +provincially. To plant it nationally, it must be in one of the four +ways mentioned, that is, either monarchically in part, as the Roman +beneficiarii; or monarchically, in the whole, as the Turkish Timariots; +aristocratically that is, by earls and barons, as the Neustrians were +planted by Turbo; or democratically, that is, by equal lots, as the +Israelitish army in the land of Canaan by Joshua. In every one of these +ways there must not only be confiscations, but confiscations to such a +proportion as may answer to the work intended. + +Confiscation of a people that never fought against you, but whose arms +you have borne, and in which you have been victorious, and this upon +premeditation and in cold blood, I should have thought to be against +any example in human nature, but for those alleged by Machiavel +of Agathocles, and Oliveretto di Fermo, the former whereof being +captain-general of the Syracusans, upon a day assembled the Senate and +the people, as if he had something to communicate with them, when at a +sign given he cut the senators in pieces to a man, and all the richest +of the people, by which means he came to be king. The proceedings of +Oliveretto, in making himself Prince of Fermo, were somewhat different +in circumstances, but of the same nature. Nevertheless Catiline, who +had a spirit equal to any of these in his intended mischief, could never +bring the like to pass in Rome. The head of a small commonwealth, such +a one as was that of Syracuse or Fermo, is easily brought to the block; +but that a populous nation, such as Rome, had not such a one, was the +grief of Nero. If Sylvia or Caesar attained to be princes, it was by +civil war, and such civil war as yielded rich spoils, there being a vast +nobility to be confiscated; which also was the case in Oceana, when +it yielded earth by earldoms, and baronies to the Neustrian for the +plantation of his new potentates. Where a conqueror finds the riches of +a land in the hands of the few, the forfeitures are easy, and amount to +vast advantage; but where the people have equal shares, the confiscation +of many comes to little, and is not only dangerous but fruitless. + +The Romans, in one of their defeats of the Volsci, found among the +captives certain Tusculans, who, upon examination, confessed that the +arms they bore were by command of their State; whereupon information +being given to the Senate by the general Camillus, he was forthwith +commanded to march against Tusculum which doing accordingly, he found +the Tusculan fields full of husbandmen, that stirred not otherwise from +the plough than to furnish his army with all kinds of accommodations +and victuals. Drawing near to the city, he saw the gates wide open, the +magistrates coming out in their gowns to salute and bid him welcome; +entering, the shops were all at work, and open, the streets sounded +with the noise of schoolboys at their books; there was no face of war. +Whereupon Camillus, causing the Senate to assemble, told them, that +though the art was understood, yet had they at length found out the true +arms whereby the Romans were most undoubtedly to be conquered, for +which cause he would not anticipate the Senate, to which he desired them +forthwith to send, which they did accordingly; and their dictator with +the rest of their ambassadors being found by the Roman senators as +they went into the house standing sadly at the door were sent for in as +friends, and not as enemies; where the dictator having said, "If we +have offended, the fault was not so great as is our penitence and your +virtue," the Senate gave them peace forthwith, and soon after made the +Tusculans citizens of Rome. + +But putting the case, of which the world is not able to show an example, +that the forfeiture of a populous nation, not conquered, but friends, +and in cool blood, might be taken, your army must be planted in one of +the ways mentioned. To plant it in the way of absolute monarchy, that +is, upon feuds for life, such as the Timars, a country as large and +fruitful as that of Greece, would afford you but 16,000 Timariots, for +that is the most the Turk (being the best husband that ever was of +this kind) makes of it at this day: and if Oceana, which is less in +fruitfulness by one-half, and in extent by three parts, should have no +greater a force, whoever breaks her in one battle, may be sure she shall +never rise; for such (as was noted by Machiavel) is the nature of the +Turkish monarchy, if you break it in two battles, you have destroyed its +whole militia, and the rest being all slaves, you hold it without any +further resistance. Wherefore the erection of an absolute monarchy in +Oceana, or in any other country that is no larger, without making it a +certain prey to the first invader is altogether impossible. + +To plant by halves, as the Roman emperors did their beneficiaries, +or military colonies, it must be either for life; and this an army of +Oceaners in their own country, especially having estates of inheritance, +will never bear because such an army so planted is as well confiscated +as the people; nor had the Mamelukes been contented with such usage in +Egypt, but that they were foreigners, and daring not to mix with the +natives, it was of absolute necessity to their being. + +Or planting them upon inheritance, whether aristocratically as the +Neustrians, or democratically as the Israelites, they grow up by certain +consequences into the national interest, and this, if they be planted +popularly, comes to a commonwealth; if by way of nobility, to a mixed +monarchy, which of all other will be found to be the only kind of +monarchy whereof this nation, or any other that is of no greater +extent, has been or can be capable; for if the Israelites, though their +democratical balance, being fixed by their agrarian, stood firm, be yet +found to have elected kings, it was because, their territory lying open, +they were perpetually invaded, and being perpetually invaded, turned +themselves to anything which, through the want of experience, they +thought might be a remedy; whence their mistake in election of their +kings, under whom they gained nothing, but, on the contrary, lost all +they had acquired by their commonwealth, both estates and liberties, is +not only apparent, but without parallel. And if there have been, as +was shown, a kingdom of the Goths in Spain, and of the Vandals in Asia, +consisting of a single person and a Parliament (taking a parliament to +be a council of the people only, without a nobility), it is expressly +said of those councils that they deposed their kings as often as they +pleased; nor can there be any other consequence of such a government, +seeing where there is a council of the people they do never receive +laws, but give them; and a council giving laws to a single person, he +has no means in the world whereby to be any more than a subordinate +magistrate but force: in which case he is not a single person and a +parliament, but a single person and an army, which army again must be +planted as has been shown, or can be of no long continuance. + +It is true, that the provincial balance bring in nature quite contrary +to the national, you are no way to plant a provincial army upon +dominion. But then you must have a native territory in strength, +situation, or government, able to overbalance the foreign, or you can +never hold it. That an army should in any other case be long supported +by a mere tax, is a mere fancy as void of all reason and experience as +if a man should think to maintain such a one by robbing of orchards; for +a mere tax is but pulling of plum-trees, the roots whereof are in other +men's grounds, who, suffering perpetual violence, come to hate the +author of it; and it is a maxim, that no prince that is hated by his +people can be safe. Arms planted upon dominion extirpate enemies and +make friends; but maintained by a mere tax, have enemies that have +roots, and friends that have none. + +To conclude, Oceana, or any other nation of no greater extent, must have +a competent nobility, or is altogether incapable of monarchy; for where +there is equality of estates, there must be equality of power, and where +there is equality of power, there can be no monarchy. + +To come then to the generation of the commonwealth. It has been shown +how, through the ways and means used by Panurgus to abase the nobility, +and so to mend that flaw which we have asserted to be incurable in this +kind of constitution, he suffered the balance to fall into the power of +the people, and so broke the government; but the balance being in the +people, the commonwealth (though they do not see it) is already in the +nature of them. There wants nothing else but time, which is slow +and dangerous, or art, which would be more quick and secure, for the +bringing those native arms, wherewithal they are found already, to +resist, they know not how, everything that opposes them, to such +maturity as may fix them upon their own strength and bottom. + +But whereas this art is prudence, and that part of prudence which +regards the present work is nothing else but the skill of raising such +superstructures of government as are natural to the known foundations, +they never mind the foundation, but through certain animosities, +wherewith by striving one against another they are infected, or through +freaks, by which, not regarding the course of things, nor how they +conduce to their purpose, they are given to building in the air, come to +be divided and subdivided into endless parties and factions, both civil +and ecclesiastical, which, briefly to open, I shall first speak of the +people in general, and then of their divisions. + +A people, says Machiavel, that is corrupt, is not capable of a +commonwealth. But in showing what a corrupt people is, he has either +involved himself, or me; nor can I otherwise come out of the labyrinth, +than by saying, the balance altering a people, as to the foregoing +government, must of necessity be corrupt; but corruption in this sense +signifies no more than that the corruption of one government, as in +natural bodies, is the generation of another. Wherefore if the balance +alters from monarchy, the corruption of the people in this case is +that which makes them capable of a commonwealth. But whereas I am not +ignorant that the corruption which he means is in manners, this also is +from the balance. For the balance leading from monarchical into popular +abates the luxury of the nobility, and, enriching the people, brings the +government from a more private to a more public interest which coming +nearer, as has been shown, to justice and right reason, the people upon +a like alteration is so far from such a corruption of manners as should +render them incapable of a commonwealth, that of necessity they must +thereby contract such a reformation of manners as will bear no other +kind of government. On the other side, where the balance changes from +popular to oligarchical or monarchical, the public interest, with the +reason and justice included in the sane, becomes more private; luxury is +introduced in the room of temperance, and servitude in that of freedom, +which causes such a corruption of manners both in the nobility and +people, as, by the example of Rome in the time of the Triumvirs, is more +at large discovered by the author to have been altogether incapable of a +commonwealth. + +But the balance of Oceana changing quite contrary to that of Rome, the +manners of the people were not thereby corrupted, but, on the contrary, +adapted to a commonwealth. For differences of opinion in a people not +rightly informed of their balance, or a division into parties (while +there is not any common ligament of power sufficient to reconcile or +hold them) is no sufficient proof of corruption. Nevertheless, seeing +this must needs be matter of scandal and danger, it will not be amiss, +in showing what were the parties, to show what were their errors. + +The parties into which this nation was divided, were temporal or +spiritual; and the temporal parties were especially two, the one +royalists, the other republicans, each of which asserted their different +causes, either out of prudence or ignorance, out of interest or +conscience. + +For prudence, either that of the ancients is inferior to the modern, +which we have hitherto been setting face to face, that anyone may judge, +or that of the royalist must be inferior to that of the commonwealths +man. And for interest, taking the commonwealths man to have really +intended the public, for otherwise he is a hypocrite and the worst of +men, that of the royalist must of necessity have been more private. +Wherefore, the whole dispute will come upon matter of conscience, and +this, whether it be urged by the right of kings, the obligation of +former laws, or of the oath of allegiance, is absolved by the balance. + +For if the right of kings were as immediately derived from the breath +of God as the life of man, yet this excludes not death and dissolution. +But, that the dissolution of the late monarchy was as natural as the +death of man, has been already shown. Wherefore it remains with the +royalists to discover by what reason or experience it is possible for a +monarchy to stand upon a popular balance; or, the balance being popular, +as well the oath of allegiance, as all other monarchical laws, imply an +impossibility, and are therefore void. + +To the commonwealths man I have no more to say, but that if he excludes +any party, he is not truly such, nor shall ever found a commonwealth +upon the natural principle of the same, which is justice. And the +royalist for having not opposed a commonwealth in Oceana, where the +laws were so ambiguous that they might be eternally disputed and never +reconciled, can neither be justly for that cause excluded from his full +and equal share in the government; nor prudently for this reason, that +a commonwealth consisting of a party will be in perpetual labor for her +own destruction: whence it was that the Romans, having conquered the +Albans, incorporated them with equal right into the commonwealth. And +if the royalists be "flesh of your flesh," and nearer of blood than were +the Albans to the Romans, you being also both Christians, the argument +is the stronger. Nevertheless there is no reason that a commonwealth +should any more favor a party remaining in fixed opposition against it, +than Brutus did his own sons. But if it fixes them upon that opposition, +it is its own fault, not theirs; and this is done by excluding them. Men +that have equal possessions and the same security for their estates and +their liberties that you have, have the same cause with you to defend +both; but if you will liberty, though for monarchy; and be trampling, +they fight for you for tyranny, though under the name of a commonwealth: +the nature of orders in a government rightly instituted being void of +all jealousy, because, let the parties which it embraces be what they +will, its orders are such as they neither would resist if they could, +nor could if they would, as has been partly already shown, and will +appear more at large by the following model. + +The parties that are spiritual are of more kinds than I need mention; +some for a national religion, and others for liberty of conscience, +with such animosity on both sides, as if these two could not consist +together, and of which I have already sufficiently spoken, to show that +indeed the one cannot well subsist without the other But they of all the +rest are the most dangerous, who, holding that the saints must govern, +go about to reduce the commonwealth to a party, as well for the reasons +already shown, as that their pretences are against Scripture, where the +saints are commanded to submit to the higher powers, and to be subject +to the ordinance of man. And that men, pretending under the notion +of saints or religion to civil power, have hitherto never failed to +dishonor that profession, the world is full of examples, whereof I shall +confine myself at present only to a couple, the one of old, the other of +new Rome. + +In old Rome, the patricians or nobility pretending to be the godly +party, were questioned by the people for engrossing all the magistracies +of that commonwealth, and had nothing to say why they did so, but that +magistracy required a kind of holiness which was not in the people; +at which the people were filled with such indignation as had come to +cutting of throats, if the nobility had not immediately laid by the +insolency of that plea; which nevertheless when they had done, the +people for a long time after continued to elect no other but patrician +magistrates. + +The example of new Rome in the rise and practice of the hierarchy (too +well known to require any further illustration) is far more immodest. + +This has been the course of nature; and when it has pleased or shall +please God to introduce anything that is above the course of nature, +he will, as he has always done, confirm it by miracle; for so in his +prophecy of the reign of Christ upon earth he expressly promises, seeing +that "the souls of them that were beheaded for Jesus, shall be seen to +live and reign with him;" which will be an object of sense, the rather, +because the rest of the dead are not to live again till the thousand +years be finished. And it is not lawful for men to persuade us that a +thing already is, though there be no such object of our sense, which God +has told us shall not be till it be an object of our sense. + +The saintship of a people as to government, consists in the election +of magistrates fearing God, and hating covetousness, and not in their +confining themselves, or being confined, to men of this or that party or +profession. It consists in making the most prudent and religious choice +they can; yet not in trusting to men, but, next God, to their own +orders. "Give us good men, and they will make us good laws," is the +maxim of a demagogue, and is (through the alteration which is commonly +perceivable in men, when they have power to work their own wills) +exceeding fallible. But "give us good orders, and they will make us +good men," is the maxim of a legislator, and the most infallible in the +politics. + +But these divisions (however there be some good men that look sadly on +them) are trivial things; first as to the civil concern, because the +government, whereof this nation is capable, being once seen, takes +in all interests. And, secondly, as to the spiritual; because as the +pretence of religion has always been turbulent in broken governments, so +where the government has been sound and steady, religion has never +shown itself with any other face than that of its natural sweetness +and tranquillity, nor is there any reason why it should, wherefore +the errors of the people are occasioned by their governors. If they +be doubtful of the way, or wander from it, it is because their guides +misled them; and the guides of the people are never so well qualified +for leading by any virtue of their own, as by that of the government. + +The government of Oceana (as it stood at the time whereof we discourse, +consisting of one single Council of the people, exclusively of the King +and the Lords) was called a Parliament: nevertheless the parliaments of +the Teutons and of the Neustrians consisted, as has been shown, of the +King, lords, and commons; wherefore this, under an old name, was a +new thing a parliament consisting of a single assembly elected by the +people, and invested with the whole power of the government, without +any covenants, conditions, or orders whatsoever. So new a thing, that +neither ancient nor modern prudence can show any avowed example of the +like. And there is scarce anything that seems to me so strange as that +(whereas there was nothing more familiar with these councillors than to +bring the Scripture to the house) there should not be a man of them that +so much as offered to bring the house to the Scripture, wherein, as +has been shown, is contained that original, whereof all the rest of the +commonwealths seem to be copies. Certainly if Leviathan (who is surer +of nothing than that a popular commonwealth consists but of one council) +transcribed his doctrine out of this assembly, for him to except against +Aristotle and Cicero for writing out of their own commonwealths was not +so fair play; or if the Parliament transcribed out of him, it had been +an honor better due to Moses. But where one of them should have an +example but from the other, I cannot imagine, there being nothing of +this kind that I can find in story, but the oligarchy of Athens, the +Thirty Tyrants of the same, and the Roman Decemvirs. + +For the oligarchy, Thucydides tells us, that it was a Senate or council +of 400, pretending to a balancing council of the people consisting of +5,000, but not producing them; wherein you have the definition of +an oligarchy, which is a single council both debating and resolving, +dividing and choosing, and what that must come to was shown by the +example of the girls, and is apparent by the experience of all times; +wherefore the thirty set up by the Lacedaemonians (when they had +conquered Athens) are called tyrants by all authors, Leviathan only +excepted, who will have them against all the world to have been an +aristocracy, but for what reason I cannot imagine; these also, as void +of any balance, having been void of that which is essential to every +commonwealth, whether aristocratical or popular, except he be pleased +with them, because that, according to the testimony of Xenophon, they +killed more men in eight months than the Lacedaemonians had done in ten +years; "oppressing the people (to use Sir Walter Raleigh's words) with +all base and intolerable slavery." + +The usurped government of the Decemvirs in Rome was of the same kind. +Wherefore in the fear of God let Christian legislators (setting the +pattern given in the Mount on the one side, and these execrable examples +on the other) know the right hand from the left; and so much the rather, +because those things which do not conduce to the good of the governed +are fallacious, if they appear to be good for the governors. God, in +chastising a people, is accustomed to burn his rod. The empire of these +oligarchies was not so violent as short, nor did they fall upon the +people, but in their own immediate ruin. A council without a balance is +not a commonwealth, but an oligarchy; and every oligarchy, except it +be put to the defence of its wickedness or power against some outward +danger, is factious. Wherefore the errors of the people being from their +governors (which maxim in the politics bearing a sufficient testimony to +itself, is also proved by Machiavel), if the people of Oceana have been +factious, the cause is apparent, but what remedy? + +In answer to this question, I come now to the army, of which the most +victorious captain and incomparable patriot, Olphaus Megaletor, was now +general, who being a much greater master of that art whereof I have made +a rough draught in these preliminaries, had such sad reflections upon +the ways and proceedings of the Parliament as cast him upon books and +all other means of diversion, among which he happened on this place of +Machiavel: "Thrice happy is that people which chances to have a man able +to give them such a government at once, as without alteration may secure +them of their liberties; seeing it was certain that Lacedaemon, in +observing the laws of Lycurgus, continued about 800 years without any +dangerous tumult or corruption." My lord general (as it is said +of Themistocles, that he could not sleep for the glory obtained by +Miltiades at the battle of Marathon) took so new and deep an impression +at these words of the much greater glory of Lycurgus, that, being on +this side assaulted with the emulation of his illustrious object, and on +the other with the misery of the nation, which seemed (as it were +ruined by his victory) to cast itself at his feet, he was almost wholly +deprived of his natural rest, till the debate he had within himself came +to a firm resolution, that the greatest advantages of a commonwealth +are, first, that the legislator should be one man; and, secondly, that +the government should be made all together, or at once. For the first, +it is certain, says Machiavel, that a commonwealth is seldom or never +well turned or constituted, except it has been the work of one man; for +which cause a wise legislator, and one whose mind is firmly set, not +upon private but the public interest, not upon his posterity but upon +his country, may justly endeavor to get the sovereign power into his +own hands, nor shall any man that is master of reason blame such +extraordinary means as in that case will be necessary, the end proving +no other than the constitution of a well-ordered commonwealth. + +The reason of this is demonstrable; for the ordinary means not failing, +the commonwealth has no need of a legislator, but the ordinary +means failing, there is no recourse to be had but to such as are +extraordinary. And, whereas a book or a building has not been known to +attain to its perfection if it has not had a sole author or architect, a +commonwealth, as to the fabric of it, is of the like nature. And thus +it may be made at once; in which there be great advantages; for a +commonwealth made at once, takes security at the same time it lends +money; and trusts not itself to the faith of men, but launches +immediately forth into the empire of laws, and, being set straight, +brings the manners of its citizens to its rule, whence followed that +uprightness which was in Lacedaemon. But manners that are rooted in men, +bow the tenderness of a commonwealth coming up by twigs to their bent, +whence followed the obliquity that was in Rome, and those perpetual +repairs by the consuls' axes, and tribunes' hammers, which could never +finish that commonwealth but in destruction. + +My lord general being clear in these points, and of the necessity +of some other course than would be thought upon by the Parliament, +appointed a meeting of the army, where he spoke his sense agreeable +to these preliminaries with such success to the soldiery, that the +Parliament was soon after deposed; had he himself, in the great hall +of the Pantheon or palace of justice, situated in Emporium, the capital +city, was created by the universal suffrage of the army, Lord Archon, or +sole legislator of Oceana, upon which theatre you have, to conclude this +piece, a person introduced, whose fame shall never draw its curtain. + +The Lord Archon being created, fifty select persons to assist him, +by laboring in the mines of ancient prudence, and bringing its hidden +treasures to new light, were added, with the style also of legislators, +and sat as a council, whereof he was the sole director and president. + + + + +PART II. THE COUNCIL OF LEGISLATORS + +OF this piece, being the greater half of the whole work, I shall be able +at this time to give no further account, than very briefly to show at +what it aims. + +My Lord Archon, in opening the Council of legislators, made it +appear how unsafe a thing it is to follow fancy in the fabric of a +commonwealth; and how necessary that the archives of ancient prudence +should be ransacked before any councillor should presume to offer any +other matter in order to the work in hand, or toward the consideration +to be had by the Council upon a model of government. Wherefore he caused +an urn to be brought, and every one of the councillors to draw a lot. By +the lots as they were drawn, + + The Commonwealth of Fell to + + Israel...... Phosphorus de Auge + Athens..... Navarchus de Paralo + Lacedaemon..... Laco de Scytale + Carthage.. Mago de Syrtibus + The Achaeans, AEtolians, and Lycians....Aratus de Isthmo + The Switz Alpester de Fulmine + Holland and the United Provinces Glaucus de Ulna + Rome...... Dolabella de Enyo + Venice..... Lynceus de Stella + +These contained in them all those excellencies whereof a commonwealth +is capable; so that to have added more had been to no purpose. Upon +time given to the councillors, by their own studies and those of their +friends, to prepare themselves, they were opened in the order, and by +the persons mentioned at the Council of legislators, and afterward by +order of the same were repeated at the council of the prytans to the +people; for in drawing of the lots, there were about a dozen of them +inscribed with the letter P, whereby the councillors that drew them +became prytans. + +The prytans were a committee or council sitting in the great hall of +Pantheon, to whom it was lawful for any man to offer anything in order +to the fabric of the commonwealth; for which cause, that they might not +be oppressed by the throng, there was a rail about the table where they +sat, and on each side of the same a pulpit; that on the right hand for +any man that would propose anything, and that on the left for any +other that would oppose him. And all parties (being indemnified by +proclamation of the Archon) were invited to dispute their own interests, +or propose whatever they thought fit (in order to the future government) +to the council of the prytans, who, having a guard of about two or three +hundred men, lest the heat of dispute might break the peace, had +the right of moderators, and were to report from time to time such +propositions or occurrences as they thought fit, to the Council of +legislators sitting more privately in the palace called Alma. + +This was that which made the people (who were neither safely to +be admitted, nor conveniently to be excluded in the framing of the +commonwealth) verily believe, when it came forth, that it was no other +than that whereof they themselves had been the makers. + +Moreover, this Council sat divers months after the publishing and during +the promulgation of the model to the people; by which means there is +scarce anything was said or written for or against the said model but +you shall have it with the next impression of this work, by way of +oration addressed to and moderated by the prytans. + +By this means the Council of legislators had their necessary solitude +and due aim in their greater work, as being acquainted from time to time +with the pulse of the people, and yet without any manner of interruption +or disturbance. + +Wherefore every commonwealth in its place having been opened by due +method--that is, first, by the people; secondly, by the Senate; and, +thirdly, by the magistracy-the Council upon mature debate took such +results or orders out of each, and out of every part of each of them, +as upon opening the same they thought fit; which being put from time to +time in writing by the clerk or secretary, there remained no more in +the conclusion, than putting the orders so taken together, to view and +examine them with a diligent eye, that it might be clearly discovered +whether they did interfere, or could anywise come to interfere or jostle +one with the other. For as such orders jostling or coming to jostle one +another are the certain dissolution of the commonwealth, so, taken upon +the proof of like experience, and neither jostling nor showing which way +they can possibly come to jostle one another, they make a perfect +and (for aught that in human prudence can be foreseen) an immortal +commonwealth. + +And such was the art whereby my Lord Archon (taking council of +the Commonwealth of Israel, as of Moses; and of the rest of the +commonwealths, as of Jethro) framed the model of the Commonwealth of +Oceana. + + + + +PART III. THE MODEL OF THE COMMONWEALTH OF OCEANA + +WHEREAS my Lord Archon, being from Moses and Lycurgus the first +legislator that hitherto is found in history to have introduced or +erected an entire commonwealth at once, happened, like them also, to be +more intent upon putting the same into execution or action, than into +writing; by which means the model came to be promulgated or published +with more brevity and less illustration than are necessary for their +understanding who have not been acquainted with the whole proceedings +of the Council of legislators, and of the prytans, where it was asserted +and cleared from all objections and doubts: to the end that I may supply +what was wanting in the promulgated epitome to a more full and +perfect narrative of the whole, I shall rather take the commonwealth +practically; and as it has now given an account of itself in some years' +revolutions (as Dicearchus is said to have done that of Lacedaemon, +first transcribed by his hand some three or four hundred years after +the institution), yet not omitting to add for proof to every order such +debates and speeches of the legislators in their Council, or at least +such parts of them as may best discover the reason of the government; +nor such ways and means as were used in the institution or rise of the +building, not to be so well conceived, without some knowledge given of +the engines wherewithal the mighty weight was moved. But through the +entire omission of the Council of legislators or workmen that squared +every stone to this structure in the quarries of ancient prudence, the +proof of the first part of this discourse will be lame, except I +insert, as well for illustration as to avoid frequent repetition, three +remarkable testimonies in this place. + +The first is taken out of the Commonwealth of Israel: "So Moses +hearkened to the voice of Jethro, his father-in-law, and did all that +he had said. And Moses chose able men out of all Israel, and made them +heads over the people;" tribunes, as it is in the vulgar Latin; or +phylarchs, that is, princes of the tribes, sitting upon twelve thrones, +and judging the twelve tribes of Israel; and next to these he chose +rulers of thousands, rulers of hundreds, rulers of fifties, and rulers +of tens, which were the steps and rise of this commonwealth from its +foundation or root to its proper elevation or accomplishment in the +Sanhedrim, and the congregation, already opened in the preliminaries. + +The second is taken out of Lacedaemon, as Lycurgus (for the greater +impression of his institutions upon the minds of his citizens) pretended +to have received the model of that commonwealth from the oracle of +Apollo at Delphos, the words whereof are thus recorded by Plutarch in +the life of that famous legislator: "When thou shalt have divided the +people into tribes (which were six) and oboe (which were five in every +tribe), thou shalt constitute the Senate, consisting, with the two +Kings, of thirty councillors, who, according as occasion requires, shall +cause the congregation to be assembled between the bridge and the river +Gnacion, where the Senate shall propose to the people, and dismiss them +without suffering them to debate." The oboe were lineages into which +every tribe was divided, and in each tribe there was another division +containing all those of the same that were of military age, which being +called the mora, was subdivided into troops and companies that were kept +in perpetual discipline under the command of a magistrate called the +polemarch. + +The third is taken out of the Commonwealth of Rome, or those parts of +it which are comprised in the first and second books of Livy, where the +people, according to the institution by Romulus, are first divided into +thirty curias or parishes, whereof he elected, by three out of each +curia, the Senate, which, from his reign to that or Servius Tullius, +proposed to the parishes or parochial congregations; and these +being called the Comitia curiata, had the election of the kings, +the confirmation of their laws, and the last appeal in matters of +judicature, as appears in the case of Horatius that killed his sister; +till, in the reign of Servius (for the other kings kept not to the +institution of Romulus), the people being grown somewhat, the power +of the Curiata was for the greater part translated to the Centuriata +comitia instituted by this King, which distributed the people, according +to the sense of valuation of their estates, into six classes, every one +containing about forty centuries, divided into youth and elders; the +youth for field-service, the elders for the defence of their territory, +all armed and under continual discipline, in which they assembled both +upon military and civil occasions. But when the Senate proposed to the +people, the horse only, whereof there were twelve centuries, consisting +of the richest sort over and above those of the foot enumerated, were +called with the first classes of the foot to the suffrage; or if these +accorded not, then the second classes were called to them, but seldom or +never any of the rest. Wherefore the people, after the expulsion of the +kings, growing impatient of this inequality, rested not till they had +reduced the suffrage as it had been in the Comitia curiato to the +whole people again; but in another way, that is to say, by the Comitia +tributa, which thereupon were instituted, being a council where the +people in exigencies made laws without the Senate, which laws were +called plebiscita. This Council is that in regard whereof Cicero and +other great wits so frequently inveigh against the people, and sometimes +even Livy as at the first institution of it. To say the truth, it was a +kind of anarchy, whereof the people could not be excusable, if there had +not, through the courses taken by the Senate, been otherwise a necessity +that they must have seen the commonwealth run into oligarchy. + +The manner how the Comitia curiata, centuriata or tributa were called, +during the time of the commonwealth, to the suffrage, was by lot: the +curia, century, or tribe, whereon the first lot fell, being styled +principium, or the prerogative; and the other curioe, centuries or +tribes, whereon the second, third, and fourth lots, etc., fell, the +jure vocatoe. From henceforth not the first classes, as in the times +of Servius, but the prerogative, whether curia, century, or tribe, came +first to the suffrage, whose vote was called omen proerogativum, and +seldom failed to be leading to the rest of the tribes. The jure vocatoe, +in the order of their lots, came next: the manner of giving suffrage +was, by casting wooden tablets, marked for the affirmative or the +negative, into certain urns standing upon a scaffold, as they marched +over it in files, which for the resemblance it bore was called the +bridge. The candidate, or competitor, who had most suffrages in a curia, +century, or tribe, was said to have that curia, century, or tribe; +and he who had most of the curioe, centuries, or tribes, carried the +magistracy. + +These three places being premised, as such upon which there will be +frequent reflection, I come to the narrative, divided into two parts, +the first containing the institution, the second the constitution of the +commonwealth, in each whereof I shall distinguish the orders, as those +which contain the whole model, from the rest of the discourse, which +tends only to the explanation or proof of them. + +In the institution or building of a commonwealth, the first work, as +that of builders, can be no other than fitting and distributing the +materials. + +The materials of a commonwealth are the people, and the people of Oceana +were distributed by casting them into certain divisions, regarding their +quality, their age, their wealth, and the places of their residence or +habitation, which was done by the ensuing orders. + +The first order "distributes the people into freemen or citizens and +servants, while such; for if they attain to liberty, that is, to live of +themselves, they are freemen or citizens." + +This order needs no proof, in regard of the nature of servitude, which +is inconsistent with freedom, or participation of government in a +commonwealth. + +The second order "distributes citizens into youth and elders (such as +are from eighteen years of age to thirty, being accounted youth; and +such as are of thirty and upward, elders), and establishes that +the youth shall be the marching armies, and the elders the standing +garrisons of this nation." + + A commonwealth, whose arms are in the hands of her +servants, had need be situated, as is elegantly said of Venice by +Contarini, out of the reach of their clutches; witness the danger run +by that of Carthage in the rebellion of Spendius and Matho. But though +a city, if one swallow makes a summer, may thus chance to be safe, yet +shall it never be great; for if Carthage or Venice acquired any fame +in their arms, it is known to have happened through the mere virtue of +their captains, and not of their orders; wherefore Israel, Lacedaemon, +and Rome entailed their arms upon the prime of their citizens, divided, +at least in Lacedaemon and Rome, into youth and elders: the youth for +the field, and the elders for defence of the territory. + +The third order "distributes the citizens into horse and foot, by the +sense or valuation of their estates; they who have above L100 a year in +lands, goods, or moneys, being obliged to be of the horse, and they +who have under that sum to be of the foot. But if a man has prodigally +wasted and spent his patrimony, he is neither capable of magistracy, +office, or suffrage in the commonwealth." + +Citizens are not only to defend the commonwealth, but according to their +abilities, as the Romans under Servius Tullius (regard had to their +estates), were some enrolled in the horse centuries, and others of the +foot, with arms enjoined accordingly, nor could it be otherwise in the +rest of the commonwealths, though out of historical remains, that are +so much darker, it be not so clearly probable. And the necessary +prerogative to be given by a commonwealth to estates, is in some measure +in the nature of industry, and the use of it to the public. "The Roman +people," says Julius Exuperantius, "were divided into classes, and taxed +according to the value of their estates. All that were worth the sums +appointed were employed in the wars; for they most eagerly contend +for the victory; who fight for liberty in defence of their country and +possessions. But the poorer sort were polled only for their heads (which +was all they had) and kept in garrison at home in time of war; for these +might betray the armies for bread, by reason of their poverty, which is +the reason that Marius, to whom the care of the government ought not to +have been committed, was the first that led them into the field;" and +his success was accordingly. There is a mean in things; as exorbitant +riches overthrow the balance of a commonwealth, so extreme poverty +cannot hold it, nor is by any means to be trusted with it. The clause in +the order concerning the prodigal is Athenian, and a very laudable one; +for he that could not live upon his patrimony, if he comes to touch the +public money, makes a commonwealth bankrupt. + +The fourth order "distributes the people according to the places of +their habitation, into parishes, hundreds, and tribes." + +For except the people be methodically distributed, they cannot be +methodically collected; but the being of a commonwealth consists in the +methodical collection of the people: wherefore you have the Israelitish +divisions into rulers of thousands, of hundreds, of fifties, and of +tens; and of the whole commonwealth into tribes: the Laconic into oboe, +moras, and tribes; the Roman into tribes, centuries, and classes; and +something there must of necessity be in every government of the like +nature, as that in the late monarchy--by counties. But this being the +only institution in Oceana, except that of the agrarian, which required +any charge or included any difficulty, engages me to a more particular +description of the manner how it was performed, as follows: + +A thousand surveyors, commissioned and instructed by the Lord Archon +and the Council, being divided into two equal numbers, each under the +inspection of two surveyors-general, were distributed into the northern +and southern parts of the territory, divided by the river Hemisua, the +whole whereof contains about 10,000 parishes, some ten of those being +assigned to each surveyor; for as to this matter there needed no great +exactness, it tending only by showing whither everyone was to, begin, to +the more orderly carrying repair and whereabout to on of the work; the +nature of their instructions otherwise regarding rather the number of +the inhabitants than of the parishes. The surveyors, therefore, being +every one furnished with a convenient proportion of urns, balls, +and balloting-boxes--in the use whereof they had been formerly +exercised--and now arriving each at his respective parish, being with +the people by teaching them their first lesson, which was the ballot; +and though they found them in the beginning somewhat froward, as at +toys, with which, while they were in expectation of greater matters from +a Council of legislators, they conceived themselves to be abused, they +came within a little while to think them pretty sport, and at length +such as might very soberly be used in good earnest; whereupon the +surveyors began the institution included in-- + +The first order, requiring "That upon the first Monday next ensuing the +last of December the bigger bell in every parish throughout the nation +be rung at eight of the clock in the morning, and continue ringing +for the space of one hour; and that all the elders of the parish +respectively repair to the church before the bell has done ringing, +where, dividing themselves into two equal numbers, or as near equal as +may be, they shall take their places according to their dignities, if +they be of divers qualities, and according to their seniority, if they +be of the same, the one half on the one side, and the other half on the +other, in the body of the church, which done, they shall make oath to +the overseers of the parish for the time being (instead of these the +surveyors were to officiate at the institution, or first assembly) by +holding up their hands, to make a fair election according to the laws of +the ballot, as they are hereafter explained, of such persons, amounting +to a fifth part of their whole number, to be their deputies, and to +exercise their power in manner hereafter explained, as they shall think +in their consciences to be fittest for that trust, and will acquit +themselves of it to the best advantage of the commonwealth. And oath +being thus made, they shall proceed to election, if the elders of the +parish amount to 1,000 by the ballot of the tribe, as it is in due place +explained, and if the elders of the parish amount to fifty or upward, +but within the number of 1,000, by the ballot of the hundred, as it is +in due place explained. But, if the elders amount not to fifty, then +they shall proceed to the ballot of the parish, as it is in this place +and after this manner explained. + +"The two overseers for the time being shall seat themselves at the upper +end of the middle alley, with a table before them, their faces being +toward the congregation, and the constable for the time being shall set +an urn before the table, into which he shall put so many balls as there +be elders present, whereof there shall be one that is gilded, the rest +being white; and when the constable has shaken the urn, sufficiently to +mix the balls, the overseers shall call the elders to the urn, who from +each side of the church shall come up the middle alley in two files, +every man passing by the urn, and drawing out one ball; which, if it be +silver, he shall cast into a bowl standing at the foot of the urn, and +return by the outward alley on his side to his place. But he who +draws the golden ball is the proposer, and shall be seated between the +overseers, where he shall begin in what order he pleases, and name such +as, upon his oath already taken, he conceives fittest to be chosen, +one by one, to the elders; and the party named shall withdraw while the +congregation is balloting his name by the double box or boxes appointed +and marked on the outward part, to show which side is affirmative +and which negative, being carried by a boy or boys appointed by the +overseers, to every one of the elders, who shall hold up a pellet made +of linen rags between his finger and his thumb, and put it after such +a manner into the box, as though no man can see into which side he puts +it, yet any man may see that he puts in but one pellet or suffrage. And +the suffrage of the congregation being thus, given, shall be returned +with the box or boxes to the overseers, who opening the same, shall pour +the affirmative balls into a white bowl standing upon the table on the +right hand, to be numbered by the first overseer; and the negative into +a green bowl standing on the left hand, to be numbered by the second +overseer; and the suffrages being numbered, he who has the major part in +the affirmative is one of the deputies of the parish, and when so many +deputies are chosen as amount to a full fifth part of the whole number +of the elders, the ballot for that time shall cease. The deputies being +chosen are to be listed by the overseers in order as they were chosen, +except only that such as are horse must be listed in the first place +with the rest, proportionable to the number of the congregation, after +this manner." + +Anno Domini + + + THE LIST OF THE FIRST MOVER + + A.A. Equestrian Order, First Deputy + B.B. Second Deputy, + C.C. Third Deputy, + D.D. Fourth Deputy, + E.E. Fifty Deputy, + + Of the parish of in the hundred of and the tribe + of, which parish at the present election contains twenty + elders, whereof one is of the horse or equestrian order. + +"The first and second in the list are overseers by consequence; the +third is the constable, and the fourth and fifth are churchwardens; the +persons so chosen are deputies of the parish for the space of one year +from their election, and no longer, nor may they be elected two years +together. This list, being the primum mobile, or first mover of +the commonwealth, is to be registered in a book diligently kept and +preserved by the overseers, who are responsible in their places, for +these and other duties to be hereafter mentioned, to the censors of the +tribe; and the congregation is to observe the present order, as they +will answer the contrary to the phylarch, or prerogative troop of the +tribe, which, in case of failure in the whole or any part of it, have +power to fine them or any of them at discretion, but under an appeal to +the Parliament." + +For proof of this order, first, in reason, it is with all politicians +past dispute that paternal power is in the right of nature; and this is +no other than the derivation of power from fathers of families as the +natural root of a commonwealth. And for experience, if it be otherwise +in that of Holland, I know no other example of the like kind. In Israel, +the sovereign power came clearly from the natural root, the elders of +the whole people; and Rome was born, Comitiis curiatis, in her parochial +congregations, out of which Romulus first raised her Senate, then all +the rest of the orders of that commonwealth, which rose so high: for the +depth of a commonwealth is the just height of it-- + + "She raises up her head unto the skies, + Near as her root unto the centre lies." + +And if the Commonwealth of Rome was born of thirty parishes, this of +Oceana was born of 10,000. But whereas mention in the birth of this +is made of an equestrian order, it may startle such as know that the +division of the people of Rome, at the institution of that commonwealth +into orders, was the occasion of its ruin. The distinction of the +patrician as a hereditary order from the very institution, engrossing +all the magistracies, was indeed the destruction of Rome; but to a +knight or one of the equestrian order, says Horace, + + "Si quadringentis sex septem millia desunt, + Plebs eris." + +By which it should seem that this order was not otherwise hereditary +than a man's estate, nor did it give any claim to magistracy; wherefore +you shall never find that it disquieted the commonwealth, nor does the +name denote any more in Oceana than the duty of such a man's estate to +the public. + +But the surveyors, both in this place and in others, forasmuch as they +could not observe all the circumstances of this order, especially that +of the time of election, did for the first as well as they could; and, +the elections being made and registered, took each of them copies +of those lists which were within their allotments, which done they +produced-- + +The sixth order, directing "in case a parson or vicar of a parish comes +to be removed by death or by the censors, that the congregation of the +parish assemble and depute one or two elders by the ballot, who upon +the charge of the parish shall repair to one of the universities of this +nation with a certificate signed by the overseers, and addressed to +the vice-chancellor, which certificate, giving notice of the death +or removal of the parson or vicar, of the value of the parsonage or +vicarage, and of the desire of the congregation to receive a probationer +from that university, the vice-chancellor, upon the receipt thereof, +shall call a convocation, and having made choice of a fit person, shall +return him in due time to the parish, where the person so returned shall +return the full fruits of the benefice or vicarage, and do the duty of +the parson or vicar, for the space of one year, as probationer; and +that being expired, the congregation of the elders shall put their +probationer to the ballot, and if he attains not to two parts in three +of the suffrage affirmative, he shall take his leave of the parish, and +they shall send in like manner as before for another probationer; but +if their probationer obtains two parts in three of the suffrage +affirmative, he is then pastor of that parish. And the pastor of the +parish shall pray with the congregation, preach the Word, and administer +the sacraments to the same, according to the directory to be hereafter +appointed by the Parliament. Nevertheless such as are of gathered +congregations, or from time to time shall join with any of them, are in +no wise obliged to this way of electing their teachers, or to give +their votes in this case, but wholly left to the liberty of their own +consciences, and to that way of worship which they shall choose, being +not popish, Jewish, or idolatrous. And to the end they may be the better +protected by the State in the exercise of the same, they are desired to +make choice, and such manner as they best like, of certain magistrates +in every one of their congregations, which we could wish might be four +in each of them, to be auditors in cases of differences or distaste, if +any through variety of opinions, that may be grievous or injurious to +them, shall fall out. And such auditors or magistrates shall have power +to examine the matter, and inform themselves, to the end that if they +think it of sufficient weight, they may acquaint the phylarch with it, +or introduce it into the Council of Religion; where all such causes +as those magistrates introduce shall from time to time be heard and +determined according to such laws as are or shall hereafter be provided +by the Parliament for the just defence of the liberty of conscience." + +This order consists of three parts, the first restoring the power of +ordination to the people, which, that it originally belongs to them, +is clear, though not in English yet in Scripture, where the apostles +ordained elders by the holding up of hands in every congregation, that +is, by the suffrage of the people, which was also given in some of +those cities by the ballot. And though it may be shown that the apostles +ordained some by the laying on of hands, it will not be shown that they +did so in every congregation. + +Excommunication, as not clearly provable out of the Scripture, being +omitted, the second part of the order implies and establishes a national +religion; for there be degrees of knowledge in divine things; true +religion is not to be learned without searching the Scripture; the +Scriptures cannot be searched by us unless we have them to search; and +if we have nothing else, or (which is all one) understand nothing else +but a translation, we may be (as in the place alleged we have been) +beguiled or misled by the translation, while we should be searching the +true sense of the Scripture, which cannot be attained in a natural way +(and a commonwealth is not to presume upon that which is supernatural) +but by the knowledge of the original and of antiquity, acquired by our +own studies, or those of some others, for even faith comes by hearing. +Wherefore a commonwealth not making provision of men from time to time, +knowing in the original languages wherein the Scriptures were written, +and versed in those antiquities to which they so frequently relate, that +the true sense of them depends in great part upon that knowledge, +can never be secure that she shall not lose the Scripture, and by +consequence her religion; which to preserve she must institute some +method of this knowledge, and some use of such as have acquired it, +which amounts to a national religion. + +The commonwealth having thus performed her duty toward God, as a +rational creature, by the best application of her reason to Scripture, +and for the preservation of religion in the purity of the same, yet +pretends not to infallibility, but comes in the third part of the order, +establishing liberty of conscience according to the instructions given +to her Council of Religion, to raise up her hands to heaven for further +light; in which proceeding she follows that (as was shown in the +preliminaries) of Israel, who, though her national religion was always +a part of her civil law, gave to her prophets the upper hand of all her +orders. + +But the surveyors having now done with the parishes, took their leave; +so a parish is the first division of land occasioned by the first +collection of the people of Oceana, whose function proper to that place +is comprised in the six preceding orders. + +The next step in the progress of the surveyors was to a meeting of the +nearest of them, as their work lay, by twenties; where conferring their +lists, and computing the deputies contained therein, as the number of +them in parishes, being nearest neighbors, amounted to 100, or as even +as might conveniently be brought with that account, they cast them and +those parishes into the precinct which (be the deputies ever since +more or fewer) is still called the hundred; and to every one of these +precincts they appointed a certain place, being the most convenient town +within the same, for the annual rendezvous; which done, each surveyor, +returning to his hundred, and summoning the deputies contained in his +lists to the rendezvous, they appeared and received-- + +The seventh order, requiring, "That upon the first Monday next ensuing +the last of January, the deputies of every parish annually assemble +in arms at the rendezvous of the hundred, and there elect out of their +number one justice of the peace, one juryman, one captain, one ensign of +their troop or century, each of these out of the horse; and one juryman, +one coroner, one high constable, out of the foot. The election to be +made by the ballot in this manner. The jurymen for the time being are +to be overseers of the ballot (instead of these, the surveyors are to +officiate at the first assembly), and to look to the performance of +the same according to what was directed in the ballot of the parishes, +saving that the high constable setting forth the urn shall have five +several suits of gold balls, and one dozen of every suit; whereof the +first shall be marked with the letter A, the second with the letter B, +the third with C, the fourth with D, and the fifth with E: and of each +of these suits he shall cast one ball into his hat, or into a little +urn, and shaking the balls together, present them to the first overseer, +who shall draw one, and the suit which is so drawn by the overseer shall +be of use for that day, and no other; for example, if the overseer drew +an A, the high constable shall put seven gold balls marked with the +letter A into the urn, with so many silver ones as shall bring them +even with the number of the deputies, who being sworn, as before, at +the ballot of the parish to make a fair election, shall be called to the +urn; and every man coming in manner as was there shown, shall draw one +ball, which, if it be silver, he shall cast it into a bowl standing at +the foot of the urn, and return to his place: but the first that draws a +gold ball (showing it to the overseers, who if it has not the letter of +the present ballot, have power to apprehend and punish him) is the first +elector, the second the second elector, and so to the seventh; which +order they are to observe in their function. "The electors as they are +drawn shall be placed upon the bench by the overseers, till the whole +number be complete, and then be conducted, with the list of the officers +to be chosen, into a place apart, where, being private, the first +elector shall name a person to the first office in the list; and if the +person so named, being balloted by the rest of the electors, attains +not to the better half of the suffrages in the affirmative, the first +elector shall continue nominating others, till one of them so nominated +by him attains to the plurality of the suffrages in the affirmative, and +be written first competitor to the first office. This done, the second +elector shall observe in his turn the like order; and so the rest of the +electors, naming competitors each to his respective office in the list, +till one competitor be chosen to every office: and when one competitor +is chosen to every office, the first elector shall begin again to name +a second competitor to the first office, and the rest successively shall +name to the rest of the offices till two competitors be chosen to every +office; the like shall be repeated till three competitors be chosen to +every office. And when three competitors are chosen to every office, the +list shall be returned to the overseers, or such as the overseers, in +case they or either of them happened to be electors, have substituted +in his or their place or places; and the overseers or substitutes +having caused the list to be read to the congregation, shall put +the competitors, in order as they are written, to the ballot of the +congregation; and the rest of the proceedings being carried on in +the manner directed in the fifth order, that competitor, of the three +written to each office, who has most of the suffrages above half in the +affirmative, is the officer. The list being after this manner completed, +shall be entered into a register, to be kept at the rendezvous of the +hundred, under inspection of the magistrates of the same, after the +manner following: + +Anno Domini + + + THE LIST OF THE NEBULOSA + + A.A. Equestrian Order, Justice of the Peace, + B.B. Equestrian Order, First Juryman, + C.C. Equestrian Order, Captain of the Hundred, + D.D. Equestrian Order, Ensign, + E.E. Second Juryman, + F.F. High Constable, + G.G. Coroner, + + Of the hundred of in the tribe of, which hundred + consists at this election of 105 deputies. + +"The list being entered, the high constable shall take three copies of +the same, whereof he shall presently return one to the lord high sheriff +of the tribe, a second to the lord custos rotulorum, and a third to the +censors; or these, through the want of such magistrates at the first +muster, may be returned to the orator, to be appointed for that tribe. +To the observation of all and every part of this order, the officers and +deputies of the hundred are all and every of them obliged, as they will +answer it to the phylarch, who has power, in case of failure in the +whole or any part, to fine all or any of them so failing at discretion, +or according to such laws as shall hereafter be provided in that case, +but under an appeal to the Parliament." There is little in this order +worthy of any further account, but that it answers to the rulers +of hundreds in Israel, to the mora or military part of the tribe in +Lacedaemon, and to the century in Rome. The jurymen, being two in a +hundred, and so forty in a tribe, give the latitude allowed by the law +for exceptions. And whereas the golden balls at this ballot begin to be +marked with letters, whereof one is to be drawn immediately before it +begins, this is to the end that the letter being unknown, men may be +frustrated of tricks or foul play, whereas otherwise a man may bring a +golden ball with him, and make as if he had drawn it out of the urn. The +surveyors, when they had taken copies of these lists, had accomplished +their work in the hundreds. + +So a hundred is the second division of land occasioned by the second +collection of the people, whose civil and military functions proper to +this place are comprised in the foregoing order. + +Having stated the hundreds, they met once again by twenties, where there +was nothing more easy than to cast every twenty hundreds, as they lay +most conveniently together, into one tribe; so the whole territory of +Oceana, consisting of about 10,000 parishes, came to be cast into 1,000 +hundreds, and into fifty tribes. In every tribe at the place appointed +for the annual rendezvous of the same, were then, or soon after begun +those buildings which are now called pavilions; each of them standing +with one open side upon fair columns, like the porch of some ancient +temple, and looking into a field capable of the muster of some 4,000 +men; before each pavilion stand three pillars sustaining urns for +the ballot, that on the right hand equal in height to the brow of +a horseman, being called the horse urn, that on the left hand, with +bridges on either side to bring it equal in height with the brow of a +footman, being called the foot urn, and the middle urn, with a bridge +on the side toward the foot urn, the other side, as left for the horse, +being without one; and here ended the whole work of the surveyors, who +returned to the Lord Archon with this-- + + +ACCOUNT OF THE CHARGE + + Imprimis: Urns, balls, and balloting-boxes for 10,000 parishes, + the same being wooden-ware, L20,000 + Item: Provision of the like kind for a thousand hundreds + + 3,000 + Item: Urns and balls of metal, with balloting-boxes for fifty + tribes, + + 2,000 + Item: For erecting of fifty pavilions, + + 60,000 + Item: Wages for four surveyors-general at L1,000 a man + + 4,000 + Item: Wages for the rest of the surveyors, being 1,000 at L250 a + man + + 250,000 + + Sum Total L339,000 + +This is no great matter of charge for the building of a commonwealth, in +regard that it has cost (which was pleaded by the surveyors) as much +to rig a few ships. Nevertheless that proves not them to be honest, +nor their account to be just; but they had their money for once, though +their reckoning be plainly guilty of a crime, to cost him his neck that +commits it another time, it being impossible for a commonwealth (without +an exact provision that it be not abused in this kind) to subsist; for +if no regard should be had of the charge (though that may go deep), yet +the debauchery and corruption whereto, by negligence in accounts, it +infallibly exposes its citizens, and thereby lessens the public faith, +which is the nerve and ligament of government, ought to be prevented. +But the surveyors being despatched, the Lord Archon was very curious in +giving names to his tribes, which having caused to be written in scrolls +cast into an urn, and presented to the councillors, each of them drew +one, and was accordingly sent to the tribe in his lot, as orators of +the same, a magistracy no otherwise instituted, than for once and pro +tempore, to the end that the council upon so great an occasion might +both congratulate with the tribes, and assist at the first muster in +some things of necessity to be differently carried from the established +administration and future course of the commonwealth. + +The orators being arrived, every one as soon as might be, at the +rendezvous of his tribe, gave notice to the hundreds, and summoned the +muster which appeared for the most part upon good horses, and already +indifferently well armed; as to instance in one for all, the tribe of +Nubia, where Hermes de Caduceo, lord orator of the same, after a short +salutation and a hearty welcome, applied himself to his business, which +began with-- + +The eighth order requiring "That the lord high sheriff as +commander-in-chief, and the lord custos rotulorum as muster-master of +the tribe (or the orator for the first muster), upon reception of the +lists of their hundreds, returned to them by the high constables of the +same, presently cause them to be cast up, dividing the horse from +the foot, and listing the horse by their names in troops, each troop +containing about 100 in number, to be inscribed First, Second, or Third +troop, etc., according to the order agreed upon by the said magistrates; +which done, they shall list the foot in like manner, and inscribe the +companies in like order. These lists upon the eve of the muster shall +be delivered to certain trumpeters and drummers, whereof there shall +be fifteen of each sort (as well for the present as otherwise to be +hereafter mentioned) stipendiated by the tribe. And the trumpeters and +drummers shall be in the field before the pavilion, upon the day of the +muster, so soon as it is light, where they shall stand every one with +his list in his hand, at a due distance, placed according to the order +of the list, the trumpeters with the lists of the horse on the right +hand, and the drummers with the lists of the foot on the left hand; +where having sounded awhile, each of them shall begin to call and +continue calling the names of the deputies, as they come into the field, +till both the horse and foot be gathered by that means into their due +order. The horse and foot being in order, the lord lieutenant of the +tribe shall cast so many gold balls marked with the figures 1, 2, 3, 4, +etc., as there be troops of horse in the field, together with so many +silver balls as there be companies, marked in the same manner, into +a little urn, to which he shall call the captains; and the captains +drawing the gold balls shall command the horse, and those that draw the +silver the foot, each in the order of his lot. The like shall be done by +the conductor at the same time for the ensigns at another urn; and they +that draw the gold balls shall be cornets, the left ensigns." + +This order may puzzle the reader, but tends to a wonderful speed of the +muster, to which it would be a great matter to lose a day in ranging +and marshalling, whereas by virtue of this the tribe is no sooner in the +field than in battalia, nor sooner in battalia than called to the urns +or the ballot by virtue of-- + +The ninth order, "Whereby the censors (or the orator for the first +muster) upon reception of the lists of the hundreds from the high +constables, according as is directed by the seventh order are to make +their notes for the urns beforehand, with regard had to the lists of the +magistrates, to be elected by the ensuing orders, that is to say, by the +first list called the prime magnitude, six; and by the second called the +galaxy, nine. Wherefore the censors are to put into the middle urn for +the election of the first list twenty-four gold balls, with twenty-six +blanks or silver balls, in all sixty; and into the side urns sixty gold +balls, divided into each according to the different number of the horse +and foot; that is to say, if the horse and the foot be equal, equally, +and if the horse and the foot be unequal, unequally, by an arithmetical +proportion. The like shall be done the second day of the muster for +the second list, except that the censors shall put into the middle urn +thirty-six gold balls with twenty-four blanks, in all sixty; and sixty +gold balls into the side urns, divided respectively into the number of +the horse and the foot; and the gold balls in the side urns at either +ballot are by the addition of blanks to be brought even with the +number of the ballotants at either urn respectively. The censors having +prepared their notes, as has been shown, and being come at the day +appointed into the field, shall present a little urn to the lord high +sheriff, who is to draw twice for the letters to be used that day, +the one at the side urns, and the other at the middle. And the censors +having fitted the urns accordingly, shall place themselves in certain +movable seats or pulpits (to be kept for that use in the pavilion) the +first censor before the horse urn, the second before the foot urn, the +lord lieutenant doing the office of censor pro tempore at the middle +urn; where all and every one of them shall cause the laws of the ballot +to be diligently observed, taking a special care that no man be suffered +to come above once to the urn (whereof it more particularly concerns +the sub-censors, that is to say, the overseers of every parish, to be +careful, they being each in this regard responsible for their respective +parishes) or to draw above one ball, which if it be gold, he is to +present to the censor, who shall look upon the letter; and if it be not +that of the day, and of the respective urn, apprehend the party, who for +this or any other like disorder is obnoxious to the phylarch." + +This order being observed by the censors, it is not possible for the +people, if they can but draw the balls, though they understand nothing +at all of the ballot, to be out. To philosophize further upon this art, +though there be nothing more rational, were not worth the while, because +in writing it will be perplexed, and the first practice of it gives +the demonstration; whence it came to pass that the orator, after some +needless pains in the explanation of the two foregoing orders, betaking +himself to exemplify the same, found the work done to his hand, for the +tribe, as eager upon a business of this nature, had retained one of +the surveyors, out of whom (before the orator arrived) they had got the +whole mystery by a stolen muster, at which in order to the ballot they +had made certain magistrates pro tempore. Wherefore he found not only +the pavilion (for this time a tent) erected with three posts, supplying +the place of pillars to the urns, but the urns being prepared with a +just number of balls for the first ballot, to become the field, and the +occasion very gallantly with their covers made in the manner of helmets, +open at either ear to give passage to the hands of the ballotants, and +slanting with noble plumes to direct the march of the people. + +Wherefore he proceeded to-- + +The tenth order, "Requiring of the deputies of the parishes, that upon +every Monday next ensuing the last of February, they make their personal +appearance, horse and foot in arms accordingly, at the rendezvous of +the tribe, where, being in discipline, the horse upon the right, and the +foot upon the left, before the pavilion, and having made oath by holding +up their hands, upon the tender of it by the lord high sheriff, to make +election without favor, and of such only as they shall judge fittest +for the commonwealth, the conductor shill take three balls, the one +inscribed with these words (outward files), another with these words +(inward files), and the third with these (middle files), which balls he +shall cast into a little urn, and present it to the lord high sheriff, +who, drawing one, shall give the words of command, as they are thereupon +inscribed, and the ballot shall begin accordingly. For example, if the +ball be inscribed 'Middle files,' the ballot shall begin by the middle; +that is, the two files that are middle to the horse shall draw out first +to the horse urn, and the two files that are middle to the foot shall +draw out first to the foot urn, and be followed by all the rest of the +files as they are next to them in order. The like shall be done by the +inward, or by the outward files in case they be first called. And the +files, as every man has drawn his ball, if it be silver, shall behind +at the urn to countermarch to their places, but he that has drawn a gold +ball at a side urn shall proceed to the middle urn, where if the balls +he draws be silver he shall also countermarch, but if it be gold he +shall take his place upon a form set across the pavilion, with his face +toward the lord high sheriff, who shall be seated in the middle of the +pavilion, with certain clerks by him, one of which shall write down the +names of every elector, that is, of every one that drew a gold ball at +the middle urn, and in the order his ball was drawn, till the electors +amount to six in number. And the first six electors, horse and foot +promiscuously, are the first order of electors; the second six (still +accounting them as they are drawn) the second order, the third six the +third order, and the fourth six the fourth order of electors; every +elector having place in his order, according to the order wherein he was +drawn. But so soon as the first order of electors is complete, the lord +high sheriff shall send them with a copy of the following list, and a +clerk that understands the ballot, immediately to a little tent standing +before the pavilion in his eye, to which no other person but themselves, +during the election, shall approach. The list shall be written in this +manner:" + +Anno Domini + + + THE LIST OF THE PRIME MAGNITUDE, OR FIRST DAY'S ELECTION OF + MAGISTRATES + + 1. The Lord High Sheriff, Commander-in-Chief, + 2. Lord Lieutenant, + 3. Lord Custos Rotulorum, Muster-Master-General, + 4. The Conductor, being Quarter-master General, + 5. The First Censor, + 6. The Second Censor, + + Of the tribe of Nubia, containing at the present muster 700 horse + and 1,500 foot, in all 22,000 deputies. + +"And the electors of the first band or order, being six, shall each +of them name to his respective magistracy in the left such as are not +already elected in the hundreds, till one competitor be chosen to every +magistracy in the list by the ballot of the electors of the first order, +which done, the list with the competitors thereunto annexed shall be +returned to the lord high sheriff by the clerk attending that order, but +the electors shall keep their places; for they have already given their +suffrage, and may not enter into the ballot of the tribe. If there +arises any dispute in an order of electors, one of the censors or +sub-censors appointed by them in case they be electors, shall enter into +the tent of that order, and that order shall stand to his judgment in +the decision of the controversy. The like shall be done exactly by each +other order of electors, being sent as they are drawn, each with another +copy of the same list, into a distinct tent, till there be returned to +the lord high sheriff four competitors to every magistracy in the list; +that is to say, one competitor elected to every office in every one of +the four orders, which competitors the lord high sheriff shall cause +to be pronounced or read by a crier to the congregation, and the +congregation having heard the whole lists repeated, the names shall be +put by the lord high sheriff to the tribe, one by one, beginning with +the first competitor in the first order, thence proceeding to the first +competitor in the second order, and so to the first in the third and +fourth orders. And the suffrages being taken in boxes by boys (as has +been already shown) shall be poured into the bowls standing before the +censors, who shall be seated at each end of the table in the pavilion, +the one numbering the affirmatives and the other the negatives, and he +of the four competitors to the first magistracy that has most above half +the suffrages of the tribe in the affirmative, is the first magistrate. +The like is to be done successively by the rest of the competitors in +their order. But because soon after the boxes are sent out for the first +name, there be others sent out for the second, and so for the third, +etc., by which means divers names are successively at one and the same +time in balloting; the boy that carries a box shall sing or repeat +continually the name of the competitor for whom that box is carrying, +with that also of the magistracy to which he is proposed. A magistrate +of the tribe happening to be an elector, may substitute any one of his +own order to execute his other function. The magistrates of the prime +magnitude being thus elected, shall receive the present charge of the +tribe." + +If it be objected against this order that the magistrates to be elected +by it will be men of more inferior rank than those of the hundreds, in +regard that those are chosen first, it may be remembered that so were +the burgesses in the former government, nevertheless the knights of the +shire were men of greater quality; and the election at the hundred is +made by a council of electors, of whom less cannot be expected than the +discretion of naming persons fittest for those capacities, with an eye +upon these to be elected at the tribe. As for what may be objected in +point of difficulty, it is demonstrable by the foregoing orders, that a +man might bring 10,000 men, if there were occasion, with as much ease, +and as suddenly to perform the ballot, as he can make 5,000 men, drawing +them out by double files, to march a quarter of a mile. But because at +this ballot, to go up and down the field, distributing the linen pellets +to every man, with which he is to ballot or give suffrage, would lose +a great deal of time, therefore a man's wife, his daughters, or others, +make him his provision of pellets before the ballot, and he comes into +the field with a matter of a score of them in his pocket. And now I have +as good as done with the sport. The next is-- + +The eleventh order, "Explaining the duties and functions of the +magistrates contained in the list of the prime magnitude, and those of +the hundreds, beginning with the lord high sheriff, who, over and above +his more ancient offices, and those added by the former order, is +the first magistrate of the phylarch, or prerogative troop. The lord +lieutenant, over and above his duty mentioned, is commander-in-chief +of the musters of the youth, and second magistrate of the phylarch. The +custos rotulorum is to return the yearly muster-rolls of the tribe, as +well that of the youth as of the elders, to the rolls in emporium, and +is the third magistrate of the phylarch. The censors by themselves and +their sub-censors, that is, the overseers of the parishes, are to see +that the respective laws of the ballot be observed in all the popular +assemblies of the tribe. They have power also to put such national +ministers, as in preaching shall intermeddle with matters of government, +out of their livings, except the party appeals to the phylarch, or to +the Council of Religion, where in that case the censors shall prosecute. +All and every one of these magistrates, together with the justices of +peace, and the jurymen of the hundreds, amounting in the whole number to +threescore and six, are the prerogative troop or phylarch of the tribe. + +"The function of the phylarch or prerogative troop is fivefold: + +"First, they are the council of the tribe, and as such to govern the +musters of the same according to the foregoing orders, having cognizance +of what has passed in the congregation or elections made in the parishes +or the hundreds, with power to punish any undue practices, or variation +from their respective rules and orders, under an appeal to the +Parliament. A marriage legitimately is to be pronounced by the parochial +congregation, the muster of the hundred, or the phylarch. And if a +tribe have a desire (which they are to express at the muster by their +captains, every troop by his own) to petition the Parliament the +phylarch, as the council, shall frame the petition in the pavilion, and +propose it by clauses to the ballot of the whole tribe; and the clauses +that shall be affirmed by the ballot of the tribe, and signed by the +hands of the six magistrates of the prime magnitude, shall be received +and esteemed by the Parliament as the petition of the tribe, and no +other. + +"Secondly, the phylarch has power to call to their assistance what +other troops of the tribe they please (he they elders or youth, whose +discipline will be hereafter directed), and with these to receive the +judges itinerant in their circuits, whom the magistrates of the phylarch +shall assist upon the bench, and the juries elsewhere in their proper +functions according to the more ancient laws and customs of this nation. + +"Thirdly, the phylarch shall hold the court called the quartersessions +according to the ancient custom, and therein shall also hear causes in +order to the protection of liberty of conscience, by such rules as are +or shall hereafter be appointed by the Parliament. + +"Fourthly, all commissions issued into the tribes by the Parliament, +or by the chancery, are to be directed to the phylarch, or some of that +troop, and executed by the same respectively. + +"Fifthly, in the case of levies of money the Parliament shall tax +the phylarchs, the phylarchs shall tax the hundreds, the hundreds the +parishes, and the parishes shall levy it upon themselves. The parishes +having levied the tax-money accordingly, shall return it to the officers +of the hundreds, the hundred to the phylarchs, and the phylarchs to the +Exchequer. But if a man has ten children living, he shall pay no taxes; +if he has five living, he shall pay but half taxes; if he has been +married three years, or be above twenty-five years of age, and has no +child or children lawfully begotten, he shall pay double taxes. And +if there happen to grow any dispute upon these or such other orders as +shall or may hereto be added hereafter, the phylarchs shall judge the +tribes, and the Parliament shall judge the phylarchs. For the rest, if +any man shall go about to introduce the right or power of debate into +any popular council or congregation of this nation, the phylarch or any +magistrate of the hundred, or of the tribe, shall cause him presently to +be sent in custody to the Council of War." + +The part of the order relating to the rolls in Emporium being of +singular use, is not unworthy to be somewhat better opened. In what +manner the lists of the parishes, hundreds, and tribes are made, has +been shown in their respective orders, where, after the parties are +elected, they give an account of the whole number of the elders or +deputies in their respective assemblies or musters; the like for this +part exactly is done by the youth in their discipline (to be hereafter +shown) wherefore the lists of the parishes, youth and elders, being +summed up, give the whole number of the people able to bear arms, and +the lists of the tribes, youth and elders, being summed up, give the +whole number of the people bearing arms. This account, being annually +recorded by the master of the rolls, is called the "Pillar of Nilus," +because the people, being the riches of the commonwealth, as they are +found to rise or fall by the degrees of this pillar, like that river, +give an account of the public harvest. + +Thus much for the description of the first day's work at the muster, +which happened (as has been shown) to be done as soon as said; for as in +practice it is of small difficulty, so requires it not much time, seeing +the great Council of Venice, consisting of a like number, begins at +twelve of the clock, and elects nine magistrates in one afternoon. But +the tribe being dismissed for this night, repaired to their quarters, +under the conduct of their new magistrates. The next morning returning +to the field very early, the orator proceeded to-- + +The twelfth order, "Directing the muster of the tribe in the second +day's election, being that of the list called the galaxy; in which the +censors shall prepare the urns according to the directions given in the +ninth order for the second ballot; that is to say, with thirty-six gold +balls in the middle urn, making four orders, and nine electors in every +order, according to the number of the magistrates in the list of the +galaxy, which is as follows: + +1. Knight 2. Knight + +To be chosen out of the horse. 3. Deputy 4. Deputy 5. Deputy + +To be chosen out of the horse. 6. Deputy 7. Deputy 8. Deputy 9. Deputy + +To be chosen out of the foot. + +"The rest of the ballot shall proceed exactly according to that of the +first day. But, forasmuch as the commonwealth demands as well the fruits +of a man's body as of his mind, he that has not been married shall not +be capable of these magistracies till he be married. If a deputy already +chosen to be an officer in the parish, in the hundred, or in the +tribe, be afterward chosen of the galaxy, it shall be lawful for him to +delegate his office in the parish, in the hundred, or in the tribe, +to any one of his own order being not already chosen into office. The +knights and deputies being chosen, shall be brought to the head of the +tribe by the lord high sheriff, who shall administer to them this oath: +'Ye shall well and truly observe and keep the orders and customs of this +commonwealth which the people have chosen.' And if any of them shall +refuse the oath, he shall be rejected, and that competitor which had +the most voices next shall be called in his place, who, if he takes the +oath, shall be entered in the list; but if he also refuses the oath, he +who had most voices next shall be called, and so till the number of +nine out of those competitors which had most voices be sworn knights and +deputies of the galaxy. (This clause, in regard to the late divisions, +and to the end that no violence be offered to any man's conscience, +to be of force but for the first three years only.) The knights of +the galaxy being elected and sworn, are to repair, by the Monday next +ensuing to the last of March, to the Pantheon or palace of justice, +situated in the metropolis of this commonwealth (except the Parliament, +by reason of a contagious sickness, or some other occasion, has +adjourned to another part of the nation), where they are to take their +places in the Senate, and continue in full power and commission as +senators for the full term of three years next ensuing the date of +their election. The deputies of the galaxy are to repair by the same day +(except as before excepted) to the halo situated in Emporium, where they +are to be listed of the prerogative tribe, or equal representative +of the people; and to continue in full power and commission as their +deputies for the full term of three years next ensuing their election. +But, forasmuch as the term of every magistracy or office in this +commonwealth requires an equal vacation, a knight or deputy of +the galaxy, having fulfilled his term of three years, shall not be +re-elected into the same galaxy or any other, till he has also fulfilled +his three years' vacation." + +Whoever shall rightly consider the foregoing orders, will be as little +able to find how it is possible that a worshipful knight should declare +himself in ale and beef worthy to serve his country, as how my lord high +sheriff's honor, in case he were protected from the law, could play +the knave. But though the foregoing orders, so far as they regard the +constitution of the Senate and the people, requiring no more as to an +ordinary election than is therein explained, that is but one-third part +of their knights and deputies, are perfect; yet must we in this place, +and as to the institution, of necessity erect a scaffold. For the +commonwealth to the first creation of her councils in full number, +required thrice as many as are eligible by the foregoing orders. +Wherefore the orator whose aid in this place was most necessary, rightly +informing the people of the reason, stayed them two days longer at the +muster, and took this course. One list, containing two knights and seven +deputies, he caused to be chosen upon the second day; which list being +called the first galaxy, qualified the parties elected of it with power +for the term of one year, and no longer: another list, containing two +knights and seven deputies more, he caused to be chosen the third day, +which list being called the second galaxy, qualified the parties elected +of it with power for the term of two years, and no longer. And upon the +fourth day he chose the third galaxy, according as it is directed by the +order, empowered for three years; which lists successively falling (like +the signs or constellations of one hemisphere, which setting, cause +those of the other to rise) cast the great orbs of this commonwealth +into an annual, triennial, and perpetual revolution. + +The business of the muster being thus happily finished, Hermes de +Caduceo, lord orator of the tribe of Nubia, being now put into her first +rapture, caused one of the censor's pulpits to be planted in front of +the squadron, and ascending into the same, spake after this manner: + +"MY LORDS, THE MAGISTRATES AND THE PEOPLE OF THE TRIBE OF NUBIA: + +"We have this day solemnized the happy nuptials of the two greatest +princes that are upon the earth or in nature, arms and councils, in the +mutual embraces whereof consists your whole commonwealth; whose councils +upon their perpetual wheelings, marches, and countermarches, create her +armies, and whose armies with the golden volleys of the ballot at once +create and salute her councils. There be those (such is the world at +present) that think it ridiculous to see a nation exercising its civil +functions in military discipline; while they, committing their buff to +their servants, come themselves to hold trenchards. For what avails it +such as are unarmed, or (which is all one) whose education acquaints +them not with the proper use of their swords, to be called citizens? +What were 2,000 or 3,000 of you, though never so well affected to your +country, but naked, to one troop of mercenary soldiers? If they should +come upon the field and say, 'Gentlemen, it is thought fit that such +and such men should be chosen by you,' where were your liberty? or, +'Gentlemen, parliaments are exceeding good, but you are to have a +little patience; these times are not so fit for them,' where were your +commonwealth? What causes the monarchy of the Turks but servants in +arms? What was it that begot the glorious Commonwealth of Rome but the +sword in the hands of her citizens? Wherefore my glad eyes salute the +serenity and brightness of this day with a shower that shall not cloud +it. + +"Behold the army of Israel become a commonwealth, and the Commonwealth +of Israel remaining an army, with her rulers of tens and of fifties, her +rulers of hundreds and thousands, drawing near (as this day throughout +our happy fields) to the lot by her tribes, increased above threefold, +and led up by her phylarchs or princes, to sit upon fifty thrones, +judging the fifty tribes of Oceana! Or, is it Athens, breaking from +her iron sepulchre, where she has been so long trampled by hosts of +Janizaries? For certainly that is the voice of Theseus, having gathered +his scattered Athenians into one city. This freeborn nation lives +not upon the dole or bounty of one man, but distributing her annual +magistracies and honors with her own hand, is herself King People--(At +which the orator was awhile interrupted with shouts, but at length +proceeded.) is it grave Lacedaemon in her armed tribe, divided by her +oboe and her mora, which appears to chide me that I teach the people to +talk, or conceive such language as is dressed like a woman, to be a fit +usher of the joys of liberty into the hearts of men? is it Rome in +her victorious arms (for so she held her concio or congregation) that +congratulates with us, for finding out that which she could not hit +on, and binding up her Comitia curiata, centuriata, and tributa, in one +inviolable league of union? Or is it the great council of incomparable +Venice, bowling forth by the selfsame ballot her immortal commonwealth? +For, neither by reason nor by experience is it impossible that a +commonwealth should be immortal; seeing the people being the materials, +never die; and the form, which is motion, must, without opposition, be +endless. The bowl which is thrown from your hand, if there be no rub, no +impediment, shall never cease: for which cause the glorious luminaries +that are the bowls of God, were once thrown forever; and next these, +those of Venice. But certainly, my lords, whatever these great examples +may have shown us, we are the first that have shown to the world a +commonwealth established in her rise upon fifty such towers, and so +garrisoned as are the tribes of Oceana, containing 100,000 elders upon +the annual list, and yet but an outguard; besides her marching armies to +be equal in the discipline, and in the number of her youth. + +"And forasmuch as sovereign power is a necessary but a formidable +creature, not unlike the powder which (as you are soldiers) is at once +your safety and your danger, being subject to take fire against you +as well as for you, how well and securely is she, by your galaxies so +collected as to be in full force and vigor and yet so distributed that +it is impossible you should be blown up by your own magazine? Let them +who will have it, that power if it be confined cannot be sovereign, tell +us, whether our rivers do not enjoy a more secure and fruitful reign +within their proper banks, than if it were lawful for them, in ravaging +our harvests, to spill themselves? whether souls, not confined to their +peculiar bodies, do govern them any more than those of witches in their +trances? whether power, not confined to the bounds of reason and virtue, +has any other bounds than those of vice and passion? or if vice and +passion be boundless, and reason and virtue have certain limits, on +which of these thrones holy men should anoint their sovereign? But to +blow away this dust, the sovereign power of a commonwealth is no more +bounded, that is to say straitened, than that of a monarch; but is +balanced. The eagle mounts not to her proper pitch, if she be bounded, +nor is free if she be not balanced. And lest a monarch should think he +can reach further with his sceptre, the Roman eagle upon such a balance +spread her wings from the ocean to Euphrates. Receive the sovereign +power; you have received it, hold it fast, embrace it forever in your +shining arms. The virtue of the loadstone is not impaired or limited, +but receives strength and nourishment, by being bound in iron. And so +giving your lordships much joy, I take my leave of this tribe." + +The orator descending, had the period of his speech made with a vast +applause and exultation of the whole tribe, attending him for that night +to his quarter, as the phylarch with some commanded troops did the next +day to the frontiers of the tribe, where leave was taken on both sides +with more tears than grief. + +So a tribe is the third division of land occasioned by the third +collection of the people, whose functions proper to that place are +contained in the five foregoing orders. + +The institution of the commonwealth was such as needed those props and +scaffolds which may have troubled the reader; but I shall here take them +away, and come to the constitution which stands by itself, and yields a +clearer prospect. + +The motions, by what has been already shown, are spherical; and +spherical motions have their proper centre, for which cause (ere I +proceed further) it will be necessary, for the better understanding +of the whole, that I discover the centre whereupon the motions of this +commonwealth are formed. + +The centre, or basis of every government, is no other than the +fundamental laws of the same. + +Fundamental laws are such as state what it is that a man, and what the +means may call his own, that is to say, property; be whereby a man may +enjoy his own, that is to say, protection. The first is also called +dominion, and the second empire or sovereign power, whereof this (as +has been shown) is the natural product of the former, for such as is the +balance of dominion in a nation, such is the nature of its empire. + +Wherefore the fundamental laws of Oceana, or the centre of this +commonwealth, are the agrarian and the ballot: the agrarian by the +balance of dominion preserving equality in the root; and the ballot by +an equal rotation conveying it into the branch, or exercise of sovereign +power, as, to begin with the former, appears by-- + +The thirteenth order, "Constituting the agrarian laws of Oceana, +Marpesia, and Panopea, whereby it is ordained, first, for all such lands +as are lying and being within the proper territories of Oceana, that +every man who is at present possessed, or shall hereafter be possessed, +of an estate in land exceeding the revenue of L2,000 a year, and having +more than one son, shall leave his lands either equally divided among +them, in case the lands amount to above L2,000 a year to each, or so +near equally, in case they come under, that the greater part or portion +of the same remaining to the eldest exceed not the value of L2,000 +revenue. And no man, not in present possession of lands above the +value of L2,000 by the year, shall receive, enjoy (except by lawful +inheritance) acquire, or, purchase to himself lands within the said +territories, amounting, with those already in his possession, above the +said revenue. And if a man has a daughter or daughters, except she be an +heiress or they be heiresses, he shall not leave or give to any. One +of them in marriage, or otherwise, for her portion, above the value of +L1,500 in lands, goods, and moneys. Nor shall any friend, kinsman, or +kinswoman add to her or their portion or portions that are so provided +for, to make any one of them greater. Nor shall any man demand or have +more in marriage with any woman. Nevertheless an heiress shall enjoy her +lawful inheritance, and a widow, whatsoever the bounty or affection +of her husband shall bequeath to her, to be divided in the first +generation, wherein it is divisible according as has been shown. + +"Secondly, for lands lying and being within the territories of Marpesia, +the agrarian shall hold in all parts as it is established in Oceana, +except only in the standard or proportion of estates in land, which +shall be set for Marpesia, at L500. And, + +"Thirdly, for Panopea, the agrarian shall hold in all parts, as in +Oceana. And whosoever possessing above the proportion allowed by +these laws, shall be lawfully convicted of the same, shall forfeit the +overplus to the use of the State." + +Agrarian laws of all others have ever been the greatest bugbears, and +so in the institution were these, at which time it was ridiculous to see +how strange a fear appeared in everybody of that which, being good for +all, could hurt nobody. But instead of the proof of this order, I shall +out of those many debates that happened ere it could be passed, insert +two speeches that were made at the Council of legislators, the first by +the Right Honorable Philautus de Garbo, a young man, being heir-apparent +to a very noble family, and one of the councillors, who expressed +himself as follows: + +"May it please your Highness, my Lord Archon of Oceana. + +"If I did not, to my capacity, know from how profound a councillor I +dissent, it would certainly be no hard task to make it as light as the +day. First, that an agrarian is altogether unnecessary; secondly, that +it is dangerous to a commonwealth; thirdly, that it is insufficient to +keep out monarchy; fourthly, that it ruins families; fifthly, that it +destroys industry; and last of all, that though it were indeed of any +good use, it will be a matter of such difficulty to introduce in this +nation, and so to settle that it may be lasting, as is altogether +invincible. + +"First, that an agrarian is unnecessary to a commonwealth, what clearer +testimony can there be than that the commonwealths which are our +contemporaries (Venice, to which your Highness gives the upper hand of +all antiquity, being one) have no such thing? And there can be no reason +why they have it not, seeing it is in the sovereign power at any time to +establish such an order, but that they need it not; wherefore no wonder +if Aristotle, who pretends to be a good commonwealths man, has long +since derided Phaleas, to whom it was attributed by the Greeks, for his +invention. + +"Secondly, that an agrarian is dangerous to a commonwealth is affirmed +upon no slight authority seeing Machiavel is positive that it was the +dissension which happened about the agrarian that caused the destruction +of Rome; nor do I think that it did much better in Lacedaemon, as I +shall show anon. + +"Thirdly, that it is insufficient to keep out monarchy cannot without +impiety be denied, the holy Scriptures bearing witness that the +Commonwealth of Israel, notwithstanding her agrarian, submitted her neck +to the arbitrary yoke of her princes. + +"Fourthly, therefore, to come to my next assertion, that it is +destructive to families: this also is so apparent, that it needs pity +rather than proof. Why alas, do you bind a nobility (which no generation +shall deny to have been the first that freely sacrificed their blood to +the ancient liberties of this people) on an unholy altar? Why are the +people taught that their liberty, which, except our noble ancestors had +been born, must have long since been buried, cannot now be born except +we be buried? A commonwealth should have the innocence of the dove. Let +us leave this purchase of her birth to the serpent, which eats itself +out of the womb of its mother. + +"Fifthly but it may be said, perhaps, that we are fallen from our first +love, become proud and idle. It is certain, my lords, that the hand +of God is not upon us for nothing. But take heed how you admit of such +assaults and sallies upon men's estates, as may slacken the nerve of +labor, and give others also reason to believe that their sweat is vain; +or else, whatsoever be pretended, your agrarian (which is my fifth +assertion) must indeed destroy industry. For, that so it did in +Lacedaemon is most apparent, as also that it could do no otherwise, +where every man having his forty quarters of barley, with wine +proportionable, supplied him out of his own lot by his laborer or helot; +and being confined in that to the scantling above which he might not +live, there was not any such thing as a trade, or other art, except that +of war, in exercise. Wherefore a Spartan, if he were not in arms, must +sit and play with his Angers, whence ensued perpetual war, and, the +estate of the city being as little capable of increase as that of the +citizens, her inevitable ruin. Now what better ends you can propose to +yourselves in the like ways, I do not so well see as I perceive that +there may be worse; for Lacedaemon yet was free from civil war: but if +you employ your citizens no better than she did, I cannot promise you +that you shall fare so well, because they are still desirous of war that +hope that it may be profitable to them; and the strongest security you +can give of peace, is to make it gainful. Otherwise men will rather +choose that whereby they may break your laws, than that whereby your +laws may break them. Which I speak not so much in relation to the +nobility or such as would be holding, as to the people or them that +would be getting; the passion in these being so much the stronger, as +a man's felicity is weaker in the fruition of things, than in their +prosecution and increase. + +"Truly, my lords, it is my fear, that by taking of more hands, and the +best from industry, you will farther endamage it, than can be repaired +by laying on a few, and the worst; while the nobility must be forced to +send their sons to the plough, and, as if this were not enough, to marry +their daughters also to farmers. + +"Sixthly, but I do not see (to come to the last point) how it is +possible that this thing should be brought about, to your good I mean, +though it may to the destruction of many. For that the agrarian of +Israel, or that of Lacedaemon, might stand, is no such miracle; the +lands, without any consideration of the former proprietor, being +surveyed and cast into equal lots, which could neither be bought, nor +sold, nor multiplied: so that they knew whereabout to have a man. But in +this nation no such division can be introduced, the lands being already +in the hands of proprietors, and such whose estates lie very rarely +together, but mixed one with another being also of tenures in nature +so different, that as there is no experience that an agrarian was ever +introduced in such a case, so there is no appearance how or reason +why it should: but that which is against reason and experience is +impossible." + +The case of my Lord Philautus was the most concerned in the whole +nation; for he had four younger brothers, his father being yet living, +to whom he was heir of L10,000 a year. Wherefore being a man both of +good parts and esteem, his words wrought both upon men's reason and +passions, and had borne a stroke at the head of the business, if my Lord +Archon had not interposed the buckler in this oration: + +"MY LORDS, THE LEGISLATORS OF OCEANA: + +"My Lord Philautus has made a thing which is easy to seem hard; if the +thanks were due to his eloquence, it would be worthy of less praise +than that he owes it to his merit, and the love he has most deservedly +purchased of all men: nor is it rationally to be feared that he who is +so much beforehand in his private, should be in arrear in his public, +capacity. Wherefore, my lord's tenderness throughout his speech arising +from no other principle than his solicitude lest the agrarian should +be hurtful to his country, it is no less than my duty to give the best +satisfaction I am able to so good a patriot, taking every one of his +doubts in the order proposed. And, + +"First, whereas my lord, upon observation of the modern commonwealths, +is of opinion that an agrarian is not necessary: it must be confessed +that at the first sight of them there is some appearance favoring +his assertion, but upon accidents of no precedent to us. For the +commonwealths of Switzerland and Holland, I mean of those leagues, being +situated in countries not alluring the inhabitants to wantonness, but +obliging them to universal industry, have an implicit agrarian in the +nature of them: and being not obnoxious to a growing nobility (which, +as long as their former monarchies had spread the wing over them, could +either not at all be hatched, or was soon broken) are of no example to +us, whose experience in this point has been to the contrary. But what if +even in these governments there be indeed an explicit agrarian? For when +the law commands an equal or near equal distribution of a man's estate +in land among his children, as it is done in those countries, a nobility +cannot grow; and so there needs no agrarian, or rather there is one. +And for the growth of the nobility in Venice (if so it be, for Machiavel +observes in that republic, as a cause of it, a great mediocrity of +estates) it is not a point that she is to fear, but might study, seeing +she consists of nothing else but nobility, by which, whatever their +estates suck from the people, especially if it comes equally, is +digested into the better blood of that commonwealth, which is all, or +the greatest, benefit they can have by accumulation. For how unequal +soever you will have them to be in their incomes, they have officers +of the pomp, to bring them equal in expenses, or at least in the +ostentation or show of them. And so unless the advantage of an estate +consists more in the measure than in the use of it, the authority of +Venice does but enforce our agrarian; nor shall a man evade or elude the +prudence of it, by the authority of any other commonwealth. + +"For if a commonwealth has been introduced at once, as those of Israel +and Lacedaemon, you are certain to find her underlaid with this as the +main foundation; nor, if she is obliged more to fortune than prudence, +has she raised her head without musing upon this matter, as appears by +that of Athens, which through her defect in this point, says Aristotle, +introduced her ostracism, as most of the democracies of Greece. But, +not to restrain a fundamental of such latitude to any one kind of +government, do we not yet see that if there be a sole landlord of a +vast territory, he is the Turk? that if a few landlords overbalance a +populous country, they have store of servants? that if a people be in an +equal balance, they can have no lords? that no government can otherwise +be erected, than upon some one of these foundations? that no one of +these foundations (each being else apt to change into some other) can +give any security to the government, unless it be fixed? that through +the want of this fixation, potent monarchy and commonwealths have fallen +upon the heads of the people, and accompanied their own sad ruins with +vast effusions of innocent blood? Let the fame, as was the merit of +the ancient nobility of this nation, be equal to or above what has been +already said, or can be spoken, yet have we seen not only their glory +but that of a throne, the most indulgent to and least invasive for so +many ages upon the liberty of a people that the world has known, through +the mere want of fixing her foot by a proportionable agrarian upon +her proper foundation, to have fallen with such horror as has been a +spectacle of astonishment to the whole earth. And were it well argued +from one calamity, that we ought not to prevent another? Nor is +Aristotle so good a commonwealths man for deriding the invention of +Phaleas as in recollecting himself, where he says that democracies, when +a less part of their citizens overtop the rest in wealth, degenerate +into oligarchies and principalities; and, which comes nearer to the +present purpose, that the greater part of the nobility of Tarentum +coming accidentally to be ruined, the government of the few came by +consequence to be changed into that of the many. + +"These things considered, I cannot see how an agrarian, as to the +fixation or security of a government, can be less than necessary. And +if a cure be necessary, it excuses not the patient, his disease being +otherwise desperate, that it is dangerous; which was the case of Rome, +not so stated by Machiavel, where he says, that the strife about the +agrarian caused the destruction of that commonwealth. As if when a +senator was not rich (as Crassus held) except he could pay an army, that +commonwealth could expect nothing but ruin whether in strife about the +agrarian, or without it. 'Of late,' says Livy, 'riches have introduced +avarice, and voluptuous pleasures abounding have through lust and +luxury begot a desire of lasting and destroying all good orders.' if the +greatest security of a commonwealth consists in being provided with the +proper antidote against this poison, her greatest danger, must be +from the absence of an agrarian, which is the whole truth of the Roman +example. For the Laconic, I shall reserve the further explication of it, +as my lord also did, to another place; and first see whether an agrarian +proportioned to a popular government be sufficient to keep out monarchy. +My lord is for the negative, and fortified by the people of Israel +electing a king. To which I say that the action of the people therein +expressed is a full answer to the objection of that example; for the +monarchy neither grew upon them, nor could; by reason of the agrarian, +possibly have invaded them, if they had not pulled it upon themselves by +the election of a king. Which being an accident, the like whereof is not +to be found in any other people so planted, nor in this till, as it +is manifest, they were given up by God to infatuation (for says he to +Samuel, 'They have not rejected thee, but they have rejected me, that I +should not reign over them,), has something in it which is apparent, by +what went before, to have been besides the course of nature, and by what +followed. + +"For the King having no other foundation than the calamities of the +people, so often beaten by their enemies, that despairing of themselves +they were contented with any change, if he had peace as in the days of +Solomon, left but a slippery throne to his successor, as appeared +by Rehoboam. And the agrarian, notwithstanding the monarchy thus +introduced, so faithfully preserved the root of that commonwealth, that +it shot forth oftener and by intervals continued longer than any other +government, as may be computed from the institution of the same by +Joshua, 1,465 years before Christ, to the total dissolution of it, +which happened in the reign of the emperor Adrian, 135 years after the +incarnation. A people planted upon an equal agrarian, and holding to it, +if they part with their liberty, must do it upon good-will, and make but +a bad title of their bounty. As to instance yet further in that which is +proposed by the present order to this nation, the standard whereof is +at L2,000 a year; the whole territory of Oceana being divided by this +proportion, amounts to 5,000 lots. So the lands of Oceana being thus +distributed, and bound to this distribution, can never fall to fewer +than 5,000 proprietors. But 5,000 proprietors so seized will not agree +to break the agrarian, for that were to agree to rob one another; nor to +bring in a king, because they must maintain him, and can have no benefit +by him; nor to exclude the people, because they can have as little by +that, and must spoil their militia. So the commonwealth continuing upon +the balance proposed, though it should come into 5,000 hands, can never +alter, and that it should ever come into 5,000 hands is as improbable as +anything in the world that is not altogether impossible. + +"My lord's other considerations are more private, as that, this order +destroys families; which is as if one should lay the ruin of some +ancient castle to the herbs which usually grow out of them, the +destruction of those families being that indeed which naturally produced +this order. For we do not now argue for that which we would have, but +for that which we are already possessed of, as would appear if a note +were but taken of all such as have at this day above L2,000 a year in +Oceana. If my lord should grant (and I will put it with the most) that +they who are proprietors in land, exceeding this proportion, exceed not +300, with what brow can the interest of so few be balanced with that of +the whole nation? or rather, what interest have they to put in such a +balance? they would live as they had been accustomed to do; who hinders +them? they would enjoy their estates; who touches them? they would +dispose of what they have according to the interest of their families; +it is that which we desire. A man has one son, let him be called; would +he enjoy his father's estate? it is his, his son's, and his son's son's +after him. A man has five sons, let them be called; would they enjoy +their father's estate? It is divided among them; for we have four votes +for one in the same family, and therefore this must be the interest of +the family, or the family knows not its own interest. If a man shall +dispute otherwise, he must draw his arguments from custom and from +greatness, which was the interest of the monarchy, not of the family; +and we are now a commonwealth. If the monarchy could not bear with +such divisions because they tendered to a commonwealth, neither can +a commonwealth connive at such accumulations because they tend to a +monarchy. If the monarchy might make bold with so many for the good of +one, we may make bold with one for the good of so many, nay, for the +good of all. + +"My lords, it comes into my mind, that which upon occasion of the +variety of parties enumerated in our late civil wars, was said by a +friend of mine coming home from his travels, about the latter end +of these troubles; that he admired how it came to pass, that younger +brothers, especially being so many more in number than their elder did +not unite as one man against a tyranny, the like whereof has not been +exercised in any other nation. And truly, when I consider that our +countrymen are none of the worst-natured, I must confess I marvel +much how it comes to pass that we should use our children as we do our +puppies--take one, lay it in the lap, feed it with every good bit, and +drown five; nay, yet worse, forasmuch as the puppies are once drowned, +whereas the children are left perpetually drowning. Really, my lords, +it is a flinty custom! and all this for his cruel ambition, that would +raise himself a pillar a golden pillar for his monument, though he has +children, his own reviving flesh, and a kind of immortality. And this is +that interest of a family, for which we are to think ill of a government +that will not endure it. But quiet ourselves; the land through which the +river Nilus wanders in one stream, is barren; but where it parts into +seven, it multiplies its fertile shores by distributing, yet keeping and +improving, such a propriety and nutrition, as is a prudent agrarian to a +well-ordered commonwealth. + +"Nor (to come to the fifth assertion) is a political body rendered any +fitter for industry by having one gouty and another withered leg, than +a natural. It tends not to the improvement of merchandise that there be +some who have no need of their trading, and others that are not able to +follow it. If confinement discourages industry, an estate in money is +not confined, and lest industry should want whereupon to work, land is +not engrossed or entailed upon any man, but remains at its devotion. +I wonder whence the computation can arise, that this should discourage +industry. Two thousand pounds a year a man may enjoy in Oceana, as +much in Panopea, L500 in Marpesia; there be other plantations, and the +commonwealth will have more. Who knows how far the arms of our agrarian +may extend themselves? and whether he that might have left a pillar, may +not leave a temple of many pillars to his more pious memory? Where there +is some measure in riches, a man may be rich, but if you will have them +to be infinite, there will be no end of starving himself, and wanting +what he has: and what pains does such a one take to be poor Furthermore, +if a man shall think that there may be an industry less greasy or more +noble, and so cast his thoughts upon the commonwealth, he will have +leisure for her and she riches and honors for him; his sweat shall smell +like Alexander's. My Lord Philautus is a young man who, enjoying his +L10,000 a year, may keep a noble house in the old way, and have homely +guests; and having but two, by the means proposed, may take the upper +hand of his great ancestors; with reverence to whom, I may say, there +has not been one of them would have disputed his place with a Roman +consul. + +"My lord, do not break my heart; the nobility shall go to no other +ploughs than those which we call our consuls. But, says he, it having +been so with Lacedaemon, that neither the city nor the citizens were +capable of increase, a blow was given by that agrarian, which ruined +both. And what are we concerned with that agrarian, or that blow while +our citizens and our city (and that by our agrarian) are both capable +of increase? The Spartan, if he made a conquest, had no citizens to hold +it; the Oceaner will have enow. The Spartan could have no trade; the +Oceaner may have all. The agrarian in Laconia, that it might bind on +knapsacks, forbidding all other arts but that of war, could not make +an army of above 30,000 citizens. The agrarian in Oceana, without +interruption of traffic, provides us in the fifth part of the youth +an annual source or fresh spring of 100,000, besides our provincial +auxiliaries, out of which to draw marching armies; and as many elders, +not feeble, but men most of them in the flower of their age, and in arms +for the defence of our territories. The agrarian in Laconia banished +money, this multiplies it; that allowed a matter of twenty or thirty +acres to a man, this 2,000 or 3,000; there is no comparison between +them. And yet I differ so much from my lord, or his opinion that +the agrarian was the ruin of Lacedaemon, that I hold it no less than +demonstrable to have been her main support. For if, banishing all other +diversions, it could not make an army of above 30,000, then, letting in +all other diversions, it must have broken that army. Wherefore Lysander, +bringing in the golden spoils of Athens, irrevocably ruined that +commonwealth; and is a warning to us, that in giving encouragement to +industry, we also remember that covetousness is the root of all evil. +And our agrarian can never be the cause of those seditions threatened +by my lord, but is the proper cure of them, as Lucan notes well in the +state of Rome before the civil wars, which happened through the want of +such an antidote. + +"Why then are we mistaken, as if we intended not equal advantages in our +commonwealth to either sex, because we would not have women's fortunes +consist in that metal which exposes them to cutpurses? If a man cuts my +purse I may have him by the heels or by the neck for it; whereas a man +may cut a woman's purse, and have her for his pains in fetters. How +brutish, and much more than brutish, is that commonwealth which prefers +the earth before the fruits of the womb? If the people be her treasure, +the staff by which she is sustained and comforted, with what justice can +she suffer them, by whom she is most enriched, to be for that cause the +most impoverished? And yet we see the gifts of God, and the bounties of +heaven in fruitful families, through this wretched custom of marrying +for money, become their insupportable grief and poverty. Nor falls this +so heavy upon the lower sort, being better able to shift for themselves, +as upon the nobility or gentry. For what avails it in this case, from +whence their veins have derived their blood; while they shall see the +tallow of a chandler sooner converted into that beauty which is required +in a bride? I appeal, whether my Lord Philautus or myself be the +advocate of nobility; against which, in the case proposed by me, there +would be nothing to hold the balance. And why is a woman, if she may +have but L1,500, undone? If she be unmarried, what nobleman allows his +daughter in that case a greater revenue than so much money may command? +And if she marry, no nobleman can give his daughter a greater portion +than she has. Who is hurt in this case?--nay, who is not benefited? If +the agrarian gives us the sweat of our brows without diminution; if it +prepares our table; if it makes our cup to overflow, and above all this, +in providing for our children, anoints our heads with that oil which +takes away the greatest of worldly cares; what man, that is not besotted +with a covetousness as vain as endless, can imagine such a constitution +to be his poverty? Seeing where no woman can be considerable for her +portion, no portion will be considerable with a woman; and so his +children will not only find better preferments without his brokage, but +more freedom of their own affections. "We are wonderful severe in laws, +that they shall not marry without our consent, as if it were care and +tenderness over them; but is it not lest we should not have the other +L1,000 with this son, or the other L100 a year more in jointure for that +daughter? These, when we are crossed in them, are the sins for which we +water our couch with tears, but not of penitence. Seeing whereas it is +a mischief beyond any that we can do to our enemies, we persist to make +nothing of breaking the affection of our children. But there is in this +agrarian a homage to pure and spotless love, the consequence whereof I +will not give for all your romances. An alderman makes not his daughter +a countess till he has given her L20,000, nor a romance a considerable +mistress till she be a princess; these are characters of bastard love. +But if our agrarian excludes ambition and covetousness, we shall at +length have the care of our own breed, in which we have been curious as +to our dogs and horses. The marriage-bed will be truly legitimate, and +the race of the commonwealth not spurious. But (impar magnanimis +ausis, imparque dolori) I am hurled from all my hopes by my lord's last +assertion of impossibility, that the root from whence we imagine these +fruits should be planted or thrive in this soil. And why? Because of the +mixture of estates and variety of tenures. Nevertheless, there is yet +extant in the Exchequer an old survey of the whole nation; wherefore +such a thing is not impossible. Now if a new survey were taken at the +present rates, and the law made that no man should hold hereafter above +so much land as is valued therein at L2,000 a year, it would amount to +a good and sufficient agrarian. It is true that there would remain +some difficulty in the different kind of rents, and that it is a matter +requiring not only more leisure than we have, but an authority which +may be better able to bow men to a more general consent than is to be +wrought out of them by such as are in our capacity. Wherefore as to the +manner, it is necessary that we refer it to the Parliament; but as to +the matter, they cannot otherwise fix their government upon the right +balance. + +"I shall conclude with a few words to some parts of the order, which +my lord has omitted. As first to the consequences of the agrarian to be +settled in Marpesia, which irreparably breaks the aristocracy of that +nation; being of such a nature, as standing, it is not possible that you +should govern. For while the people of that country are little better +than the cattle of the nobility, you must not wonder if, according as +these can make their markets with foreign princes, you find those to be +driven upon your grounds. And if you be so tender, now you have it +in your power, as not to hold a hand upon them that may prevent the +slaughter which must otherwise ensue in like cases, the blood will lie +at your door. But in holding such a hand upon them, you may settle the +agrarian; and in settling the agrarian, you give that people not only +liberty, but lands; which makes your protection necessary to their +security; and their contribution due to your protection, as to their own +safety. + +"For the agrarian of Panopea, it allowing such proportions of so good +land, men that conceive themselves straitened by this in Oceana, will +begin there to let themselves forth, where every citizen will in time +have his villa. And there is no question, but the improvement of that +country by this means must be far greater than it has been in the best +of former times. I have no more to say, but that in those ancient and +heroic ages (when men thought that to be necessary which was virtuous) +the nobility of Athens, having the people so much engaged in their debt +that there remained no other question among these than which of those +should be king, no sooner heard Solon speak than they quitted their +debts, and restored the commonwealth; which ever after held a solemn +and annual feast called the Sisacthia, or Recision, in memory of that +action. Nor is this example the phoenix; for at the institution by +Lycurgus, the nobility having estates (as ours here) in the lands of +Laconia, upon no other valuable consideration than the commonwealth +proposed by him, threw them up to be parcelled by his agrarian. But +now when no man is desired to throw up a farthing of his money, or a +shovelful of his earth, and that all we can do is but to make a virtue +of necessity, we are disputing whether we should have peace or war. +For peace you cannot have without some government, nor any government +without the proper balance. Wherefore if you will not fix this which you +have, the rest is blood, for without blood you can bring in no other." + +By these speeches made at the institution of the agrarian you may +perceive what were the grounds of it. The next is-- + +The fourteenth order, "Constituting the ballot of Venice, as it is +fitted by several alterations, and appointed to every assembly, to +be the constant and only way of giving suffrage in this commonwealth, +according to the following scheme." + +I shall endeavor by the following figure to demonstrate the manner of +the Venetian ballot (a thing as difficult in discourse or writing, as +facile in practice) according to the use of it in Oceana. The whole +figure represents the Senate, containing, as to the house or form +of sitting, a square and a half; the tribunal at the upper end being +ascended by four steps. On the uppermost of these sit the magistrates +that constitute the signory of the commonwealth, that is to say, A the +strategus; B the orator; C the three commissioners of the great seal; D +the three commissioners of the Treasury, whereof one, E, exercises for +the present the office of a censor at the middle urn, F To the two upper +steps of the tribunal answer G, G-G, G, the two long benches next the +wall on each side of the house; the outwardmost of which are equal in +height to the uppermost step, and the innermost equal in height to the +next. Of these four benches consists the first seal; as the second seat +consists in like manner of those four benches H, H-H, H, which being +next the floor, are equal in height to the two nethermost steps of +the throne. So the whole house is distributed into two seats, each +consisting of four benches. + +This distribution causes not only the greater conveniency; as will be +shown, to the senators in the exercise of their function at the ballot, +but a greater grace to the aspect of the Senate. In the middle of the +outward benches stand I, 12 the chairs of the censors, those being their +ordinary places, though upon occasion of the ballot they descend, and +sit where they are shown by K, K at each of the outward urns L, L. Those +M, M that sit with their tables, and the bowls N, N before them, upon +the halfspace or second step of the tribunal from the floor, are the +clerks or secretaries of the house. Upon the short seats O, O on the +floor (which should have been represented by woolsacks) sit: P, the two +tribunes of the horse. Q, the two tribunes of the foot; and R, R-R, R +the judges, all which magistrates are assistants, but have no suffrage. +This posture of the Senate considered, the ballot is performed as +follows: + +First, whereas the gold balls are of several suits, and accordingly +marked with several letters of the alphabet, a secretary presents a +little urn (wherein there is one ball of every suit or mark) to the +strategus and the orator; and look what letter the strategus draws, the +same and no other is to be used for that time in the middle urn F; the +like for the letter drawn by the orator is to be observed for the side +urns L, L, that is to say if the strategus drew a ball with an A, all +the gold balls in the middle urn for that day are marked with the letter +A; and if the orator drew a B, all the gold balls in the side urn for +that day are marked with the letter B, which done immediately before +the ballot, and so the letter unknown to the ballotants, they can use no +fraud or juggling; otherwise a man might carry a gold ball in his hand, +and seem to have drawn it out of an urn. He that draws a gold ball at +any urn, delivers it to the censor or assessor of that urn, who views +the character, and allows accordingly of his lot. + +The strategus and the orator having drawn for the letters, the urns are +prepared accordingly by one of the commissioners and the two censors. +The preparation of the urns is After this manner. If the Senate be to +elect, for example, the list called the tropic of magistrates, which is +this: + +1. The Lord Strategus; + +2. The Lord Orator; + +3. The Third Commissioner of the Great Seal; + +4. The Third Commissioner of the Treasury; + +5. The First Censor; + +6. The Second Censor; + +this list or schedule consists of six magistracies, and to every +magistracy there are to be four competitors; that is, in all +four-and-twenty competitors proposed to the house. They that are to +propose the competitors are called electors, and no elector can propose +above one competitor: wherefore for the proposing of four-and-twenty +competitors you must have four-and-twenty electors; and whereas the +ballot consists of a lot and of a suffrage, the lot is for no other use +than for the designation of electors; and he that draws a gold ball +at the middle urn is an elector. Now, as to have four-and-twenty +competitors proposed, you must have four-and-twenty electors made, so to +have four-and-twenty electors made by lot, you must have four-and-twenty +gold balls in the middle urn; and these (because otherwise it would +be no lot) mixed with a competent number of blanks, or silver balls. +Wherefore to the four-and-twenty gold balls cast six-and-twenty silver +ones, and those (reckoning the blanks with the prizes) make fifty balls +in the middle urn. This done (because no man can come to the middle urn +that has not first drawn a gold ball at one of the side urns) and to be +sure that the prizes or gold balls in this urn be all drawn, there must +come to it fifty persons; therefore there must be in each of the side +urns five-and-twenty gold balls, which in both come to fifty; and to the +end that every senator may have his lot, the gold balls in the side urns +are to be made up with blanks equal to the number of the ballotants at +either urn; for example, the house consisting of 300 senators, there +must be in each of the side urns 125 blanks and twenty-five prizes, +which come in both the side urns to 300 balls. This is the whole mystery +of preparing the urns, which the censors having skill to do accordingly, +the rest of the ballot, whether the parties balloting understand it or +not must of necessary consequence come right; and they can neither be +out, nor fall into any confusion in the exercise of this art. + +But the ballot, as I said, is of two parts, lot and suffrage, or +the proposition and result. The lot determines who shall propose the +competitors; and the result of the Senate, which of the competitors +shall be the magistrates. The whole, to begin with the lot, proceeds in +this manner: + +The first secretary with an audible voice reads first the list of the +magistrates to be chosen for the day, then the oath for fair election, +at which the senators hold up their hands; which done, another secretary +presents a little urn to the strategus, in which are four balls, each +of them having one of these four inscriptions: "First seat at the upper +end," "First seat at the lower end," "Second seat at the upper end," +"Second seat at the lower end." And look which of them the strategus +draws, the secretary pronouncing the inscription with a loud voice, the +seat so called comes accordingly to the urns: this in the figure is the +second seat at the upper end. The manner of their coming to the side +urns is in double files, that being two holes in the cover of each side +urn, by which means two may draw at once. The senators therefore S, S-S, +S are coming from the upper end of their seats H, H-H, H to the side +urns L, L. The senators T T-T are drawing. The senator V has drawn a +gold ball at his side urn, and is going to the middle urn F, where +the senator W, having done the like at the other side urn, is already +drawing. But the senators X, X-X, X having drawn blanks at their side +urns, and thrown them into the bowls Y Y standing at the feet of the +urns, are marching by the lower end into their seats again; the senator +a having done the like at the middle urn, is also throwing his blank +into the bowl b and marching to his seat again: for a man by a prize at +a side urn gains no more than right to come to the middle urn, where, if +he draws a blank, his fortune at the side urn comes to nothing at all; +wherefore he also returns to his place. But the senator C has had a +prize at the middle urn, where the commissioner, having viewed his ball, +and found the mark to be right, he marches up the steps to the seat +of the electors, which is the form d set across the tribunal, where he +places himself, according as he was drawn, with the other electors e, e, +e drawn before him. These are not to look back, but sit with their faces +toward the signory or state, till their number amount to that of the +magistrates to be that day chosen, which for the present, as was shown, +are six: wherefore six electors being made, they are reckoned according +as they were drawn: first, second, third, fourth, fifth, sixth, in +their order, and the first six that are chosen are the first order of +electors. + +The first order of electors being made, are conducted by a secretary, +with a copy of the list to be chosen, out of the Senate, and into a +committee or council-chamber, being neither suffered by the way, nor in +their room (till the ballot be ended), to have conference with any but +themselves; wherefore the secretary, having given them their oath that +they shall make election according to the law and their conscience, +delivers them the list, and seats himself at the lower end of the table +with his pen and paper, while another secretary keeps the door. + +By such time as the first order of electors are thus seated, the second +order of electors is drawn, who, with a second copy of the same list, +are conducted into another committee-chamber, by other secretaries +performing the same office with the former. + +The like exactly is done by the third and by the fourth orders (or +hands, as the Venetians call them) of electors, by which means you have +the four-and-twenty electors divided according to the four copies of +the same list, by six, into four hands or orders; and every one of these +orders names one competitor to every magistracy in the list; that is to +say, the first elector names to the first magistracy, the second elector +to the second magistracy, and so forth. But though the electors, as has +been shown, are chosen by mere lot, yet the competitors by them named +are not chosen by any lot, but by the suffrage of the whole order for +example, the first elector in the first order proposes a name to +be strategus, which name is balloted by himself and the other five +electors, and if the name so balloted attain not to above half the +suffrages, it is laid aside, and the first elector names another to the +same magistracy and so in case this also fails, another, till one he has +named, whether it be himself, or some other, has attained to above half +the suffrages in the affirmative; and the name so attaining to above +half the suffrages in the affirmative is written to the first magistracy +in the list by the secretary which being done, the second elector of the +first order, names to 'the second magistracy till one of his nomination +be chosen to the same. The like is done by the rest of the electors of +the first order, till one competitor be chosen, and written to every +magistracy in their list. Now the second, third, and fourth orders of +electors doing exactly after the same manner, it comes to pass that one +competitor to every magistracy being chosen in each order, there be in +all four competitors chosen to every magistracy. + +If any controversy arises in an order of electors, one of the censors +(these being at this game the groom-porters) is advertised by the +secretary who brings him in, and the electors disputing are bound to +acquiesce in his sentence. For which cause it is that the censors do not +ballot at the urns; the signory also abstains, lest it should deform the +house: wherefore the blanks in the side urns are by so many the +fewer. And so much for the lot, which is of the greater art but less +consequence, because it concerns proposition only: but all (except the +tribunes and the judges, which being but assistants have no suffrage) +are to ballot at the result, to which I now come. + +The four orders of electors having perfected their lists, the face of +the house is changed: for the urns are taken away, and every senator +and magistrate is seated in his proper place, saving the electors, who, +having given their suffrages already, may not stir out of their +chambers till the house have given theirs, and the rest of the ballot be +performed; which follows in this manner: + +The four lists being presented by the secretaries of each council of +electors to the signory, are first read, according to their order, to +the house, with an audible voice; and then the competitors are put to +the ballot or suffrage of the whole Senate in this manner: A, A named +to be strategus in the first order, whereupon eight ballotins, or pages, +such as are expressed by the figures f, f, take eight of the boxes +represented, though rudely, by the figures g, g, and go four on the one +and four on the other side of the house, that is, one to every bench, +signifying "A, A named to be the strategus in the first order.." and +every magistrate or senator (beginning by the strategus and the orator +first) holds up a little pellet of linen, as the box passes, between his +finger and his thumb, that men may see he has but one, and then puts it +into the same. The box consisting in the inner part of two boxes, being +painted on the outside white and green, to distinguish the affirmative +from the negative side, is so made that when your hand is in it, no man +can see to which of the sides you put the suffrage, nor hear to which it +falls, because the pellet being linen, makes no noise. The strategus and +the orator having begun, all the rest do the like. + +The ballotins having thus gathered the suffrages, bring them before the +signory, in whose presence the outward boxes being opened, they take +out the inner boxes, whereof the affirmative is white, and the negative +green, and pour the white in the bowl N on the right hand, which is +white also, and the green into the bowl N on the left, which is also +green. These bowls or basins (better represented at the lower end of the +figure by h, i) being upon this occasion set before the tables of the +secretaries at the upper end N, N, the white on the right hand, and the +green on the left, the secretaries on each side number the balls, by +which, if they find that the affirmatives amount not to above one-half, +they write not the name that was balloted, but if they amount to above +one-half, they write it, adding the number of above half the suffrages +to which it attained. The first name being written, or laid aside, the +next that is put is BB named to be strategus in the second order; the +third CC, named to be strategus in the third order; the fourth DD, named +to be strategus in the fourth order and he of these four competitors +that has most above half in the affirmative, is the magistrate; or if +none of them attain to above half, the nomination for that magistracy +is to be repeated by such new electors as shall be chosen at the next +ballot. And so, as is exemplified in the first magistracy, proceeds the +ballot of the rest; first in the first, then in the second, and so in +the third and fourth orders. + +Now whereas it may happen that AA, for example, being named strategus in +the first order, may also be named to the same or some one or more +other magistracies in one or more of the other orders; his name is +first balloted where it is first written, that is to the more worthy +magistracy, whereof if he misses, he is balloted as it comes in course +for the next, and so for the rest, if he misses of that, as often as he +is named. + +And because to be named twice, or oftener, whether to the same or some +other magistracy, is the stronger recommendation, the note must not fail +to be given upon the name, at the proposition in this manner: AA named +to be strategus in the first, and in the second order, or AA named to be +strategus in the first and the third, in the first and the fourth, etc. +But if he be named to the same magistracy in the first, second, third, +and fourth orders, he can have no competitor; wherefore attaining to +above half the suffrages, he is the magistrate. Or thus: AA named to be +strategus in the first, to be censor in the second, to be orator in the +third, and to be commissioner of the seal in the fourth order, or the +like in more or fewer orders, in which cases if he misses of the first +magistracy, he is balloted to the second; if he misses of the second, to +the third; and if he misses of the third, to the fourth. + +The ballot not finished before sunset, though the election of the +magistrates already chosen be good, voids the election of such +competitors as being chosen are not yet furnished with magistracies, as +if they had never been named (for this is no juggling-box, but an art +that must see the sun), and the ballot for the remaining magistracies +is to be repeated the next day by new orders of electors, and such +competitors as by them shall be elected. And so in the like manner, if +of all the names proposed to the same magistracy, no one of them attains +to above half the suffrages in the affirmative. + +The senatorian ballot of Oceana being thus described, those of the +parish, of the hundred, and of the tribe, being so little different, +that in this they are all contained, and by this may be easily +understood, are yet fully described, and made plain enough before in the +fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth, and tenth orders. + +This, therefore, is the general order, whence those branches of the +ballot, some whereof you have already seen, are derived; which, with +those that follow, were all read and debated in this place at the +institution. When my Lord Epimonus de Garrula, being one of the +councillors, and having no further patience (though the rulers were +composed by the agent of this commonwealth, residing for that purpose at +Venice) than to hear the direction for the parishes, stood up and made +way for himself in this manner: + +"MAY IT PLEASE YOUR HIGHNESS, MY LORD ARCHON: + +"Under correction of Mr. Peregrin, Spy, our very learned agent and +intelligencer, I have seen the world a little, Venice, and (as gentlemen +are permitted to do) the great Council balloting. And truly I must needs +say, that it is for a dumb show the goodliest that I ever beheld with my +eyes. You should have some would take it ill, as if the noble Venetians +thought themselves too good to speak to strangers, but they observed +them not so narrowly. The truth is, they have nothing to say to their +acquaintance; or men that are in council sure would have tongues: for a +council, and not a word spoken in it, is a contradiction. But there is +such a pudder with their marching and countermarching, as, though never +a one of them draw a sword, you would think they were training; which +till I found that they did it only to entertain strangers, I came from +among them as wise as I went thither But in the Parliament of Oceana you +had no balls nor dancing, but sober conversation; a man might know and +be known, show his parts, and improve them. And now if you take the +advice of this same fellow, you will spoil all with his whimsies. Mr. +Speaker--cry you mercy, my Lord Archon, I mean--set the wisest man of +your house in the great Council of Venice, and you will not know him +from a fool. Whereas nothing is more certain than that flat and dull +fellows in the judgment of all such as used to keep company with them +before, upon election into our house, have immediately chitted like +barley in the vat, where it acquires a new spirit, and flowed forth into +language, that I am as confident as I am here, if there were not such +as delight to abuse us, is far better than Tully's; or, let anybody but +translate one of his orations, and speak it in the house, and see if +everybody do not laugh at him. + +"This is a great matter, Mr. Speaker; they do not cant it with your +book-learning, your orbs, your centres, your prime magnitudes, and your +nebulones, things I profess that would make a sober man run stark mad to +hear them; while we, who should be considering the honor of our country +and that it goes now or never upon our hand, whether it shall be +ridiculous to all the world, are going to nine-holes or trow madam for +our business, like your dumb Venetian, whom this same Sir Politic your +resident, that never saw him do anything but make faces, would insinuate +to you, at this distance, to have the only knack of state. Whereas if +you should take the pains, as I have done, to look a little nearer, +you would find these same wonderful things to be nothing else but mere +natural fopperies, or capriccios as they call them in Italian, even +of the meanest, of that nation. For, put the case you be travelling in +Italy, ask your contadino, that is, the next country-fellow you meet, +some question, and presently he ballots you an answer with a nod, which +is affirmative; or a shake with his head, which is the negative box; or +a shrug with his shoulder, which is the bossolo di non sinceri. Good! +You will admire Sandys for telling you, that grotta di cane is a +miracle: and I shall be laughed at, for assuring you, that it is nothing +else but such a damp (continued by the neighborhood of certain sulphur +mines) as through accidental heat does sometimes happen in our coalpits. +But ingratitude must not discourage an honest man from doing good. +There is not, I say, such a tongue-tied generation under heaven as your +Italian, that you should not wonder if he makes signs. But our people +must have something in their diurnals; we must ever and anon be telling +them our minds; or if we be at it when we raise taxes, like those +gentlemen with the finger and the thumb, they will swear that we are +cutpurses. Come, I know what I have heard them say, when some men had +money that wrought hard enough for it; and do you conceive they will be +better pleased when they shall be told that upon like occasions you are +at mumchance or stool-ball? + +"I do not speak for myself; for though I shall always acknowledge that +I got more by one year's sitting in the house than by my three years' +travels, it was not of that kind. But I hate that this same Spy, for +pretending to have played at billiards with the most serene Commonwealth +of Venice, should make such fools of us here, when I know that he must +have had his intelligence from some corn-cutter upon the Rialto; for a +noble Venetian would be hanged if he should keep such a fellow company. +And yet if I do not think he has made you all dote, never trust me, my +Lord Archon is sometimes in such strange raptures. Well, good my lord, +let me be heard as well as your apple squire. Venice has fresh blood +in her cheeks, I must confess, yet she is but an old lady. N or has he +picked her cabinet; these he sends you are none of her receipts, I can +assure you; he bought them for a Julio at St. Mark's of a mountebank. +She has no other wash, upon my knowledge, for that same envied +complexion of hers but her marshes, being a little better scented, +saving your presence, than a chamber-pot. My lords, I know what I say, +but you will never have done with it, that neither the great Turk, nor +any of those little Turks her neighbors, have been able to spoil her! +Why you may as well wonder that weasels do not suck eggs in swans' +nests. Do you think that it has lain in the devotion of her beads; which +you that have puked so much at popery, are now at length resolved shall +consecrate M. Parson, and be dropped by every one of his congregation, +while those same whimsical intelligences your surveyors (you will break +my heart) give the turn to your primum mobile! And so I think they will; +(for you will find that money is the primum mobile) and they will turn +you thus out of some L300,000 or L400,000: a pretty sum for urns +and balls, for boxes and pills, which these same quacksalvers are to +administer to the parishes; and for what disease I marvel! Or how does +it work? Out comes a constable, an overseer, and a churchwarden! Mr. +Speaker, I am amazed!" + +Never was there goose so stuck with lard as my Lord Epimonus's speech +with laughter, the Archon having much ado to recover himself in such a +manner as might enable him to return these thanks: + +"In your whole lives, my lords, were you never entertained with so much +ingenuity, my Lord Epimonus having at once mended all the faults of +travellers. For, first, whereas they are abominable liars, he has not +told you (except some malicious body has misinformed him concerning poor +Spy) one syllable of falsehood. And, secondly, whereas they never fail +to give the upper hand in all their discourses to foreign nations, still +jostling their own into the kennel, he bears an honor to his country +that will not dissolve in Cephalonia, nor be corrupted with figs and +melons, which I can assure you is an ordinary obligation; and therefore +hold it a matter of public concern that we be to no occasion of +quenching my lord's affections, nor is there any such great matter +between us, but, in my opinion, might be easily reconciled, for though +that which my lord gained by sitting in the house, I steadfastly +believe, as he can affirm, was got fairly yet dare I not, nor do I +think, that upon consideration he will promise for other gamesters, +especially when they were at it so high, as he intimates not only to +have been in use, but to be like enough to come about again. Wherefore +say I, let them throw with boxes, for unless we will be below the +politics of an ordinary, there is no such bar to cogging, it is known +to his lordship that our game is most at a throw, and that every cast +of our dice is in our suffrages, nor will he deny that partiality in a +suffrage is downright cogging. + +"If the Venetian boxes be the most sovereign of all remedies against this +same cogging, is it not a strange thing that they should be thrown first +into the fire by a fair gamester? Men are naturally subject to all kinds +of passions; some you have that are not able to withstand the brow of an +enemy, and others that make nothing of this, are less proof against that +of a friend. So that if your suffrage be barefaced, I dare say you shall +not have one fair cast in twenty. But whatever a man's fortune be at the +box, he neither knows whom to thank, nor whom to challenge. Wherefore +(that my lord may have a charitable opinion of the choice affection +which I confess to have, above all other beauties, for that of +incomparable Venice) there is in this way of suffrage no less than a +demonstration that it is the most pure, and the purity of the suffrage +in a popular government is the health, if not the life of it, seeing +the soul is not otherwise breathed into the sovereign power than by the +suffrage of the people. Wherefore no wonder if Postellus be of opinion +that this use of the ball is the very same with that of the bean in +Athens, or that others, by the text concerning Eldad and Medad, derive +it from the Commonwealth of Israel. There is another thing, though not +so material to us, that my lord will excuse me if I be not willing to +yield, which is, that Venice subsists only by her situation. It is true +that a man in time of war may be more secure from his enemies by being +in a citadel, but not from his diseases; wherefore the first cause, if +he lives long, is his good constitution, without which his citadel were +to little purpose, and it is not otherwise with Venice." + +With this speech of the Archon I conclude the proof of the agrarian and +the ballot, being the fundamental laws of this commonwealth, and come +now from the centre to the circumferences or orbs, whereof some have +been already shown; as how the parishes annually pour themselves into +the hundreds, the hundreds into the tribes, and the tribes into the +galaxies; the annual galaxy of every tribe consisting of two knights and +seven deputies, whereof the knights constitute the Senate; the deputies, +the prerogative tribe, commonly called the people; and the Senate and +people constitute the sovereign power or Parliament of Oceana. Whereof +to show what the Parliament is, I must first open the Senate, and then +the prerogative tribe. + +To begin with the Senate, of which (as a man is differently represented +by a picture drawer and by an anatomist) I shall first discover the +face or aspect, and then the parts, with the use of them. Every Monday +morning in the summer at seven, and in the winter at eight, the great +bell in the clock-house at the Pantheon begins, and continues ringing +for the space of one hour; in which time the magistrates of the Senate, +being attended according to their quality, with a respective number of +the ballotins, doorkeepers, and messengers, and having the ensigns of +their magistracies borne before them, as the sword before the +strategus, the mace before the orator, a mace with the seal before +the commissioners of the chancery, the like with the purse before the +commissioners of the treasury, and a silver wand, like those in use with +the universities, before each of the censors, being chancellors of the +same. These, with the knights, in all 300, assemble in the house or hall +of the Senate. + +The house or hall of the Senate being situated in the Pantheon or palace +of justice, is a room consisting of a square and a half. In the middle +of the lower end is the door, at the upper end hangs a rich state +overshadowing the greater part of a large throne, or half-pace of two +stages; the first ascended by two steps from the floor, and the second +about the middle rising two steps higher. Upon this stand two chairs, +in that on the right hand sits the strategus, in the other the orator +adorned with scarlet robes, after the fashion that was used by the dukes +in the aristocracy. At the right end of the upper stage stand three +chairs, in which the three commissioners of the seal are placed; and at +the other end sit the three commissioners of the treasury, every one +in a robe or habit like that of the earls. Of these magistrates of +this upper stage consists the signory. At either end of the lower stage +stands a little table, to which the secretaries of the Senate are set +with their tufted sleeves in the habit of civil lawyers. To the four +steps, whereby the two stages of the throne are ascended, answer four +long benches, which successively deriving from every one of the steps, +continue their respective height, and extend themselves by the side +walls toward the lower end of the house, every bench being divided by +numeral characters into the thirty-seven parts or places. Upon the upper +benches sit the censors in the robes of barons; the first in the middle +of the right hand bench, and the second directly opposite to him on the +other side. Upon the rest of the benches sit the knights, who, if they +be called to the urns, distributing themselves by the figures, come in +equal files, either by the first seat, which consists of the two upper +benches on either side; or by the second seat, consisting of the two +lower benches on either side, beginning also at the upper or at the +lower ends of the same, according to the lot whereby they are called; +for which end the benches are open, and ascended at either end with easy +stairs and large passages. + +The rest of the ballot is conformable to that of the tribe; the censors +of the house sitting at the side urn, and the youngest magistrate of +the signory at the middle, the urns being placed before the throne, and +prepared according to the number of the magistrates to be at that time +chosen by the rules already given to the censors of the tribes. But +before the benches of the knights on either side stands one being +shorter, and at the upper end of this sit the two tribunes of the horse. +At the upper end of the other the two tribunes of the foot in their +arms, the rest of the benches being covered by the judges of the land in +their robes. But these magistrates have no suffrage, nor the tribunes, +though they derive their presence in the Senate from the Romans, nor +the judges, though they derive theirs from the ancient Senate of Oceana. +Every Monday this assembly sits of course; at other times, if there be +occasion, any magistrate of the house, by giving order for the bell, or +by his lictor or ensign-bearer, calls a senate. And every magistrate +or knight during his session has the title, place, and honor of a duke, +earl, baron, or knight respectively And every one that has borne the +same magistracy by his third session, has his respective place and title +during the term of his life, which is all the honor conferred by this +commonwealth, except upon the master of the ceremonies, the master of +the horse, and the king of the heralds, who are knights by their places. +And thus you have the face of the Senate, in which there is scarce any +feature that is not Roman or Venetian; nor do the horns of the crescent +extend themselves much unlike those of the Sanhedrim, on either hand of +the prince, and of the father of that Senate. But upon beauty, in which +every man has his fancy, we will not otherwise philosophize than to +remember that there is something more than decency in the robe of +a judge, that would not be well spared from the bench; and that the +gravest magistrate to whom you can commit the sword of justice, will +find a quickness in the spurs of honor, which, if they be not laid to +virtue, will lay themselves to that which may rout a commonwealth. + +To come from the face of the Senate to the constitution and use of the +parts: it is contained in the peculiar orders. And the orders which are +peculiar to the Senate, are either of election or instruction. + +Elections in the Senate are of three sorts: annual, biennial, and +extraordinary. + +Annual elections are performed by the schedule called the tropic; and +the tropic consists of two parts: the one containing the magistrates, +and the other the councils to be yearly elected. The schedule or tropic +of the magistrates is as follows in-- + +The fifteenth order requiring, "That upon every Monday next ensuing the +last of March, the knights of the annual galaxies taking their places in +the Senate, be called the third region of the same; and that the house +having dismissed the first region, and received the third, proceed to +election of the magistrates contained in the first part of the tropic, +by the ensuing schedule: + + The lord strategus, + The lord orator, + the first censor, + The second censor, + + Annual magistrates, + + The third commissioner of the seal, + The third commissioner of the Treasury, + + Triennal magistrates. + +"The annual magistrates (provided that no one man bears above one of +those honors during the term of one session) may be elected out of any +region. But the triennial magistrates may not be elected out of any +other than the third region only, lest the term of their session expire +before that of their honor; and (it being unlawful for a man to bear +magistracy any longer than he is thereto qualified by the election of +the people) cause a fraction in the rotation of this commonwealth. + +"The strategus is first president of the Senate, and general of the +army, if it be commanded to march; in which case there shall be a second +strategus elected to be first president of the Senate, and general +of the second army, and if this also be commanded to march, a third +strategus shill be chosen, and so on, as long as the commonwealth sends +forth armies. + +"The lord orator is the second and more peculiar president of the Senate +to whom it appertains to keep the house to orders. + +"The censors, whereof the first, by consequence of his election, +is chancellor of the University of Clio, and the second of that of +Calliope, are presidents of the Council for Religion and magistrates, to +whom it belongs to keep the house to the order of the ballot. They are +also inquisitors into the ways and means of acquiring magistracy, and +have power to punish indirect proceedings in the same, by removing a +knight or magistrate out of the house, under appeal to the Senate. + +"The commissioners of the seal being three, whereof the third is +annually chosen out of the third region, are judges in chancery. + +"The commissioners of the Treasury being three, whereof the third is +annually chosen out of the third region, are judges in the exchequer, +and every magistrate of this schedule has right to propose to the +Senate. + +"But the strategus with the six commissioners is the signory of this +commonwealth, having right of session and suffrage in every council of +the Senate, and power either jointly or severally to propose in all or +any of them." + +I have little in this order to observe and prove but that the strategus +is the same honor both in name and thing that was borne, among others, +by Philopemen and Aratus in the Commonwealth of the Achaeans; the like +having been in use also with the AEtolians. The orator, called otherwise +the speaker, is, with small alteration, the same that had been of former +use in this nation. These two, if you will, may be compared to the +consuls in Rome, or the suffetes in Carthage, for their magistracy is +scarce different. + +The censors derive their power of removing a senator from those of +Rome, the government of the ballot from those of Venice, and that of +animadversion upon the ambitious, or canvass for magistracy, from both. + +The signory, with the whole right and use of that magistracy to be +hereafter more fully explained, is almost purely Venetian. + +The second part of the tropic is directed by-- + +The sixteenth order" Whereby the constitution of the councils being +four; that is to say, the Council of State, the Council of War, the +Council of Religion, and the Council of Trade, is rendered conformable +in their revolutions to that of the Senate. As: First, by the annual +election of five knights out of the first region of the Senate into the +Council of State, consisting of fifteen knights, five in every region. +Secondly, by the annual election of three knights out of the third +region of the Council of State, to be proposed by the provosts, and +elected by that council, into the Council of War, consisting of nine +knights, three in every region, not excluded by this election from +remaining members also of the Council of State. The four tribunes of +the people have right of session and suffrage in the Council of War. +Thirdly, by the annual election of four knights out of the third +region of the Senate into the Council of Religion, consisting of +twelve knights, four in every region; of this council the censors are +presidents. Fourthly, by the annual election of four knights out of +the third region of the Senate into the Council of Trade, consisting of +twelve knights, four in every region. And each region, in every one of +these councils thus constituted, shall weekly and interchangeably elect +one provost whose magistracy shall continue for one week; nor shall he +be re-elected into the same till every knight of that region in the same +council has once borne the same magistracy. And the provosts being one +in every region, three in every council, and twelve in all, beside their +other capacities, shall assemble and be a council, or rather an Academy +apart, to certain ends and purposes to be hereafter further explained +with those of the rest of the councils." + +This order is of no other use than the frame and turn of the councils, +and yet of no small one; for in motion consists life, and the motion of +a commonwealth will never be current unless it be circular. Men that, +like my Lord Epimonus, not enduring the resemblance of this kind of +government to orbs and spheres, fall on physicking and purging it, do no +more than is necessary; for if it be not in rotation both as to persons +and things, it will be very sick. The people of Rome, as to persons, if +they had not been taken up by the wheel of magistracy, had overturned +the chariot of the Senate. And those of Lacedaemon, as to things, had +not been so quiet when the Senate trashed their business, by encroaching +upon the result, if by the institution of the ephors they had not +brought it about again. So that if you allow not a commonwealth her +rotation, in which consists her equality, you reduce her to a party, and +then it is necessary that you be physicians indeed, or rather farriers; +for you will have strong patients, and such as must be haltered and +cast, or yourselves may need bone-setters. Wherefore the councils of +this commonwealth, both in regard of their elections, and, as will +be shown, of their affairs, are uniform with the Senate in their +revolutions; not as whirlpits to swallow, but to bite, and with the +screws of their rotation to hold and turn a business (like the vice of a +smith) to the hand of the workman. Without engines of which nature it +is not possible for the Senate, much less for the people, to be perfect +artificers in a political capacity. But I shall not hold you longer +from-- + +The seventeenth order, "Directing biennial elections, or the +constitution of the orb of ambassador-in-ordinary, consisting of four +residences, the revolution whereof is performed in eight years, and +preserved through the election of one ambassador in two years by the +ballot of the Senate to repair to the Court of France, and reside there +for the term of two years; and the term of two years being expired, +to remove from thence to the Court of Spain, there to continue for the +space of two years, and thence to remove to the State of Venice, and +after two years' residence in that city to conclude with his residence +at Constantinople for a like term of time, and so to return. A knight +of the Senate, or a deputy of the prerogative, may not be elected +ambassador-in-ordinary, because a knight or deputy so chosen must either +lose his session, which would cause an unevenness in the motion of this +commonwealth, or accumulate magistracy, which agrees not with equality +of the same. Nor may any man be elected into this capacity that is above +five-and-thirty years of age, lest the commonwealth lose the charge of +his education, by being deprived at his return of the fruit of it, or +else enjoy it not long through the defects of nature." + +This order is the perspective of the commonwealth, whereby she foresees +danger; or the traffic, whereby she receives every two years the return +of a statesman enriched with eight years' experience from the prime +marts of negotiation in Europe. And so much for the elections in the +Senate that are ordinary; such as are extraordinary follow in-- + +The eighteenth order, "Appointing all elections upon emergent occasions, +except that of the dictator, to be made by the scrutiny, or that kind +of election whereby a council comes to be a fifth order of electors. +For example, if there be occasion of an ambassador-extraordinary, the +provosts of the Council of State, or any two of them, shall propose to +the same, till one competitor be chosen by that council; and the council +having chosen a competitor, shall bring his name into the Senate, +which in the usual way shall choose four more competitors to the same +magistracy; and put them, with the competitor of the council, to the +ballot of the house, by which he of the five that is chosen is said to +be elected by the scrutiny of the Council of State. A vice-admiral, a +polemarch, or field officer, shall be elected after the same manner, by +the scrutiny of the Council of War. A judge or sergeant-at-law, by the +scrutiny of the commissioners of the seal. A baron, or considerable +officer of the Exchequer, by the scrutiny of the commissioners of +the Treasury: Men in magistracy, or out of it, are equally capable of +election by the scrutiny; but a magistrate or officer elected by the +scrutiny to a military employment, if he be neither a knight of the +Senate nor a deputy of the prerogative, ought to have his office +confirmed by the prerogative, because the militia in a commonwealth, +where the people are sovereign, is not lawful to be touched injussu +populi. + +The Romans were so curious that, though their consuls were elected in +the centuriate assemblies, they might not touch the militia, except +they were confirmed in the parochial assemblies; for a magistrate not +receiving his power from the people, takes it from them, and to take +away their power is to take away their liberty. As to the election by +the scrutiny, it is easily perceived to be Venetian, there being no such +way to take in the knowledge; which in all reason must be best in every +council of such men as are most fit for their turns, and yet to keep +them from the bias of particular affection or interest under that +pretence; for the cause why the great Council in Venice scarce ever +elects any other than the name that is brought in by the scrutiny, is +very probable to be, that they may... This election is the last of those +appertaining to the Senate. The councils being chosen by the orders +already shown, it remains that we come to those whereby they are +instructed and the orders of instruction to the councils are two: the +first for the matter whereupon they are to proceed, and the second +for the manner of their proceeding. The matter of the councils is +distributed to them by-- + +The nineteenth order "Distributing to every council such businesses +as are properly to belong to their cognizance, whereof some they shall +receive and determine, and others they shall receive, prepare, and +introduce into the house: as, first, + +"The Council of State is to receive all addresses, intelligences, and +letters of negotiation; to give audience to ambassadors sent to, and to +draw up instructions for such as shall be sent by, this commonwealth; +to receive propositions from, and hold intelligence with, the provincial +councils; to consider upon all laws to be enacted, amended, or +repealed, and upon all levies of men or money, war or peace, leagues +or associations to be made by this commonwealth, so far forth as is +conducible to the orderly preparation of the same to be introduced by +them into the Senate; provided, that all such affairs, as otherwise +appertaining to the Council of State, are, for the good of the +commonwealth, to be carried with greater secrecy, be managed by the +Council of War, with power to receive and send forth agents, spies, +emissaries, intelligencers, frigots, and to manage affairs of that +nature, if it be necessary without communication to the Senate, till +such time as it may be had without detriment to the business. But they +shall have no power to engage the commonwealth in a war without the +consent of the Senate and the people. It appertains also to this +council to take charge of the fleet as admiral, and of all storehouses, +armories, arsenals, and magazines appertaining to this commonwealth. +They shall keep a diligent record of the military expeditions from time +to time reported by him that was strategus or general, or one of the +polemarchs in that action; or at least so far as the experience of such +commanders may tend to the improvement of the military discipline, which +they shall digest and introduce into the Senate; and if the Senate shall +thereupon frame any article, they shall see that it be observed, in the +musters or education of the youth. And whereas the Council of War is the +sentinel or scout of this commonwealth, if any person or persons shall +go about to introduce debate into any popular assembly of the same, or +otherwise to alter the present government, or strike at the root of it, +they shall apprehend, or cause to be apprehended, seized, imprisoned, +and examine, arraign, acquit, or condemn, and cause to be executed any +such person or persons, by their proper power and authority and without +appeal. + +"The Council of Religion, as the arbiter of this commonwealth in cases of +conscience more peculiarly appertaining to religion, Christian charity, +and a pious life, shall have the care of the national religion, and +the protection of the liberty of conscience with the cognizance of +all causes relating to either of them. And first as to the national +religion: they shall cause all places or preferments of the best revenue +in either of the universities to be conferred upon no other than such of +the most learned and pious men as have dedicated themselves to the +study of theology. They shall also take a special care that, by such +augmentations as be or shall hereafter be appointed by the Senate, every +benefice in this nation be improved at least to the value of L100 a +year. And to the end that there be no interest at all, whereby the +divines or teachers of the national religion may be corrupted, or +corrupt religion, they shall be capable of no other kind of employment +or preferment in this commonwealth. And whereas a directory for the +administration of the national religion is to be prepared by this +council, they shall in this and other debates of this nature proceed in +manner following: a question arising in matter of religion shall be put +and stated by the council in writing, which writing the censors shall +send by their beadles (being proctors chosen to attend them) each to the +university whereof he is chancellor, and the vice-chancellor of the same +receiving the writing, shall call a convocation of all the divines of +that university being above forty years of age. And the universities, +upon a point so proposed, shall have no manner of intelligence or +correspondence one with another, till their debates be ended, and they +have made return of their answers to the Council of Religion by two +or three of their own members, that they may clear their sense, if any +doubt should arise, to the council, which done, they shall return, and +the council, having received such information, shall proceed according +to their own judgments, in the preparation of the whole matter for the +Senate: that so the interest of the learned being removed, there may be +a right application of reason to Scripture, which is the foundation of +the national religion. + +"Secondly, this council, as to the protection of the liberty of +conscience, shall suffer no coercive power in the matter of religion to +be exercised in this nation; the teachers of the natural religion being +no other than such as voluntarily undertake that calling, and their +auditors or hearers no other than are also voluntary. Nor shall any +gathered congregation be molested or interrupted in their way of worship +(being neither Jewish nor idolatrous), but vigilantly and vigorously +protected and defended in the enjoyment, practice, and profession of +the same. And if there be officers or auditors appointed by any +such congregation for the introduction of causes into the Council of +Religion, all such causes so introduced shall be received, heard, and +determined by the same, with recourse had, if need be, to the Senate. + +"Thirdly, every petition addressed to the Senate, except that of a +tribe, shall be received, examined, and debated by this council; and +such only as they, upon such examination and debate had, shall think +fit, may be introduced into the Senate. + +"The Council of Trade being the vena porta of this nation, shall +hereafter receive instructions more at large. For the present, their +experience, attaining to a right understanding of those trades +and mysteries that feed the veins of this commonwealth, and a true +distinction of them from those that suck or exhaust the same, they shall +acquaint the Senate with the conveniences and inconveniences, to the end +that encouragement may be applied to the one, and remedy to the other. + +"The Academy of the provosts, being the affability of the commonwealth, +shall assemble every day toward the evening in a fair room, having +certain withdrawing-rooms thereto belonging; and all sorts of company +that will repair thither for conversation or discourse, so it be upon +matters of government, news, or intelligence, or to propose anything to +the councils, shall be freely and affably received in the outer chamber, +and heard in the way of civil conversation, which is to be managed +without any other awe or ceremony than is thereto usually appertaining, +to the end that every man may be free, and that what is proposed by +one, may be argued or discoursed by the rest, except the matter be of +secrecy; in which case the provosts, or some of them, shall take such as +desire audience into one of the withdrawing-rooms. And the provosts +are to give their minds that this academy be so governed, adorned, and +preserved, as may be most attractive to men of parts and good affections +to the commonwealth, for the excellency of the conversation. + +"Furthermore, if any man, not being able or willing to come in person, +has any advice to give which he judges may be for the good of the +commonwealth, he may write his mind to the Academy of the provosts, in +a letter signed or not signed, which letter shall be left with the +doorkeeper of the Academy. Nor shall any person delivering such a letter +be seized, molested, or detained, though it should prove to be a libel. +But the letters so delivered shall be presented to the provosts; and in +case they be so many that they cannot well be perused by the provosts +themselves, they shall distribute them as they please to be read by the +gentlemen of the Academy, who, finding anything in them material, +will find matter of discourse; or if they happen upon a business that +requires privacy, return it with a note upon it to a provost. And the +provosts by the secretaries attending shall cause such notes out of +discourses or letters to be taken as they please, to the end that they +may propose, as occasion serves, what any two of them shall think fit +out of their notes so taken to their respective councils; to the end +that not only the ear of the commonwealth be open to all, but that men +of such education being in her eve, she may upon emergent elections or +occasions be always provided of her choice of fit persons. + +"Every council being adorned with a state for the signory, shall +be attended by two secretaries, two doorkeepers, and two +messengers-in-ordinary, and have power to command more upon emergencies, +as occasion requires. And the Academy shall be attended with two +secretaries, two messengers, and two doorkeepers; this with the other +councils being provided with their further conveniences at the charge of +the State. + +"But whereas it is incident to commonwealths, upon emergencies requiring +extraordinary speed or secrecy, either through their natural delays or +unnatural haste, to incur equal danger, while holding to the slow pace +of their orders, they come not in time to defend themselves from some +sudden blow; or breaking them for the greater speed, they but haste to +their own destruction; if the Senate shall at any time make election +of nine knights-extraordinary, to be added to the Council of War, as a +juncta for the term of three months, the Council of War with the juncta +so added, is for the term of the same Dictator of Oceana, having power +to levy men and money, to make war and peace, as also to enact laws, +which shall be good for the space of one year (if they be not sooner +repealed by the Senate and the people) and for no longer time, +except they be confirmed by the Senate and the people. And the whole +administration of the commonwealth for the term of the said three months +shall be in the Dictator, provided that the Dictator shall have no power +to do anything that tends not to his proper end and institution, but all +to the preservation of the commonwealth as it is established, and for +the sudden restitution of the same to the natural channel and common +course of government. And all acts, orders, decrees, or laws of the +Council of War with the junota being thus created, shall be signed, + + "DICTATOR OCEANAE." + +This order of instructions to the councils being (as in a matter of that +nature is requisite) very large, I have used my best skill to abbreviate +it in such manner as might show no more of it than is necessary to the +understanding of the whole, though as to the parts, or further duties +of the councils, I have omitted many things of singular use in a +commonwealth. But it was discoursed at the council by the Archon in this +manner: + +"MY LORDS, THE LEGISLATORS: + +"Your councils, except the Dictator only, are proper and native springs +and sources, you see, which (hanging a few sticks and straws, that, as +less considerable, would otherwise be more troublesome, upon the banks +of their peculiar channels) derive the full stream of business into the +Senate, so pure, and so far from the possibility of being troubled +or stained (as will Undeniably appear by the course contained in the +ensuing order) with any kind of private interest or partiality, that +it shall never be possible for any assembly hearkening to the advice or +information of this or that worthy member (either instructed upon his +pillow, or while he was making himself ready, or by the petition or +ticket which he received at the door) to have half the security in +his faith, or advantage by his wisdom; such a Senate or council being, +through the uncertainty of the winds, like a wave of the sea. Nor +shall it otherwise mend the matter by flowing up into dry ditches, or +referring businesses to be better examined by committees, than to go +further about with it to less purpose; if it does not ebb back again +with the more mud in it. For in a case referred to an occasional +committee, of which any member that is desirous may get himself named, +and to which nobody will come but either for the sake of his friend or +his own interest; it fares little better as to the information of the +Senate, than if it had been referred to the parties. Wherefore the +Athenians being distributed into four tribes, out of which by equal +numbers they annually chose 400 men, called the Senate of the Bean, +because the ballot at their election was performed by the use of beans, +divided them by fifties into eight parts. And every fifty in their turn, +for one-eighth part of the year, was a council apart called the Prytans. + +"The Prytans in their distinct council receiving all comers, and +giving ear to every man that had anything to propose concerning the +commonwealth, had power to debate and prepare all the businesses that +were to be introduced into the Senate. The Achaeans had ten selected +magistrates called the demiurgs, constituting a council apart called the +synarchy, which, with the strategus, prepared all the business that was +introduced into their Senate. But both the Senate of the Athenians, and +that of the Achaeans, would have wondered if a man had told them that +they were to receive all comers and discourses, to the end that they +might refer them afterward to the Prytans or the synarchy, much less +to an occasional committee, exposed to the catch that catch may of the +parties interested. And yet Venice in this, as in most of her orders, +excels them all by the constitution of her councils, that of the +College, and the other of the Dieci, or Council of Ten. The course of +the College is exactly described in the ensuing order: and for that +of the Dieci, it so little differs from what it has bestowed upon Our +Dictator, that I need not make any particular description of it. But to +dictatorian power in general, and the use of it (because it must needs +be of difficult digestion to such as, puking still at ancient prudence, +show themselves to be in the nursery of mother-wit); it is no less than +necessary to say something. And, first, in a commonwealth that is not +wrought up, or perfected, this power will be of very frequent, if not +continual, use; wherefore it is said more than once, upon defects of the +government, in the book of Judges, 'that in those days there was no king +in Israel.' Nor has the translator, though for 'no king, he should have +said 'no judge,' abused you so much; seeing that the Dictator (and such +was the Judge of Israel) or the dictatorian power being in a single +person, so little differs from monarchy, which followed in that, that +from the same cause there has been no other effect in any commonwealth: +as in Rome was manifest by Sylla and Caesar, who to make themselves +absolute or sovereign, had no more to do than to prolong their +magistracy, for the dictatorian power was reputed divine, and therefore +irresistible. + +"Nevertheless, so it is, that without this power, which is so dangerous, +and subject to introduce monarchy, a commonwealth cannot be safe from +falling into the like dissolution; unless you have an expedient in +this case of your own, and bound up by your providence from recoiling. +Expedients in some cases you must not only have, but be beholden for +them to such whom you must trust at a pinch, when you have not leisure +to stand with them for security; which will be a thousand times more +dangerous. And there can never be a commonwealth otherwise than by the +order in debate wrought up to that perfection; but this necessity must +sometimes happen in regard of her natural slowness and openness, and the +suddenness of assaults that may be made upon her, as also the secrecy +which in some cases may be of absolute necessity to her affairs. Whence +Machiavel concludes it positively, that a commonwealth unprovided of +such a refuge, must fall to ruin; for her course is either broken by the +blow in one of those cases, or by herself, while it startles her out of +her orders. And indeed a commonwealth is like a greyhound, which, having +once coasted, will never after run fair, but grow slothful; and when it +comes to make a common practice of taking nearer ways than its orders, +it is dissolved: for the being of a commonwealth consists in its orders. +Wherefore at this list you will be exposed to danger, if you have not +provided beforehand for the safety of your resort in the like cases: nor +is it sufficient that your resort be safe, unless it be as secret and +quick; for if it be slow or open, your former inconveniences are not +remedied. + +"Now for our imitation in this part, there is nothing in experience like +that of the Council of Ten in Venice; the benefit whereof would be too +long to be shown in the whole piece, and therefore I shall take but a +pattern out of Janotti. In the war, says he, which the Venetians had +with Florence in Casentin, the Florentines, finding a necessity in their +affairs far from any other inclination in themselves to ask their peace, +sent ambassadors about it to Venice, where they were no sooner heard, +than the bargain was struck up by the Council of Ten: and everybody +admiring (seeing this commonwealth stood upon the higher ground) what +should be the reason of such haste, the council upon the return of the +ambassadors imparted letters to the Senate, whereby it appeared that the +Turks had newly launched a formidable fleet against their State, which, +had it been understood by the Florentines, it was well enough known they +would have made no peace. Wherefore the service of the Ten was highly +applauded by the Senate, and celebrated by the Venetians. Whereby may +appear not only in part what use there is of dictatorian power in that +government, but that it is assumed at the discretion of that Council; +whereas in this of Oceana it is not otherwise intrusted than when the +Senate, in the election of nine knights-extraordinary, gives at once +the commission, and takes security in a balance, added to the Council +of War, though securer before by the tribunes of the people than that of +Venice, which yet never incurred jealousy; for if the younger nobility +have been often girding at it, that happened not so much through the +apprehension of danger in it to the commonwealth, as through the awe of +it upon themselves. Wherefore the graver have doubtlessly shown their +prudence in the law whereby the magistracy of these councillors being to +last till' their successors be created, the council is established." + +The instructions of the councils for their matter being shown, it +remains that I show the instructions for the manner of their proceeding, +as they follow in-- + +The twentieth order, "Containing the method of debates to be observed +by the magistrates and the councils successively in order to a decree of +the Senate. + +"The magistrates of the signory, as councillors of this commonwealth, +shall take into their consideration all matters of state or of +government; and, having right to propose in any council, may, any one or +more of them, propose what business he or they please in that council +to which it most properly belongs. And, that the councils may be held to +their duty, the said magistrates are superintendents and inspectors of +the same, with right to propose to the Senate. + +"The censors have equal power with these magistrates, but in relation to +the Council of Religion only. + +"Any two of the three provosts in every council may propose to, and are +the more peculiar proposers of, the same council; to the end that there +be not only an inspection and superintendency of business in general, +but that every work be also committed to a peculiar hand. + +"Any one or more of the magistrates, or any two of the provosts +respectively having proposed, the council shall debate the business so +proposed, to which they of the third region that are willing shall speak +first in their order; they of the second, next; and they of the first, +last; and the opinions of those that proposed or spoke, as they shall +be thought the most considerable by the council, shall be taken by the +secretary of the same in writing, and each of them signed with the name +of the author. + +"The opinions being thus prepared, any magistrate of the signory, the +censors, or any two of the provosts of that council, upon this occasion +may assemble the Senate. + +"The Senate being assembled, the opinions (for example, if they be four) +shall be read in their order, that is, according to the order or dignity +of the magistrates or councillors by which they were signed. And being +read, if any of the council introducing them will speak, they, as best +acquainted with the business, shall have precedence; and after them the +senators shall speak according to their regions, beginning by the third +first, and so continuing till every man that will has spoken; and when +the opinions have been sufficiently debated, they shall be put all +together to the ballot after this manner: + +"Four secretaries, carrying each of them one of the opinions in one +hand, with a white box in the other, and each following the other, +according to the order of the opinions, shall present his box, naming +the author of his opinion to every senator; and one secretary or +ballotin with a green box shall follow the four white ones; and one +secretary or ballotin with a red box shall follow the green one; and +every senator shall put one ball into some one of these six boxes. The +suffrage being gathered and opened before the signory, if the red box or +non-sincere had above half the suffrages, the opinions shall be all cast +out, for the major part of the house is not clear in the business. If +no one of the four opinions had above half the suffrages in the +affirmative, that which had fewest shall be cast out, and the other +three shall be balloted again. If no one of the three had above half, +that which had fewest shall be cast out, and the other two shall ballot +again. If neither of the two had above half, that which had fewest shall +be cast out, and the remaining opinion shall be balloted again. And if +the remaining opinion has not above half, it shall also be cast out. +But the first of the opinions that arrives at most above half in the +affirmative, is the decree of the Senate. The opinions being all of them +cast out by the non-sincere, may be reviewed, if occasion permits, by +the council, and brought in again. If they be cast out by the negative, +the case being of advice only; the house approves not, and there is an +end of it: the case being necessary, and admitting delay, the council is +to think again upon the business, and to bring in new opinions; but the +case being necessary, and not admitting delay, the Senate immediately +electing the juncta shall create the Dictator. 'And let the Dictator,' +as the Roman saying is, 'take care that the commonwealth receives no +harm.'" + +This in case the debate concludes not in a decree. But if a decree be +passed, it is either in matter of state or government according to law +enacted already, and then it is good without going any further, or it +is in matter of law to be enacted, repealed, or amended; and then the +decree of the Senate, especially if it be for a war, or for a levy of +men or money, is invalid, without the result of the commonwealth, which +is in the prerogative tribe, or representative of the people. + +"The Senate having prepared a decree to be proposed to the people, shall +appoint their proposers; and no other may propose for the Senate to +the people but the magistrates of the house; that is to say, the +three commissioners of the seal, or any two of them; the three of the +Treasury, or any two of them; or the two censors. + +"The Senate having appointed their proposers, shall require of the +tribunes a muster of the people at a set time and place: and the +tribunes or any two of them having mustered the people accordingly, the +proposers shall propose the sense or decree of the Senate by clauses to +the people. And that which is proposed by the authority of the Senate, +and resolved by the command of the people, is the law of Oceana." To +this order, implicitly containing the sum very near of the whole civil +part of the commonwealth, my Lord Archon spoke thus in council: + + "MY DEAR LORDS: + +"There is a saying, that a man must cut his coat according to his cloth. +When I consider what God has allowed or furnished to our present work, I +am amazed. You would have a popular government; he has weighed it to you +in the present balance, as I may say, to a drachm; you have no more +to do but to fix it. For the superstructures of such a government they +require a good aristocracy: and you have, or have had a nobility or +gentry the best studied, and the best writers, at least next that +of Italy, in the whole world; nor have they been inferior, when so +exercised, in the leading of armies. But the people are the main body +of a commonwealth; show me from the treasuries of the snow (as it is in +Job) to the burning zone a people whose shoulder so universally and so +exactly fits the corselet. Nevertheless, it were convenient to be well +provided with auxiliaries. There is Marpesia, through her fruitfulness, +inexhaustible of men, and men through her barrenness not only enured to +hardship, but in your arms. It may be said that Venice, excepting only +that she takes not in the people, is the most incomparable situation +of a commonwealth. You are Venice, taking in your people and your +auxiliaries too. My lords, the children of Israel were makers of brick +before they were builders of a commonwealth; but our brick is made, +our mortar tempered, the cedars of Lebanon are hewed and squared to our +hands. Has this been the work of man? Or is it in man to withstand this +work? 'Shall he that contends with the Almighty instruct him? He that +reproves God, let him answer it.' For our parts, everything is so laid +that when we come to have use of it, it is the next at hand; and unless +we can conceive that God and nature do anything in vain, there is no +more for us to do but to despatch. The piece which we have reached to us +in the foregoing orders, is the aristocracy. Athens, as has been shown, +was plainly lost through the want of a good aristocracy. + +"But the sufficiency of an aristocracy goes demonstrably upon the hand +of the nobility or gentry; for that the politics can be mastered +without study, or that the people can have leisure to study, is a vain +imagination; and what kind of aristocracy divines and lawyers would +make, let their incurable running upon their own narrow bias and their +perpetual invectives against Machiavel (though in some places justly +reprovable, yet the only politician, and incomparable patron of the +people) serve for instruction. I will stand no more to the judgment +of lawyers and divines in this work, than to that of so many other +tradesmen; but if this model chances to wander abroad, I recommend it +to the Roman speculativi (the most complete gentlemen of this age) +for their censure; or with my Lord Epimonus his leave, send 300 or 400 +copies to your agent at Venice to be presented to the magistrates there; +and when they have considered them, to be proposed to the debate of the +Senate, the most competent judges under heaven, who, though they have +great affairs, will not refuse to return you the oracle of their ballot. +The councillors of princes I will not trust; they are but journeymen. +The wisdom of these later times in princes' affairs (says Verulamius) is +rather fine deliveries and shiftings of dangers when they be near, than +solid and grounded courses to keep them off. Their councillors do not +derive their proceedings from any sound root of government that may +contain the demonstration, and assure the success of them, but are +expedient-mongers, givers of themselves to help a lame dog over a stile; +else how comes it to pass that the fame of Cardinal Richelieu has been +like thunder, whereof we hear the noise, but can make no demonstration +of the reason? But to return: if neither the people, nor divines and +lawyers, can be the aristocracy of a nation, there remains only +the nobility; in which style, to avoid further repetition, I shall +understand the gentry also, as the French do by the word noblesse. + +"Now to treat of the nobility in such sort as may be less obnoxious to +mistake, it will be convenient, and answerable to the present occasion, +that I divide my discourse into four parts: + +"The first, treating of nobility, and the kinds of it; + +"The second, of their capacity of the Senate; + +"The third, of the divers kinds of senates; + +"The fourth, of the Senate, according to the foregoing orders. + +"Nobility may be defined divers ways; for it is either ancient riches, +or ancient virtue, or a title conferred by a prince or a commonwealth. + +"Nobility of the first kind may be subdivided into two others, such as +hold an overbalance in dominion or property to the whole people, or such +as hold not an overbalance, in the former case, a nobility (such was +the Gothic, of which sufficient has been spoken) is incompatible with +popular government; for to popular government it is essential that power +should be in the people, but the overbalance of a nobility in dominion +draws the power to themselves. Wherefore in this sense it is that +Machiavel is to be understood, where he says, that these are pernicious +in a commonwealth; and of France, Spain, and Italy, that they are +nations which for this cause are the corruption of the world: for +otherwise nobility may, according to his definition (which is, 'that +they are such as live upon their own revenues in plenty, without +engagement either to the tilling of their lands, or other work for their +livelihood '), hold an underbalance to the people; in which case +they are not only safe, but necessary to the natural mixture of a +well-ordered commonwealth. + +"For how else can you have a commonwealth that is not altogether +mechanic? or what comparison is there of such commonwealths as are, or +come nearest to mechanic--for example, Athens, Switzerland, Holland, +to Lacedaemon, Rome, and Venice, plumed with their aristocracies? Your +mechanics, till they have first feathered their nests, like the fowls of +the air whose whole employment is to seek their food, are so busied in +their private concernments that they have neither leisure to study +the public, nor are safely to be trusted with it, because a man is not +faithfully embarked in this kind of ship, if he has no share in the +freight. But if his share be such as gives him leisure by his private +advantage to reflect upon that of the public, what other name is there +for this sort of men, being a leur aise, but (as Machiavel you see calls +them) nobility? Especially when their families come to be such as are +noted for their services done to the commonwealth, and so take into +their ancient riches ancient virtue, which is the second definition of +nobility, but such a one as is scarce possible in nature without the +former. 'For as the baggage,' says Verulamius, 'is to an army, so are +riches to virtue; they cannot be spared nor left behind, though they be +impediments, such as not only hinder the march, but sometimes through +the care of them lose or disturb the victory.' Of this latter sort is +the nobility of Oceana; the best of all others because they, having no +stamp whence to derive their price, can have it no otherwise than by +their intrinsic value. The third definition of nobility, is a title, +honor, or distinction from the people, conferred or allowed by the +prince or the commonwealth. And this may be two ways, either without +any stamp or privilege, as in Oceana; or with such privileges as are +inconsiderable, as in Athens after the battle of Plataea, whence the +nobility had no right, as such, but to religious offices, or inspection +of the public games, to which they were also to be elected by the +people; or with privileges, and those considerable ones, as the nobility +in Athens before the battle of Plataea, and the patricians in Rome +each of which had right, or claimed it, to the Senate and all the +magistracies; wherein for some time they only by their stamp were +current. + +"But to begin higher, and to speak more at large of nobility in their +several capacities of the Senate. The phylarchs, or princes of the +tribes of Israel, were the most renowned, or, as the Latin, the most +noble of the congregation, whereof by hereditary right they had the +leading and judging. The patriarchs, or princes of families, according +as they declared their pedigrees, had the like right as to their +families; but neither in these nor the former was there any hereditary +right to the Sanhedrim: though there be little question but the wise men +and understanding, and known among their tribes, which the people took +or elected into those or other magistracies, and whom Moses made rulers +over them, must have been of these, seeing they could not choose but be +the most known among the tribes, and were likeliest by the advantages of +education to be the most wise and understanding. + +"Solon having found the Athenians neither locally nor genealogically, +but by their different ways of life, divided into four tribes--that +is, into the soldiery, the tradesmen, the husbandmen, and the +goatherds--instituted a new distribution of them, according to the sense +or valuation of their estates, into four classes: the first, second, and +third consisting of such as were proprietors in land, distinguished by +the rate of their freeholds, with that stamp upon them, which making +them capable of adding honor to their riches, that is to say, of the +Senate, and all the magistracies, excluded the fourth, being the body +of the people, and far greater in number than the former three, from all +other right, as to those capacities, except the election of these, who +by this means became an hereditary aristocracy or senatorian order +of nobility. This was that course which came afterward to be the +destruction of Rome, and had now ruined Athens. The nobility, according +to the inevitable nature of such a one, having laid the plot how to +divest the people of the result, and so to draw the whole power of the +commonwealth to themselves; which in all likelihood they had done, if +the people, coming by mere chance to be victorious in the battle of +Plataea, and famous for defending Greece against the Persians, had not +returned with such courage as irresistibly broke the classes, to which +of old they had borne a white tooth, brought the nobility to equal +terms, and the Senate with the magistracies to be common to both; the +magistracies by suffrage, and the Senate (which was the mischief of +it, as I shall show anon in that constitution) by lot only." The +Lacedaemonians were in the manner, and for the same cause with the +Venetians at this day, no other than a nobility even according to the +definition given of nobility by Machiavel; for they neither exercised +any trade, nor labored their lands or lots, which was done by their +helots: wherefore some nobility may be far from pernicious in a +commonwealth by Machiavel's own testimony, who is an admirer of this, +though the servants thereof were more in number than the citizens. To +these servants I hold the answer of Lycurgus--when he bade him who asked +why he did not admit the people to the government of his commonwealth, +to go home and admit his servants to the government of his family-to +relate: for neither were the Lacedaemonians servants, nor, further, +capable of the government, unless, whereas the congregation had the +result, he should have given them the debate also; every one of +these that attained to sixty years of age, and the major vote of the +congregation, being equally capable of the Senate. + +"The nobility of Rome, and their capacity of the Senate, I have already +described by that of Athens before the battle of Plataea, saving +only that the Athenian was never eligible into the Senate without the +suffrage of the people till the introduction of the lot, but the Roman +nobility ever: for the patricians were elected into the Senate by the +kings; by the consuls, or the censors, or if a plebeian happened to +be conscribed, he and his posterity became patricians. Nor, though +the people had many disputes with the nobility, did this ever come in +controversy, which, if there had been nothing else, might in my judgment +have been enough to overturn that commonwealth. + +"The Venetian nobility, but that they are richer, and not military, +resemble at all other points the Lacedaemonian, as I have already shown. +These Machiavel excepts from his rule, by saying that their estates are +rather personal than real, or of any great revenue in land, which comes +to our account, and shows that a nobility or party of the nobility, not +overbalancing in dominion, is not dangerous, but of necessary use in +every commonwealth, provided it be rightly ordered; for if it be so +ordered as was that of Rome, though they do not overbalance at the +beginning, as they did not there, it will not be long ere they do, as +is clear both in reason and experience toward the latter end. That the +nobility only be capable of the Senate is there only not dangerous, +where there be no other citizens, as in this government and that of +Lacedaemon. + +"The nobility of Holland and Switzerland, though but few, have +privileges not only distinct from the people, but so great that in some +sovereignties they have a negative voice; an example which I am far from +commending, being such as (if those governments were not cantonized, +divided, and subdivided into many petty sovereignties that balance one +another, and in which the nobility, except they had a prince at the head +of them, can never join to make work) would be the most dangerous +that ever was, but the Gothic, of which it favors. For in ancient +commonwealths you shall never find a nobility to have had a negative +but by the poll, which, the people being far more in number, came to +nothing; whereas these have it, be they never so few by their stamp or +order. + +"Ours of Oceana have nothing else but their education and their leisure +for the public, furnished by their ease and competent riches: and their +intrinsic value, which, according as it comes to hold weight in the +judgment or suffrage of the people, is their only way to honor and +preferment. Wherefore I would have your lordships to look upon your +children as such, who, if they come to shake off some part of their +baggage, shall make the more quick and glorious march; for it was +nothing else but the baggage, sordidly plundered by the nobility of +Rome, that lost the victory of the whole world in the midst of her +triumph. + +"Having followed the nobility thus close, they bring us, according to +their natural course and divers kinds, to the divers constitutions of +the Senate. + +"That of Israel (as was shown by my right noble Lord Phosphorus de Auge, +in the opening of the commonwealth) consisted of seventy elders, elected +at first by the people. But whereas they were for life, they ever after +(though without any divine precept for it) substituted their successors +by ordination, which ceremony was most usually performed by imposition +of hands; and by this means a commonwealth of as popular institution +as can be found became, as it is accounted by Josephus, aristocratical. +From this ordination derives that which was introduced by the Apostles +into the Christian Church; for which cause I think it is that +the Presbyterians would have the government of the Church to be +aristocratical, though the Apostles, to the end, as I conceive, that +they might give no occasion to such a mistake, but show that they +intended the government of the Church to be popular, ordained elders, +as has been shown, by the holding up of hands (or free suffrage of the +people) in every congregation or ecclesia: for that is the word in the +original, being borrowed from the civil congregations of the people in +Athens and Lacedaemon, which were so called; and the word for holding up +of hands in the text is also the very same, which signified the suffrage +of the people in Athens, chirotonante; for the suffrage of the +Athenians was given per chirotonian, says Emmius. + +"The Council of the Bean (as was shown by my Lord Navarchus de Paralo in +his full discourse), being the proposing Senate of Athens (for that +of the Areopagites was a judicatory), consisted of 400, some say 500 +senators, elected annually, all at once, and by a mere lot without +suffrage. Wherefore though the Senate, to correct the temerity of the +lot, had power to cast out such as they should judge unworthy of that +honor, this related to manners only, and was not sufficient to repair +the commonwealth, which by such means became impotent; and forasmuch +as her Senate consisted not of the natural aristocracy, which in a +commonwealth is the only spur and rein of the people, it was cast +headlong by the rashness of her demagogues or grandees into ruin; while +her Senate, like the Roman tribunes (who almost always, instead of +governing, were rather governed by the multitude), proposed not to the +result only, but to the debate also of the people, who were therefore +called to the pulpits, where some vomited, and others drank, poison. + +"The Senate of Lacedaemon, most truly discovered by my Lord Laco de +Scytale, consisted but of thirty for life, whereof the two kings, having +but single votes, were hereditary, the rest elected by the free suffrage +of the people, but out of such as were sixty years of age. These had +the whole debate of the commonwealth in themselves, and proposed to the +result only of the people. And now the riddle which I have heretofore +found troublesome to unfold, is out; that is to say, why Athens and +Lacedaemon, consisting each of the Senate and the people, the one +should be held a democracy, and the other an aristocracy, or laudable +oligarchy, as it is termed by Isocrates; for that word is not, wherever +you meet it, to be branded, Seeing it is used also by Aristotle, +Plutarch, and others, sometimes in a good sense. The main difference was +that the people in this had the result only, and in that the debate and +result, too. But for my part, where the people have the election of +the Senate, not bound to a distinct order, and the result, which is the +sovereign power, I hold them to have that share in the government (the +Senate being not for life) whereof, with the safety of the commonwealth, +they are capable in nature, and such a government, for that cause, to +be democracy; though I do not deny but in Lacedaemon, the paucity of +the senators considered, it might be called oligarchy, in comparison of +Athens; or, if we look on their continuance for life, though they had +been more, aristocracy. + +"The Senate of Rome (whose fame has been heard to thunder in the +eloquence of my Lord Dolabella d'Enyo) consisting of 300, was, in regard +of the number, less oligarchical than that of Lacedaemon; but more in +regard of the patricians, who, having an hereditary capacity of +the same, were not elected to that honor by the people; but, being +conscribed by the censors, enjoyed it for life. Wherefore these, if they +had their wills, would have resolved as well as debated; which set the +people at such variance with them as dissolved the commonwealth; whereas +if the people had enjoyed the result, that about the agrarian, as well +as all other strife, must of necessity have ceased. + +"The Senates of Switzerland and Holland (as I have learnt of my Lords +Alpester and Glaucus), being bound up (like the sheaf of arrows which +the latter gives) by leagues, lie like those in their quivers; but +arrows, when they come to be drawn, fly from this way and from that; and +I am contented that these concerned us not. + +"That of Venice (by the faithful testimony of my most excellent Lord +Linceus de Stella) has obliged a world, sufficiently punished by its +own blindness and ingratitude, to repent and be wiser: for whereas +a commonwealth in which there is no senate, or where the senate is +corrupt, cannot stand, the great Council of Venice, like the statue of +Nilus, leans upon an urn or waterpot, which pours forth the Senate in +so pure and perpetual a stream, as being unable to stagnate, is forever +incapable of corruption. The fuller description of this Senate is +contained in that of Oceana; and that of Oceana in the foregoing orders. +To every one of which, because something has been already said, I shall +not speak in particular. But in general, your Senate, and the other +assembly, or the prerogative, as I shall show in due place, are +perpetual, not as lakes or puddles, but as the rivers of Eden; and are +beds made, as you have seen, to receive the whole people, by a due and +faithful vicissitude, into their current. They are not, as in the late +way, alternate. Alternate life in government is the alternate death of +it. + +"This was the Gothic work, whereby the former government (which was not +only a ship, but a gust, too) could never open her sails, but in danger +to overset herself, neither could make any voyage nor lie safe in her +own harbor. The wars of later ages, says Verulamius, seem to be made in +the dark, in respect of the glory and honor which reflected on men from +the wars in ancient times. Their shipping of this sort Was for voyages; +ours dare not launch, nor lies it safe at home. Your Gothic politicians +seem to me rather to have invented some new ammunition or gunpowder, in +their King and Parliament, than government. For what is become of the +princes (a kind of people) in Germany?--blown up. Where are the estates, +or the power of the people in France?--blown up. Where is that of the +people in Arragon, and the rest of the Spanish kingdoms?--blown up. On +the other side, where is the King of Spain's power in Holland?--blown +up. Where is that of the Austrian princes in Switzerland?--blown up. +This perpetual peevishness and jealousy, under the alternate empire of +the prince and of the people, are obnoxious to every spark. Nor shall +any man show a reason that will be holding in prudence, why the people +of Oceana have blown up their King, but that their kings did not +first blow up them. The rest is discourse for ladies. Wherefore your +parliaments are not henceforth to come out of the bag of AEolus, but by +your galaxies, to be the perpetual food of the fire of Vesta. + +"Your galaxies, which divide the house into so many regions, are three; +one of which constituting the third region is annually chosen, but +for the term of three years; which causes the house (having at once +blossoms, fruit half ripe, and others dropping off in full maturity) +to resemble an orange tree, such as is at the same time an education or +spring, and a harvest, too; for the people have made a very ill-choice +in the man, who is not easily capable of the perfect knowledge in one +year of the senatorian orders; which knowledge, allowing him for the +first to have been a novice, brings him the second year to practise, and +time enough. For at this rate you must always have 200 knowing men +in the government. And thus the vicissitude of your senators is not +perceivable in the steadiness and perpetuity of your Senate; which, like +that of Venice, being always changing, is forever the same. And though +other politicians have not so well imitated their patter, there is +nothing more obvious in nature, seeing a man who wears the same flesh +but a short time, is nevertheless the same man, and of the same genius; +and whence is this but from the constancy of nature, in holding a man +to her orders? Wherefore keep also to your orders. But this is a mean +request; your orders will be worth little if they do not hold you to +them, wherefore embark. They are like a ship, if you be once aboard, +you do not carry them, but they you; and see how Venice stands to her +tackling: you will no more forsake them than you will leap into the sea. + +"But they are very many and difficult. O my Lords, what seaman casts +away his card because it has four-and-twenty points of the compass? and +yet those are very near as many and as difficult as the orders in the +whole circumference of your commonwealth. Consider, how have we been +tossed with every wind of doctrine, lost by the glib tongues of your +demagogues and grandees in our own havens? A company of fiddlers that +have disturbed your rest for your groat; L2,000 to one, L3,000 a year to +another, has been nothing. And for what? Is there one of them that +yet knows what a commonwealth is? And are you yet afraid of such a +government in which these shall not dare to scrape for fear of the +statute? Themistocles could not fiddle, but could make of a small city +a great commonwealth: these have fiddled, and for your money, till they +have brought a great commonwealth to a small city. + +"It grieves me, while I consider how, and from what causes, imaginary +difficulties will be aggravated, that the foregoing orders are not +capable of any greater clearness in discourse or writing; but if a man +should make a book, describing every trick and passage, it would fare no +otherwise with a game at cards; and this is no more, if a man plays upon +the square. 'There is a great difference,' says Verulamius, 'between a +cunning man and a wise man (between a demagogue and a legislator), not +only in point of honesty, but in point of ability as there be that can +pack the cards, and yet cannot play well; so there be some that are good +in canvasses and fractions, that are otherwise weak men.' Allow me but +these orders, and let them come with their cards in their sleeves, +or pack if they can. 'Again,' says he, 'it is one thing to understand +persons, and another to understand matters; for many are perfect in +men's humors that are not greatly capable of the real part of business, +which is the constitution of one that has studied men more than books. +But there is nothing more hurtful in a State than that cunning men +should pass for wise.' His words are an oracle. As Dionysius, when he +could no longer exercise his tyranny among men, turned schoolmaster, +that he might exercise it among boys. Allow me but these orders, and +your grandees, so well skilled in the baits and palates of men, shall +turn rat-catchers. + +"And whereas 'councils (as is discreetly observed by the same author +in his time) are at this day, in most places, but familiar meetings +(somewhat like the Academy of our provosts), where matters are rather +talked on than debated, and run too swift to order an act of council,' +give me my orders, and see if I have not puzzled your demagogues. + +"It is not so much my desire to return upon haunts, as theirs that +will not be satisfied; wherefore if, notwithstanding what was said of +dividing and choosing in our preliminary discourses, men will yet +be returning to the question, Why the Senate must be a council apart +(though even in Athens, where it was of no other constitution than the +popular assembly, the distinction of it from the other was never held +less than necessary) this may be added to the former reasons, that if +the aristocracy be not for the debate, it is for nothing; but if it be +for debate, it must have convenience for it; and what convenience +is there for debate in a crowd, where there is nothing but jostling, +treading upon one another, and stirring of blood, than which in this +case there is nothing more dangerous? Truly, it was not ill said of my +Lord Epimonus, that Venice plays her game, as it were, at billiards or +nine-holes; and so may your lordships, unless your ribs be so strong +that you think better of football: for such sport is debate in a popular +assembly as, notwithstanding the distinction of the Senate, was the +destruction of Athens." + +This speech concluded the debate which happened at the institution +of the Senate. The next assembly is that of the people or prerogative +tribe. + +The face, or mien, of the prerogative tribe for the arms, the horses, +and the discipline, but more especially for the select men, is that of +a very noble regiment, or rather of two; the one of horse, divided +into three troops (besides that of the provinces, which will be shown +hereafter), with their captains, cornets, and two tribunes of the horse +at the head of them; the other of foot in three companies (beside that +of the provinces), with their captains, ensigns, and two tribunes of +the foot at the head of them. The first troop is called the Phoenix, +the second the Pelican, and the third the Swallow. The first company the +Cypress, the second the Myrtle, and the third the Spray. Of these again +(not without a near resemblance of the Roman division of a tribe) the +Phoenix and the Cypress constitute the first class, the Pelican and the +Myrtle the second, and the Swallow with the Spray the third, renewed +every spring by-- + +The one-and-twentieth order, "Directing, that upon every Monday next +ensuing the last of March, the deputies of the annual galaxy arriving at +the pavilion in the halo, and electing one captain and one cornet of the +Swallow (triennial officers) by and out of the cavalry at the horse urn, +according to the rules contained in the ballot of the hundred; and one +captain with one ensign of the Spray (triennial officers) by and out +of the infantry at the foot urn, after the same way of balloting, +constitute and become the third classes of the prerogative tribe." + +Seven deputies are annually returned by every tribe, whereof three are +horse and four are foot; and there be fifty tribes: so the Swallow must +consist of 150 horse, the Spray of 200 foot. And the rest of the classes +being two, each of them in number equal, the whole prerogative (beside +the provinces, that is, the knights and deputies of Marpesia and +Panopea) must consist of 1,050 deputies. And these troops and companies +may as well be called centuries as those of the Romans; for the Romans +related not, in so naming theirs, to the number. And whereas they were +distributed according to the valuation of their estates, so are these; +which, by virtue of the last order, are now accommodated with their +triennial officers. But there be others appertaining to this tribe whose +election, being of far greater importance, is annual, as follows in + +The twenty-second order, "Whereby the first class having elected their +triennial officers, and made oath to the old tribunes, that they +will neither introduce, cause, nor to their power suffer debate to be +introduced into any popular assembly of this government, but to their +utmost be aiding and assisting to seize and deliver any person or +persons in that way offending, and striking at the root of this +commonwealth, to the Council of War, are to proceed with the other two +classes of the prerogative tribe to election of the new tribunes, +being four annual magistrates, whereof two are to be elected out of the +cavalry at the horse urn, and two out of the infantry at the foot +urn, according to the common ballot of the tribes. And they may be +promiscuously chosen out of any classes, provided that the same person +shall not be capable of bearing the tribunitian honor twice in the term +of one galaxy. The tribunes thus chosen shall receive the tribe (in +reference to the power of mustering and disciplining the same) as +commanders-in-chief, and for the rest as magistrates, whose proper +function is prescribed by the next order. The tribunes may give leave +to any number of the prerogative, not exceeding 100 at a time, to be +absent, so they be not magistrates nor officers, and return within three +months. If a magistrate or officer has a necessary occasion, he may also +be absent for the space of one month, provided that there be not above +three cornets or ensigns, two captains, or one tribune so absent at one +time." + +To this the Archon spoke at the institution after this manner: + +"MY LORDS: + +"It is affirmed by Cicero, in his oration for Flaccus, that the +commonwealths of Greece were all shaken or ruined by the intemperance of +their Comitia, or assemblies of the people. The truth is, if good heed +in this point be not taken, a commonwealth will have bad legs. But all +the world knows he should have excepted Lacedaemon, where the people, as +has been shown by the oracle, had no power at all of debate, nor (till +after Lysander, whose avarice opened a gulf that was not long ere it +swallowed up his country) came it ever to be exercised by them. Whence +that commonwealth stood longest and firmest of any other but this, +in our days, of Venice; which, having underlaid herself with the like +institution, owes a great, if not the greater, part of her steadiness to +the same principle; the great Council, which is with her the people, by +the authority of my Lord Epimonus, never speaking a word. Nor shall any +commonwealth, where the people in their political capacity is talkative, +ever see half the days of one of these, but, being carried away by +vainglorious men (that, as Overbury says, void more than they drink), +swim down the stream, as did Athens, the most prating of these dames, +when that same ranting fellow Alcibiades fell a-demagoguing for the +Silician War. + +"But whereas debate, by the authority and experience of Lacedaemon +and Venice, is not to be committed to the people in a well-ordered +government, it may be said that the order specified is but a slight +bar in a matter of like danger; for so much as an oath, if there be no +recourse upon the breach of it, is a weak tie for such hands as have +the sword in them, wherefore what should hinder the people of Oceana, +if they happen not to regard an oath from assuming debate, and making +themselves as much an anarchy as those of Athens? To which I answer, +Take the common sort in a private capacity, and, except they be injured, +you shall find them to have a bashfulness in the presence of the better +sort, or wiser men, acknowledging their abilities by attention, and +accounting it no mean honor to receive respect from them; but if they be +injured by them, they hate them, and the more for being wise or great, +because that makes it the greater injury. Nor refrain they in this +case from any kind of intemperance of speech, if of action. It is no +otherwise with a people in their political capacity; you shall never +find that they have assumed debate for itself, but for something else. +Wherefore in Lacedaemon where there was, and in Venice where there is, +nothing else for which they should assume it, they have never shown so +much as an inclination to it. + +"Nor was there any appearance of such a desire in the people of Rome +(who from the time of Romulus had been very well contented with the +power of result either in the parochial assemblies, as it was settled +upon them by him, or in the meetings of the hundreds, as it was altered +in their regard for the worse by Servius Tullius) till news was brought, +some fifteen years after the exile of Tarquin, their late King (during +which time the Senate had governed pretty well), that he was dead at the +Court of Aristodemus the tyrant of Cumae. Whereupon the patricians, +or nobility, began to let out the hitherto dissembled venom which is +inherent in the root of oligarchy and fell immediately upon injuring +the people beyond all moderation. For whereas the people had served both +gallantly and contentedly in arms upon their own charges, and, though +joint purchasers by their swords of the conquered lands, had not +participated in the same to above two acres a man (the rest being +secretly usurped by the patricians), they, through the meanness of their +support and the greatness of their expense, being generally indebted, no +sooner returned home with victory to lay down their arms, than they were +snatched up by their creditors, the nobility, to cram jails. Whereupon, +but with the greatest modesty that was ever known in the like case, +they first fell upon debate, affirming 'That they were oppressed and +captivated at home, while abroad they fought for liberty and empire, +and that the freedom of the common people was safer in time of war than +peace, among their enemies than their fellow-citizens.' It is true that +when they could not get the Senate, through fear, as was pretended +by the patricians, to assemble and take their grievances into +consideration, they grew so much the warmer, that it was glad to meet; +where Appius Claudius, a fierce spirit, was of opinion that recourse +should be had to consular power, whereby some of the brands of sedition +being taken off, the flame might be extinguished. Servilius, being of +another temper, thought it better and safer to try if the people might +be bowed than broken. + +"But this debate was interrupted by tumultuous news of the near approach +of the Volsci, a case in which the Senate had no recourse but to the +people, who, contrary to their former custom upon the like occasions, +would not stir a foot, but fell a-laughing, and saying, 'Let them fight +that have something to fight for.' The Senate that had purses, and could +not sing so well before the thief, being in a great perplexity, found +no possible way out of it but to beseech Servilius, one of a genius well +known to be popular, that he would accept of the consulship, and make +some such use of it as might be helpful to the patrician interest. +Servilius, accepting of the offer, and making use of his interest with +the people, persuaded them to hope well of the good intention of the +fathers, whom it would little beseem to be forced to those things which +would lose their grace, and that in view of the enemy, if they came not +freely; and withal published an edict, that no man should withhold a +citizen of Rome by imprisonment from giving his name (for that was +the way, as I shall have opportunity hereafter to show more at large, +whereby they drew out their armies), nor to seize or sell any man's +goods or children that were in the camp. Whereupon the people with a +mighty concourse immediately took arms, marched forth, and (which to +them was as easy as to be put into the humor, and that, as appears in +this place, was not hard) totally defeated the Volsci first, then the +Sabines (for the neighboring nations, hoping to have had a good bargain +of the discord in Rome, were up in arms on all sides), and after the +Sabines the Aurunci. Whence returning, victorious in three battles they +expected no less than that the Senate would have made good their words, +when Appius Claudius, the other Consul, of his innate pride, and that +he might frustrate the faith of his colleague, caused the soldiers (who +being set at liberty, had behaved themselves with such valor) to be +restored at their return to their creditors and their jails. + +"Great resort upon this was made by the people to Servilius, showing him +their wounds, calling him to witness how they had behaved themselves, +and minding him of his promise. Poor Servilius was sorry, but so +overawed with the headiness of his colleague, and the obstinacy of the +whole faction of the nobility, that, not daring to do anything either +way, he lost both parties, the fathers conceiving that he was ambitious, +and the people that he was false; while the Consul Claudius, continuing +to countenance such as daily seized and imprisoned some of the indebted +people, had still new and dangerous controversies with them, insomuch +that the commonwealth was torn with horrid division, and the people +(because they found it not so safe or so effectual in public) minded +nothing but laying their heads together in private conventicles. For +this Aulus Virginius and Titus Vetusius, the new Consuls, were reproved +by the Senate as slothful, and upbraided with the virtue of Appius +Claudius. Whereupon the Consuls having desired the Senate that they +might know their pleasure, showed afterward their readiness to obey +it, by summoning the people according to command, and requiring names +whereby to draw forth an army for diversion, but no man would answer. +Report hereof being made to the Senate, the younger sort of the fathers +grew so hot with the Consuls that they desired them to abdicate the +magistracy, which they had not the courage to defend. + +"The Consuls, though they conceived themselves to be roughly handled, +made this soft answer. 'Fathers conscript, that you may please to take +notice it was foretold some horrid sedition is at hand, we shall only +desire that they whose valor in this place is so great, may stand by us +to see how we behave ourselves, and then be as resolute in your +commands as you will; your fatherhoods may know if we be wanting in the +performance.' + +"At this some of the hot young noblemen returned with the Consuls to +the tribunal, before which the people were yet standing; and the +Consuls having generally required names in vain, to put it to something, +required the name of one that was in their eye particularly; on whom, +when he moved not, they commanded a lictor to lay hands, but the people, +thronging about the party summoned, forbade the lictor, who durst not +touch him; at which the hotspurs that came with the consuls, enraged by +the affront, descended from the throne to the aid of the lictor; +from whom in so doing they turned the indignation of the people upon +themselves with such heat that the Consuls interposing, thought fit, by +remitting the assembly, to appease the tumult; in which, nevertheless, +there had been nothing but noise. Nor was there less in the Senate, +being suddenly rallied upon this occasion, where they that received the +repulse, with others whose heads were as addled as their own, fell +upon the business as if it had been to be determined by clamor till +the Consuls, upbraiding the Senate that it differed not from the +market-place, reduced the house to orders. + +"And the fathers, having been consulted accordingly, there were three +opinions: Publius Virginius conceived that the consideration to be +had upon the matter in question, or aid of the indebted and imprisoned +people, was not to be further extended than to such as had engaged upon +the promise made by Servilius; Titus Largius, that it was no time to +think it enough, if men's merits were acknowledged, while the whole +people, sunk under the weight of their debts, could not emerge without +some common aid, which to restrain, by putting some into a better +condition than others, would rather more inflame the discord than +extinguish it; Appius Claudius (still upon the old haunt) would have it +that the people were rather wanton than fierce; it was not oppression +that necessitated, but their power that invited them to these freaks; +the empire of the Consuls since the appeal to the people (whereby a +plebeian might ask his fellows if he were a thief) being but a mere +scarecrow. 'Go to,' says he, 'let us create the dictator, from whom +there is no appeal, and then let me see more of this work, or him that +shall forbid my lictor.' + +"The advice of Appius was abhorred by many; and to introduce a general +recision of debts with Largius, was to violate all faith; that of +Virginius, as the most moderate, would have passed best, but that +there were private interests, that constant bane of the public, which +withstood it. So they concluded with Appius, who also had been dictator, +if the Consuls and some of the graver sort had not thought it altogether +unseasonable, at a time when the Volsci and the Sabines were up again, +to venture so far upon alienation of the people: for which cause +Valerius, being descended from the Publicolas, the most popular family, +as also in his own person of a mild nature, was rather trusted with so +rigid a magistracy. Whence it happened that the people, though they knew +well enough against whom the Dictator was created, feared nothing from +Valerius; but upon a new promise made to the same effect with that of +Servilius, hoped better another time, and throwing away all disputes, +gave their names roundly, went out, and, to be brief, came home again +as victorious as in the former action, the Dictator entering the city in +triumph. Nevertheless, when he came to press the Senate to make good his +promise, and do something for the ease of the people, they regarded him +no more as to that point than they had done Servilius. Whereupon the +Dictator, in disdain to be made a stale, abdicated his magistracy, and +went home. Here, then, was a victorious army without a captain, and a +Senate pulling it by the beard in their gowns. What is it (if you have +read the story, for there is not such another) that must follow? Can +any man imagine that such only should be the opportunity upon which this +people could run away? + +"Alas, poor men, the AEqui and the Volsci and the Sabines were nothing, +but the fathers invincible! There they sat, some 300 of them armed all +in robes, and thundering with their tongues, without any hopes in +the earth to reduce them to any tolerable conditions. Wherefore, not +thinking it convenient to abide long so near them, away marches the +army, and encamps in the fields. This retreat of the people is called +the secession of Mount Aventin, where they lodged, very sad at their +condition, but not letting fall so much as a word of murmur against the +fathers. The Senate by this time were great lords, had the whole city to +themselves; but certain neighbors were upon the way that might come to +speak with them, not asking leave of the porter. Wherefore their minds +became troubled, and an orator was posted to the people to make as good +conditions with them as he could; but, whatever the terms were, to bring +them home, and with all speed. And here it was covenanted between the +Senate and the people, that these should have magistrates of their own +election, called the tribunes, upon which they returned. + +"To hold you no longer, the Senate having done this upon necessity, made +frequent attempts to retract it again, while the tribunes, on the other +side, to defend what they had got, instituted their Tributa Comitia, +or council of the people; where they came in time, and, as disputes +increased, to make laws without the authority of the Senate, called +plebiscita. Now to conclude in the point at which I drive: such were the +steps whereby the people of Rome came to assume debate, nor is it in art +or nature to debar a people of the like effect, where there is the like +cause. For Romulus, having in the election of his Senate squared out a +nobility for the support of a throne, by making that of the patricians +a distinct and hereditary order, planted the commonwealth upon two +contrary interests or roots, which, shooting forth, in time produced two +commonwealths, the one oligarchical in the nobility, the other a mere +anarchy of the people, and ever after caused a perpetual feud and enmity +between the Senate and the people, even to death. + +"There is not a more noble or useful question in the politics than that +which is started by Machiavel, whether means were to be found whereby +the enmity that was between the Senate and the people of Rome could +have been removed? Nor is there any other in which we, on the present +occasion, are so much concerned, particularly in relation to this +author; forasmuch as his judgment in the determination of the question +standing, our commonwealth falls. And he that will erect a commonwealth +against the judgment of Machiavel, is obliged to give such reasons +for his enterprise as must not go a-begging. Wherefore to repeat the +politician very honestly, but somewhat more briefly, he disputes thus: + +"'There be two sorts of commonwealths, the one for preservation, as +Lacedaemon and Venice; the other for increase, as Rome. + +"'Lacedaemon, being governed by a King and a small Senate, could +maintain itself a long time in that condition, because the inhabitants, +being few, having put a bar upon the reception of strangers, and living +in a strict observation of the laws of Lycurgus, which now had got +reputation, and taken away all occasion of tumults, might well continue +long in tranquillity. For the laws of Lycurgus introduced a greater +equality in estates, and a less equality in honors, whence there was +equal poverty; and the plebeians were less ambitious, because the honors +or magistracies of the city could extend but to a few and were not +communicable to the people, nor did the nobility by using them ill ever +give them a desire to participate of the same. This proceeded from the +kings, whose principality, being placed in the midst of the nobility, +had no greater means whereby to support itself than to shield the people +from all injury; whence the people, not fearing empire, desired it not; +and so all occasion of enmity between the Senate and the people was +taken away. But this union happened especially from two causes: the one +that the inhabitants of Lacedaemon being few, could be governed by the +few; the other, that, not receiving strangers into their commonwealth, +they did not corrupt it, nor increase it to such a proportion as was not +governable by the few. + +"'Venice has not divided with her plebeians, but all are called +gentlemen that be in administration of the government; for which +government she is more beholden to chance than the wisdom of her +law-makers; for many retiring to those islands, where that city is now +built, from the inundations of barbarians that overwhelmed the Roman +Empire, when they were increased to such a number that to live together +it was necessary to have laws, they ordained a form of government, +whereby assembling often in council upon affairs, and finding their +number sufficient for government, they put a bar upon all such as +repairing afterward to their city should become inhabitants, excluding +them from participation of power. Whence they that were included in the +administration had right, and they that were excluded, coming afterward, +and being received upon no other conditions to be inhabitants, had no +wrong, and therefore had no occasion, nor (being never trusted with +arms) any means to be tumultuous. Wherefore this commonwealth might very +well maintain itself in tranquillity. + +"'These things considered, it is plain that the Roman legislators, to +have introduced a quiet state, must have done one of these two things: +either shut out strangers, as the Lacedemonians; or, as the Venetians, +not allowed the people to bear arms. But they did neither. By which +means the people, having power and increase, were in perpetual tumult. +Nor is this to be helped in a commonwealth for increase, seeing if Rome +had cut off the occasion of her tumults, she must have cut off the means +of her increase, and by consequence of her greatness. + +"'Wherefore let a legislator consider with himself whether he would make +his commonwealth for preservation, in which case she may be free from +tumults; or for increase, in which case she must be infested with them. + +"'If he makes her for preservation, she may be quiet at home, but will +be in danger abroad. First, because her foundation must be narrow, +and therefore weak, as that of Lacedaemon, which lay but upon 30,000 +citizens; or that of Venice, which lies but upon 3,000. Secondly, such +a commonwealth must either be in peace, or war; if she be in peace, +the few are soonest effeminated and corrupted and so obnoxious also to +faction. If in war, succeeding ill, she is an easy prey; or succeeding +well, ruined by increase: a weight which her foundation is not able to +bear. For Lacedaemon, when she had made herself mistress upon the matter +of all Greece, through a slight accident, the rebellion of Thebes, +occasioned by the conspiracy of Pelopidas discovering this infirmity of +her nature, the rest of her conquered cities immediately fell off, and +in the turn as it were of a hand reduced her from the fullest tide to +the lowest ebb of her fortune. And Venice having possessed herself of a +great part of Italy by her purse, was no sooner in defence of it put to +the trial of arms than she lost all in one battle. + +"'Whence I conclude that in the ordination of a commonwealth a +legislator is to think upon that which is most honorable, and, laying +aside models for preservation, to follow the example of Rome conniving +at, and temporizing with, the enmity between the Senate and the people, +as a necessary step to the Roman greatness. For that any man should +find out a balance that may take in the conveniences and shut out the +inconveniences of both, I do not think it possible.' These are the words +of the author, though the method be somewhat altered, to the end that I +may the better turn them to my purpose. + +"My lords, I do not know how you hearken to this sound; but to hear +the greatest artist in the modern world giving sentence against our +commonwealth is that with which I am nearly concerned. Wherefore, with +all honor due to the prince of politicians, let us examine his reasoning +with the same liberty which he has asserted to be the right of a free +people. But we shall never come up to him, except by taking the business +a little lower, we descend from effects to their causes. The causes of +commotion in a commonwealth are either external or internal. External +are from enemies, from subjects, or from servants. To dispute then what +was the cause why Rome was infested by the Italian, or by the servile +wars; why the slaves took the capitol; why the Lacedaemonians were near +as frequently troubled with their helots as Rome with all those; or why +Venice, whose situation is not trusted to the faith of men, has as good +or better quarter with them whom she governs, than Rome had with the +Latins; were to dispute upon external causes. The question put by +Machiavel is of internal causes; whether the enmity that Was between the +Senate and the people of Rome might have been removed. And to determine +otherwise of this question than he does, I must lay down other +principles than he has done. To which end I affirm that a commonwealth, +internally considered, is either equal or unequal. A commonwealth that +is internally equal, has no internal cause of commotion, and therefore +can have no such effect but from without. A commonwealth internally +unequal has no internal cause of quiet, and therefore can have no such +effect but by diversion. + +"To prove my assertions, I shall at this time make use of no other +than his examples. Lacedaemon was externally unquiet, because she was +externally unequal, that is as to her helots; and she was internally at +rest, because she was equal in herself, both in root and branch; in the +root by her agrarian, and in branch by the Senate, inasmuch as no man +was thereto qualified but by election of the people. Which institution +of Lycurgus is mentioned by Aristotle, where he says that rendering his +citizens emulous (not careless) of that honor, he assigned to the people +the election of the Senate. Wherefore Machiavel in this, as in other +places, having his eye upon the division of patrician and plebeian +families as they were in Rome, has quite mistaken the orders of this +commonwealth, where there was no such thing. Nor did the quiet of it +derive from the power of the kings, who were so far from shielding the +people from the injury of the nobility, of which there was none in +his sense but the Senate, that one declared end of the Senate at the +institution was to shield the people from the kings, who from that time +had but single votes. Neither did it proceed from the straitness of the +Senate, or their keeping the people excluded from the government, that +they were quiet, but from the equality of their administration, seeing +the Senate (as is plain by the oracle, their fundamental law) had no +more than the debate, and the result of the commonwealth belonged to the +people. + +"Wherefore when Theopompus and Polydorus, Kings of Lacedaemon, would +have kept the people excluded from the government by adding to the +ancient law this clause, 'If the determination of the people be faulty, +it shall be lawful for the Senate to resume the debate,' the people +immediately became unquiet, and resumed that debate, which ended not +till they had set up their ephors, and caused that magistracy to be +confirmed by their kings." For when Theopompus first ordained that +the ephori or overseers should be created at Lacedaemon, to be such a +restraint upon the kings there as the tribunes were upon the consuls at +Rome, the Queen complained to him, that by this means he transmitted +the royal authority greatly diminished to his children: "I leave indeed +less," answered he, "but more lasting." And this was excellently said; +for that power only is safe which is limited from doing hurt. Theopompus +therefore, by confining the kingly power within the bounds of the laws, +did recommend it by so much to the people's affection as he removed it +from being arbitrary.' By which it may appear that a commonwealth for +preservation, if she comes to be unequal, is as obnoxious to enmity +between the Senate and the people as a commonwealth for increase; and +that the tranquillity of Lacedaemon was derived from no other cause than +her equality. + +"For Venice, to say that she is quiet because she disarms her subjects, +is to forget that Lacedaemon disarmed her helots, and yet could not in +their regard be quiet; wherefore if Venice be defended from external +causes of commotion, it is first through her situation, in which respect +her subjects have no hope (and this indeed may be attributed to her +fortune); and, secondly, through her exquisite justice, whence they have +no will to invade her. But this can be attributed to no other cause than +her prudence, which will appear to be greater, as we look nearer; for +the effects that proceed from fortune, if there be any such thing, are +like their cause, inconstant. But there never happened to any other +commonwealth so undisturbed and constant a tranquillity and peace in +herself as are in that of Venice; wherefore this must proceed from some +other cause than chance. And we see that as she is of all others the +most quiet, so the most equal commonwealth. Her body consists of one +order, and her Senate is like a rolling stone, as was said, which never +did, nor, while it continues upon that rotation, never shall gather the +moss of a divided or ambitious interest, much less such a one as that +which grasped the people of Rome in the talons of their own eagles. And +if Machiavel, averse from doing this commonwealth right, had considered +her orders, as his reader shall easily perceive he never did, he must +have been so far from attributing the prudence of them to chance, that +he would have touched up his admirable work to that perfection which, +as to the civil part, has no pattern in the universal world but this of +Venice. + +"Rome, secure by her potent and victorious arms from all external causes +of commotion, was either beholden for her peace at home to her enemies +abroad, or could never rest her head. My lords, you that are parents +of a commonwealth, and so freer agents than such as are merely natural, +have a care. For, as no man shall show me a commonwealth born straight +that ever became crooked, so no man shall show me a commonwealth born +crooked that ever became straight. Rome was crooked in her birth, or +rather prodigious. Her twins, the patrician and plebeian orders, came, +as was shown by the foregoing story, into the world, one body but two +heads, or rather two bellies; for, notwithstanding the fable out of +AEsop, whereby Menenius Agrippa, the orator that was sent from the +Senate to the people at Mount Aventin, showed the fathers to be the +belly, and the people to be the arms and the legs (which except that, +how slothful soever it might seem, they were nourished, not these only, +but the whole body must languish and be dissolved), it is plain that the +fathers were a distinct belly, such a one as took the meat indeed out of +the people's mouths, but abhorring the agrarian, returned it not in +the due and necessary nutrition of a commonwealth. Nevertheless, as the +people that live about the cataracts of Nilus are said not to hear the +noise, so neither the Roman writers, nor Machiavel the most conversant +with them, seem among so many of the tribunitian storms to hear their +natural voice; for though they could not miss of it so far as to +attribute them to the strife of the people for participation in +magistracy, or, in which Machiavel more particularly joins, to that +about the agrarian, this was to take the business short, and the remedy +for the disease. + +"A people, when they are reduced to misery and despair, become their +own politicians, as certain beasts, when they are sick, become their own +physicians, and are carried by a natural instinct to the desire of such +herbs as are their proper cure; but the people, for the greater part, +are beneath the beasts in the use of them. Thus the people of Rome, +though in their misery they had recourse by instinct, as it were, to the +two main fundamentals of a commonwealth, participation of magistracy and +the agrarian, did but taste and spit at them, not (which is necessary in +physic) drink down the potion, and in that their healths. For when they +had obtained participation of magistracy it was but lamely, not to a +full and equal rotation in all elections; nor did they greatly regard it +in what they had got. And when they had attained to the agrarian, they +neglected it so far as to suffer the law to grow obsolete; but if you do +not take the due dose of your medicines (as there be slight tastes which +a man may have of philosophy that incline to atheism) it may chance to +be poison, there being a like taste of the politics that inclines to +confusion, as appears in the institution of the Roman tribunes, by which +magistracy and no more the people were so far from attaining to peace, +that they in getting but so much, got but heads for an eternal feud; +whereas if they had attained in perfection either to the agrarian, they +had introduced the equality and calm of Lacedaemon, or to rotation, and +they had introduced that of Venice: and so there could have been no more +enmity between the Senate and the people of Rome than there was between +those orders in Lacedaemon, or is now in Venice. Wherefore Machiavel +seems to me, in attributing the peace of Venice more to her luck than +her prudence, of the whole stable to have saddled the wrong horse; +for though Rome in her military part could beat it better, beyond +all comparison, upon the sounding hoof, Venice for the civil part has +plainly had the wings of Pegasus. + +"The whole question then will come upon this point, whether the people +of Rome could have obtained these orders? And first, to say that they +could not have obtained them without altering the commonwealth, is no +argument; seeing neither could they, without altering the commonwealth, +have obtained their tribunes, which nevertheless were obtained. And if +a man considers the posture that the people were in when they obtained +their tribunes, they might as well, and with as great ease (forasmuch +as the reason why the nobility yielded to the tribunes was no other +than that there was no remedy) have obtained anything else. And for +experience, it was in the like case that the Lacedaemonians did set up +their ephors, and the Athenians, after the battle of Plataea, bowed the +Senate (so hard a thing it is for a commonwealth that was born crooked +to become straight) as much the other way. Nor, if it be objected +that this must have ruined the nobility (and in that deprived the +commonwealth of the greatness which she acquired by them), is this +opinion holding, but confuted by the sequel of the story, showing +plainly that the nobility, through the defect of such orders (that is +to say, of rotation and the agrarian), came to eat up the people; and +battening themselves in luxury, to be, as Sallust speaks of them, 'a +most sluggish and lazy nobility, in whom, besides the name, there was no +more than in a statue;' and to bring so mighty a commonwealth, and of so +huge a glory, to so deplorable an end. Wherefore means might have been +found to remove the enmity that was between the Senate and the people of +Rome. + +"My lords, if I have argued well, I have given you the comfort and +assurance that, notwithstanding the judgment of Machiavel, your +commonwealth is both safe and sound; but if I have not argued well, then +take the comfort and assurance which he gives you while he is firm, that +a legislator is to lay aside all other examples, and follow that of Rome +only, conniving and temporizing with the enmity between the Senate and +the people as a necessary step to the Roman greatness. Whence it follows +that your commonwealth, at the worst, is that which he has given you his +word is the best. + +"I have held your lordships long, but upon an account of no small +importance, which I can now sum up in these few words: where there is a +liquorishness in a popular assembly to debate, it proceeds not from +the constitution of the people, but of the commonwealth. Now that your +commonwealth is of such a constitution as is naturally free from this +kind of intemperance, is that which, to make good, I must divide the +remainder of my discourse into two parts: + +"The first, showing the several constitutions of the assemblies of the +people in other commonwealths; + +"The second, comparing our assembly of the people with theirs; and +showing how it excludes the inconveniences and embraces the conveniences +of them all. + +"In the beginning of the first part I must take notice, that among +the popular errors of our days it is no small one that men imagine the +ancient governments of this kind to have consisted for the most part +of one city that is, of one town; whereas by what we have learned of my +'lords that owned them, it appears that there was not any considerable +one of such a Constitution but Carthage, till this in our days of +Venice. + +"For to begin with Israel, it consisted of the twelve tribes, locally +spread or quartered throughout the whole territory, and these being +called together by trumpets, constituted the Church or assembly of +the people. The vastness of this weight, as also the slowness thence +unavoidable, became a great cause (as has been shown at large by my Lord +Phosphorus) of the breaking that commonwealth; notwithstanding that +the Temple, and those religious ceremonies for which the people were at +least annually obliged to repair thither, were no small ligament of the +tribes, otherwise but slightly tacked together. + +"Athens consisted of four tribes, taking in the whole people, both of +the city and of the territory; not so gathered by Theseus into one +town, as to exclude the country, but to the end that there might be some +capital of the commonwealth: though true it be, that the congregation, +consisting of the inhabitants within the walls, was sufficient to all +intents and purposes, without those of the country. These also being +exceeding numerous, became burdensome to themselves and dangerous to +the commonwealth; the more for their ill-education, as is observed by +Xenophon and Polybius, who compare them to mariners that in a calm are +perpetually disputing and swaggering one with another, and never lay +their hands to the common tackling or safety till they be all endangered +by some storm. Which caused Thucydides, when he saw this people through +the purchase of their misery become so much wiser as to reduce their +Comitia or assemblies to 5,000, to say in his eighth book: 'And now, at +least in my time, the Athenians seem to have ordered their State aright, +consisting of a moderate tempor both of the few (by which he means the +Senate of the Bean) and of the many,' or the 5,000. And he does not only +give you his judgment, but the best proof of it; for 'this,' says he, +'was the first thing that, after so many misfortunes past, made the city +again to raise her head.' The place I would desire your lordships to +note, as the first example that I find, or think is to be found, of a +popular assembly by way of representative. + +"Lacedaemon consisted of 30,000 citizens dispersed throughout Laconia, +one of the greatest provinces in all Greece, and divided, as by some +authors is probable, into six tribes. Of the whole body of these, +being gathered, consisted the great Church or assembly, which had the +legislative power; the little church, gathered sometimes for matters of +concern within the city, consisted of the Spartans only. These happened, +like that of Venice, to be good constitutions of a congregation, but +from an ill-cause the infirmity of a commonwealth, which through her +paucity was oligarchical. + +"Wherefore, go which way you will, it should seem that without a +representative of the people, your commonwealth, consisting of a whole +nation, can never avoid falling either into oligarchy or confusion. + +"This was seen by the Romans, whose rustic tribes, extending themselves +from the river Arno to the Vulturnus, that is, from Fesulae or Florence +to Capua, invented a way of representative by lots: the tribe upon which +the first fell being the prerogative, and some two or three more +that had the rest, the jure vocatoe. These gave the suffrage of the +commonwealth in two meetings; the prerogative at the first assembly, and +the jure vocatoe at a second. + +"Now to make the parallel: all the inconveniences that you have observed +in these assemblies are shut out, and all the conveniences taken into +your prerogative. For first, it is that for which Athens, shaking +off the blame of Xenophon and Polybius, came to deserve the praise of +Thucydides, a representative. And, secondly, not, as I suspect in +that of Athens, and is past suspicion in this of Rome, by lot, but by +suffrage, as was also the late House of Commons, by which means in your +prerogatives all the tribes of Oceana are jure vocatoe; and if a man +shall except against the paucity of the standing number, it is a wheel, +which in the revolution of a few years turns every hand that is fit, +or fits every hand that it turns to the public work. Moreover, I am +deceived if, upon due consideration, it does not fetch your tribes, with +greater equality and ease to themselves and to the government, from the +frontiers of Marpesia, than Rome ever brought any one of hers out of her +pomoeria, or the nearest parts of her adjoining territories. To this you +may add, that whereas a commonwealth, which in regard of the people is +not of facility in execution, were sure enough in this nation to be +cast off through impatience; your musters and galaxies are given to the +people, as milk to babes, whereby when they are brought up through four +days' election in a whole year (one at the parish, one at the hundred, +and two at the tribe) to their strongest meat, it is of no harder +digestion than to give their negative or affirmative as they see cause. +There be gallant men among us that laugh at such an appeal or umpire; +but I refer it whether you be more inclining to pardon them or me, who I +confess have been this day laughing at a sober man, but without meaning +him any harm, and that is Petrus Cunaeus, where speaking of the nature +of the people, he says, 'that taking them apart, they are very simple, +but yet in their assemblies they see and know something, and so runs +away without troubling himself with what that something is. Whereas the +people, taken apart, are but so many private interests; but if you take +them together, they are the public interest. + +"The public interest of a commonwealth, as has been shown, is nearest +that of mankind, and that of mankind is right reason; but with +aristocracy (whose reason or interest, when they are all together, +as appeared by the patricians, is but that of a party) it is quite +contrary: for as, taken apart, they are far wiser than the people +considered in that manner, so, being put together, they are such fools, +who by deposing the people, as did those of Rome, will saw off the +branch whereupon they sit, or rather destroy the root of their own +greatness. Wherefore Machiavel, following Aristotle, and yet going +before him, may well assert, 'that the people are wiser and more +constant in their resolutions than a prince:' which is the prerogative +of popular government for wisdom. And hence it is that the prerogative +of your commonwealth, as for wisdom so for power, is in the people, +which (though I am not ignorant that the Roman prerogative was so +called a proerogando, because their suffrage was first asked) gives the +denomination to your prerogative tribe." + +The elections, whether annual or triennial, being shown by the +twenty-second, that which comes in the next place to be considered is-- + +The twenty-third order, "Showing the power, function, and manner of +proceeding of the prerogative tribe. + +"The power or function of the prerogative is of two parts: the one of +result, in which it is the legislative, power, the other of judicature, +in which regard it is the highest court, and the last appeal in this +commonwealth. + +"For the former part (the people by this constitution being not obliged +by any law that is not of their own making or confirmation, by the +result of the prerogative, their equal representative) it shall not be +lawful for the Senate to require obedience from the people, nor for the +people to give obedience to the Senate in or by any law that has not +been promulgated, or printed and published for the space of six weeks, +and afterward proposed by the authority of the Senate to the prerogative +tribe, and resolved by the major vote of the same in the affirmative. +Nor shall the Senate have any power to levy war, men, or money, +otherwise than by the consent of the people so given, or by a law so +enacted, except in cases of exigence, in which it is agreed that the +power, both of the Senate and the people, shall be in the dictator +so qualified, and for such a term of time, as is according to that +constitution already prescribed. While a law is in promulgation, the +censors shall animadvert upon the Senate, and the tribunes upon the +people, that there be no laying of heads together, no conventicles or +canvassing to carry on or oppose anything; but that all may be done in a +free and open way. + +"For the latter part of the power of the prerogative, or that whereby +they are the supreme judicatory of this nation, and of the provinces of +the same, the cognizances of crimes against the majesty of the people, +such as high treason, as also of peculation, that is, robbery of the +treasury, or defraudation of the commonwealth, appertains to this tribe. +And if any person or persons, provincials or citizens, shall appeal to +the people, it belongs to the prerogative to judge and determine the +case; provided that if the appeal be from any court of justice in this +nation or the provinces, the appellant shall first deposit L100 in the +court from which he appeals, to be forfeited to the same if he be cast +in his suit by the people. But the power of the Council of War being the +expedition of this commonwealth, and the martial law of the strategus +in the field, are those only from which there shall lie no appeal to the +people. + +"The proceeding of the prerogative in case of a proposition is to be +thus ordered: The magistrates, proposing by authority of the Senate, +shall rehearse the whole matter, and expound it to the people; which +done, they shall put the whole together to the suffrage, with three +boxes, the negative, the affirmative, and the non-sincere; and the +suffrage being returned to the tribunes, and numbered in the presence +of the proposers. If the major vote be in the non-sincere, the proposer +shall desist, and the Senate shall resume the debate. If the major vote +be in the negative, the proposers shall desist, and the Senate, too. But +if the major vote be in the affirmative, then the tribe is clear and the +proposers shall begin and put the whole matter, with the negative +and the affirmative (leaving out the non-sincere) by clauses; and the +suffrages being taken and numbered by the tribunes in the presence of +the proposers, shall be written and reported by the tribunes of the +Senate. And that which is proposed by the authority of the Senate, and +confirmed by the command of the people, is the law of Oceana. + +"The proceeding of the prerogative in a case of judicature is to be thus +ordered: The tribunes being auditors of all causes appertaining to +the cognizance of the people, shall have notice of the suit or trial, +whether of appeal or otherwise, that is to be commenced; and if any one +of them shall accept of the same, it appertains to him to introduce it. +A cause being introduced, and the people mustered or assembled for the +decision of the same, the tribunes are presidents of the court, having +power to keep it to orders, and shall be seated upon a scaffold erected +in the middle of the tribe. Upon the right hand shall stand a seat or +large pulpit assigned to the plaintiff or the accuser; and, upon the +left, another for the defendant, each if they please with his counsel. +And the tribunes (being attended upon such occasions with so many +ballotins, secretaries, doorkeepers, and messengers of the Senate as +shall be requisite) one of them shall turn up a glass of the nature +of an hour-glass, but such a one as is to be of an hour and a half's +running; which being turned up, the party or counsel on the right hand +may begin to speak to the people. If there be papers to be read, or +witnesses to be examined, the officer shall lay the glass sideways +till the papers be read and the witnesses examined, and then turn it up +again; and so long as the glass is running, the party on the right hand +has liberty to speak, and no longer. The party on the right hand having +had his time, the like shall be done in every respect for the party on +the left. And the cause being thus heard, the tribunes shall put +the question to the tribe with a white, a black, and a red box (or +non-sincere), whether guilty or not guilty. And if the suffrage being +taken, the major vote be in the non-sincere, the cause shall be reheard +upon the next juridicial day following, and put to the question in the +same manner. If the major vote comes the second time in the non-sincere, +the cause shall be heard again upon the third day; but at the third +hearing the question shall be put without the non-sincere. Upon the +first of the three days in which the major vote comes in the white box, +the party accused is absolved; and upon the first of them in which +it comes in the black box, the party accused is condemned. The party +accused being condemned, the tribunes (if the case be criminal) shall +put with the white and the black box these questions, or such of them +as, regard had to the case, they shall conceive most proper: + + 1. Whether he shall have a writ of ease; + 2. Whether he shall be fined so much or so much; + 3. Whether he shall be confiscated; + 4. Whether he shall be rendered incapable of magistracy; + 5. Whether he shall be banished; + 6. Whether he shall be put to death. + +"These, or any three of these questions, whether simple or such as shall +be thought fitly mixed, being put by the tribunes, that which has most +above half the votes in the black box is the sentence of the people, +which the troop of the third class is to see executed accordingly. + +"But whereas by the constitution of this commonwealth it may appear that +neither the propositions of the Senate nor the judicature of the people +will be so frequent as to hold the prerogative in continual employment, +the Senate, a main part of whose office it is to teach and instruct +the people, shall duly (if they have no greater affairs to divert +them) cause an oration to be made to the prerogative by some knight or +magistrate of the Senate, to be chosen out of the ablest men, and from +time to time appointed by the orator of the house, in the great hall of +the Pantheon, while the Parliament resides in the town, or in some grove +or sweet place in the field, while the Parliament for the heat of +the year shall reside in the country, upon every Tuesday, morning or +afternoon. + +"And the orator appointed for the time to this office shall first repeat +the orders of the commonwealth with all possible brevity; and then, +making choice of one or some part of it, discourse thereof to the +people. An oration or discourse of this nature, being afterward +perused by the Council of State, may as they see cause be printed and +published." + +The Archon's comment upon the order I find to have been of this sense: + +"MY LORDS: + +"To crave pardon for a word or two in further explanation of what +was read, I shall briefly show how the constitution of this tribe or +assembly answers to their function; and how their function, which is of +two parts, the former in the result or legislative power, the latter +in the supreme judicature of the commonwealth, answers to their +constitution. Machiavel has a discourse, where he puts the question, +'Whether the guard of liberty may with more security be committed to the +nobility or to the people?' Which doubt of his arises through the want +of explaining his terms; for the guard of liberty can signify nothing +else but the result of the commonwealth; so that to say that the guard +of liberty may be committed to the nobility, is to say that the result +may be committed to the Senate, in which case the people signify +nothing. + +"Now to show it was a mistake to affirm it to have been thus in +Lacedaemon, sufficient has been spoken; and whereas he will have it +to be so in Venice also: 'They,' says Contarini, 'in whom resides the +supreme power of the whole commonwealth, and of the laws, and upon whose +orders depends the authority as well of the Senate as of all the other +magistrates, is the Great Council.' It is institutively in the Great +Council, by the judgment of all that know that commonwealth; though, for +the reasons shown, it be sometimes exercised by the Senate. Nor need +I run over the commonwealths in this place for the proof of a thing so +doubtless, and such as has been already made so apparent, as that the +result of each was in the popular part of it. The popular part of yours, +or the prerogative tribe, consists of seven deputies (whereof three are +of the horse) annually elected out of every tribe of Oceana; which being +fifty, amounts to 150 horse and 200 foot. And the prerogative consisting +of three of these lists, consists of 450 horse and 600 foot, besides +those of the provinces to be hereafter mentioned; by which means the +overbalance in the suffrage remaining to the foot by 150 votes, you have +to the support of a true and natural aristocracy the deepest root of a +democracy that has been ever planted. + +"Wherefore there is nothing in art or nature better qualified for the +result than this assembly it is noted out of Cicero by Machiavel, 'That +the people, though they are not so prone to find out truth of themselves +as to follow custom or run into error yet if they be shown truth, they +not only acknowledge and embrace it very suddenly, but are the most +constant and faithful guardians and conservators of it.' it is your +duty and office, whereto you are also qualified by the orders of this +commonwealth, to have the people as you have your hawks and greyhounds, +in leashes and slips, to range the fields and beat the bushes for them, +for they are of a nature that is never good at this sport, but when you +spring or start their proper quarry. Think not that they will stand to +ask you what it is, or less know it than your hawks and greyhounds do +theirs; but presently make such a flight or course, that a huntsman may +as well undertake to run with his dogs, or a falconer to fly with his +hawk, as an aristocracy at this game to compare with the people. The +people of Rome were possessed of no less a prey than the empire of the +world, when the nobility turned tails, and perched among daws upon the +tower of monarchy. For though they did not all of them intend the thing, +they would none of them endure the remedy, which was the agrarian. + +"But the prerogative tribe has not only the result, but is the supreme +judicature, and the ultimate appeal in this commonwealth. For the +popular government that makes account to be of any standing, must make +sure in the first place of the appeal to the people. As an estate in +trust becomes a man's own if he be not answerable for it, so the +power of a magistracy not accountable to the people, from whom it was +received, becoming of private use, the commonwealth loses her liberty +Wherefore the right of supreme judicature in the people (Without which +there can be no such thing as popular government) is confirmed by the +constant practice of all commonwealths; as that of Israel in the cases +of Achan, and of the tribe of Benjamin, adjudged by the congregation. + +"The dicasterian, or court called the heliaia in Athens, which (the +comitia of that commonwealth consisting of the whole people, and so +being too numerous to be a judicatory) was constituted sometimes of +500, at others of 1,000, or, according to the greatness of the cause, of +1,500, elected by the lot out of the whole body of the people, had, with +the nine Archons that were presidents, the cognizance of such causes as +were of highest importance in that State. The five ephors in Lacedaemon, +which were popular magistrates, might question their kings, as appears +by the cases of Pausanias, and of Agis, who being upon his trial in this +court, was cried to by his mother to appeal to the people, as Plutarch +has it in his life. The tribunes of the people of Rome (like, in the +nature of their magistracy, and for some time in number, to the ephors, +as being, according to Halicarnassus and Plutarch, instituted in +imitation of them) had power to summon any man, his magistracy at least +being expired (for from the Dictator there lay no appeal) to answer for +himself to the people. As in the case of Coriolanus, who was going +about to force the people, by withholding corn from them in a famine, +to relinquish the magistracy of the tribunes, in that of Spurius Cassius +for affecting tyranny, of Marcus Sergius for running away at Veii, of +Caius Lucretius for spoiling his province, of Junius Silanus for making +war without a command from the people against the Cimbri, with divers +others. And the crimes of this nature were called loesoe majestatis, +or high treason. Examples of such as were arraigned or tried for +peculation, or defraudation of the commonwealth, were Marcus Curius +for intercepting the money of the Samnites, Salinator for the unequal +division of spoils to his soldiers, Marcus Posthumius for cheating the +commonwealth by a feigned shipwreck. Causes of these two kinds were of +a more public nature; but the like power upon appeals was also exercised +by the people in private matters, even during the time of the kings, as +in the case of Horatius. Nor is it otherwise with Venice, where the +Doge Loredano was sentenced by the great Council, and Antonio Grimani, +afterward doge, questioned, for that he, being admiral, had suffered the +Turk to take Lepanto in view of his fleet. + +"Nevertheless, there lay no appeal from the Roman dictator to the +people; which, if there had, might have cost the commonwealth dear, +when Spurius Melius, affecting empire, circumvented and debauched the +tribunes: whereupon Titus Quintus Cincinnatus was created Dictator, who +having chosen Servilius Ahala to be his lieutenant, or magister equitum, +sent him to apprehend Melius, whom, while he disputed the commands of +the Dictator and implored the aid of the people, Ahala cut off upon +the place. By which example you may see in what cases the dictator may +prevent the blow which is ready sometimes to fall ere the people be +aware of the danger. Wherefore there lies no appeal from the Dieci, +or the Council of Ten, in Venice, to the Great Council, nor from our +Council of War to the people. For the way of proceeding of this tribe, +or the ballot, it is, as was once said for all, Venetian. + +"This discourse of judicatories whereupon we are fallen, brings us +rather naturally than of design from the two general orders of every +commonwealth, that is to say, from the debating part, or the Senate, and +the resolving part, or the people, to the third, which is the executive +part or the magistracy, whereupon I shall have no need to dwell, for the +executive magistrates of this commonwealth are the strategus in arms; +the signory in their several courts, as the chancery, the exchequer; as +also the councils in divers cases within their instructions; the censors +as well in their proper magistracy, as in the Council of Religion; the +tribunes in the government of the prerogative, and that judicatory; and +the judges with their courts; of all which so much is already said or +known as may suffice. + +"The Tuesday lectures or orations to the people will be of great benefit +to the Senate, the prerogative, and the whole nation. To the Senate, +because they will not only teach your Senators elocution, but keep the +system of the government in their memories. Elocution is of great use to +your Senators, for if they do not understand rhetoric (giving it at this +time for granted that the art were not otherwise good) and come to treat +with, or vindicate the cause of the commonwealth against some other +nation that is good at it, the advantage will be subject to remain upon +the merit of the art, and not upon the merit of the cause. Furthermore, +the genius or soul of this government being in the whole and in +every part, they will never be of ability in determination upon any +particular, unless at the same time they have an idea of the whole. +That this therefore must be, in that regard, of equal benefit to the +prerogative, is plain; though these have a greater concernment in it. +For this commonwealth is the estate of the people; and a man, you know, +though he be virtuous, yet if he does not understand his estate, may run +out or be cheated of it. Last of all, the treasures of the politics will +by this means be so opened, rifled, and dispersed, that this nation +will as soon dote, like the Indians, upon glass beads, as disturb your +government with whimsies and freaks of mother-wit, or suffer themselves +to be stuttered out of their liberties. There is not any reason why +your grandees, your wise men of this age, that laugh out and openly at +a commonwealth as the most ridiculous thing, do not appear to be, as in +this regard they are, mere idiots, but that the people have not eyes." + +There remains no more relating to the Senate and the people than-- + +The twenty-fourth order, "Whereby it is lawful for the province of +Marpesia to have thirty knights of their own election continually +present in the Senate of Oceana, together with sixty deputies of horse, +and 120 of foot in the prerogative tribe, endued with equal power +(respect had to their quality and number) in the debate and result of +this commonwealth, provided that they observe the course or rotation +of the same by the annual return of ten knights, twenty deputies of the +horse, and forty of the foot. The like in all respects is lawful for +Panopea; and the horse of both the provinces amounting to one troop, and +the foot to one company, one captain and one cornet of the horse shall +be annually chosen by Marpesia, and one captain and one ensign of the +foot shall be annually chosen by Panopea." + +The orb of the prerogative being thus complete, is not unnaturally +compared to that of the moon, either in consideration of the light +borrowed from the Senate, as from the sun; or of the ebbs and floods +of the people, which are marked by the negative or affirmative of this +tribe. And the constitution of the Senate and the people being shown, +you have that of the Parliament of Oceana, consisting of the Senate +proposing, and of the people resolving, which amounts to an act of +Parliament. So the Parliament is the heart, which, consisting of two +ventricles, the one greater and replenished with a grosser matter, the +other less and full of a purer, sucks in and spouts forth the vital +blood of Oceana by a perpetual circulation. Wherefore the life of +this government is no more unnatural or obnoxious upon this score to +dissolution than that of a man; nor to giddiness than the world; seeing +the earth, whether it be itself or the heavens that are in rotation, is +so far from being giddy, that it could not subsist without motion. But +why should not this government be much rather capable of duration +and steadiness by motion? Than which God has ordained no other to the +universal commonwealth of mankind: seeing one generation comes and +another goes, but the earth remains firm forever, that is, in her proper +situation or place, whether she be moved or not moved upon her proper +centre. The Senate, the people, and the magistracy, or the Parliament so +constituted, as you have seen, is the guardian of this commonwealth, and +the husband of such a wife as is elegantly described by Solomon: "She is +like the merchant's ships; she brings her food from far. She considers +a field, and buys it: with the fruit of her hands she plants a vineyard. +She perceives that her merchandise is good. She stretches forth her +hands to the poor. She is not afraid of the snow for her household; for +all her household are clothed with scarlet. She makes herself coverings +of tapestry, her clothing is silk and purple. Her husband is known (by +his robes) in the gates, when he sits among the senators of the land." +The gates, or inferior courts, were branches, as it were, of the +Sanhedrim, or Senate, of Israel. Nor is our commonwealth a worse +housewife, nor has she less regard to her magistrates; as may pear by-- + +The twenty-fifth order, "That, whereas the public revenue is through the +late civil wars dilapidated, the excise, being improved or improvable to +the revenue of L1,000,000, be applied, for the space of eleven years to +come, to the reparation of the same, and for the present maintenance of +the magistrates, knights, deputies, and other officers, who, according +to their several dignities and functions, shall annually receive toward +the support of the same, as follows: + +"The lord strategus marching, is, upon another account, to have +field-pay as general. + + Per Annum + The lord strategus sitting...... L2,000 + The lord orator...... 2,000 + The three commissioners of the seal... 4,500 + The three commissioners of the treasury... 4,500 + The two censors.... 3,000 + The 290 knights, at L500 a man..... 145,000 + The four ambassadors-in-ordinary.... 12,000 + The Council of War for intelligence.... 3,000 + The master of the ceremonies..... 500 + The master of the horse...... 500 + His substitute..... 150 + The twelve ballotins for their winter liveries 240 + + For summer liveries... 120 + + For their board-wages...... 480 + For the keeping of three coaches of state, + + twenty-four coach-horses, with coachmen + + and postilions.......... 1,500 + For the grooms, and keeping of sixteen + + great horses for the master of the + + horse, and for the ballotins whom he + + is to govern and instruct in the art + + of riding.......... 480 + The twenty secretaries of the Parliament... 2,000 + The twenty doorkeepers, who are to attend + + with pole-axes, + + For their coats....... 200 + + For their board-wages.... 1,000 + The twenty messengers, which are trumpeters, + + For their coats.... 200 + + For their board-wages..... 1,000 + For ornament of the masters of the youth... 5,000 + + Sum L189,370 + +"Out of the personal estates of every man, who at his death bequeaths +not above forty shillings to the muster of that hundred wherein it lies, +shall be levied one per cent. till the solid revenue of the muster of +the hundred amounts to L50 per annum for the prizes of the youth. + +"The twelve ballotins are to be divided into three regions, according to +the course of the Senate; the four of the first region to be elected at +the tropic out of such children as the knights of the same shall offer, +not being under eleven years of age, nor above thirteen. And their +election shall be made by the lot at an urn set by the sergeant of the +house for that purpose in the hall of the Pantheon. The livery of the +commonwealth for the fashion or the color may be changed at the election +of the strategus according to his fancy. But every knight during his +session shall be bound to give to his footman, or some one of his +footmen, the livery of the commonwealth. + +"The prerogative tribe shall receive as follows: + + By the week + The two tribunes of the horse..... L14 0 + The two tribunes of the foot..... 12 0 + The three captains of the horse..... 15 0 + The three cornets..... 9 0 + The three captains of the foot.... 12 0 + The three ensigns........ 7 0 + The 442 horse, at L2 a man..... 884 0 + The 592 foot, at L1 10s a man.... 888 0 + The six trumpeters..... 7 10 + The three drummers........... 2 5 + + Sum by the week................ L1,850 15 + + Sum by the year............. L96,239 0 + + The total of the Senate, the people, + + and the magistracy.................... L287,459 15 + +"The dignity of the commonwealth, and aids of the several magistracies +and offices thereto belonging, bring provided for as aforesaid, the +overplus of the excise, with the product of the sum rising, shall be +carefully managed by the Senate and the people through the diligence of +the officers of the Exchequer, till it amount to L8,000,000, or to the +purchase of about L400,000 solid revenue. At which time, the term of +eleven years being expired, the excise, except it be otherwise ordered +by the Senate and the people, shall be totally remitted and abolished +forever." + +At this institution the taxes, as will better appear in the Corollary, +were abated about one-half, which made the order, when it came to be +tasted, to be of good relish with the people in the very beginning; +though the advantages then were no ways comparable to the consequences +to be hereafter shown. Nevertheless, my Lord Epimonus, who with much ado +had been held till now, found it midsummer moon, and broke out of bedlam +in this manner. + +"MY LORD ARCHON: + +"I have a singing in my head like that of a cart-wheel, my brains are +upon a rotation; and some are so merry, that a man cannot speak his +griefs, but if your high-shod prerogative, and those same slouching +fellows your tribunes, do not take my lord strategus's and my lord +orator's heads, and jolt them together under the canopy, then let me be +ridiculous to all posterity. For here is a commonwealth, to which if a +man should take that of the 'prentices in their ancient administration +of justice at Shrovetide, it were an aristocracy. You have set the very +rabble with truncheons in their hands, and the gentry of this nation, +like cocks with scarlet gills, and the golden combs of their salaries to +boot, lest they should not be thrown at. + +"Not a night can I sleep for some horrid apparition or other; one while +these myrmidons are measuring silks by their quarterstaves, another +stuffing their greasy pouches with my lord high treasurer's jacobuses. +For they are above 1,000 in arms to 300, which, their gowns being pulled +over their ears, are but in their doublets and hose. But what do I speak +of 1,000? There be 2,000 in every tribe, that is, 100,000 in the whole +nation, not only in the posture of an army, but in a civil capacity +sufficient to give us what laws they please. Now everybody knows that +the lower sort of people regard nothing but money; and you say it is +the duty of a legislator to presume all men to be wicked: wherefore they +must fall upon the richer, as they are an army; or, lest their minds +should misgive them in such a villany, you have given them encouragement +that they have a nearer way, seeing it may be done every whit as well as +by the overbalancing power which they have in elections. There is a fair +which is annually kept in the centre of these territories at Kiberton, +a town famous for ale, and frequented by good fellows; where there is a +solemnity of the pipers and fiddlers of this nation (I know not whether +Lacedaemon, where the Senate kept account of the stops of the flutes and +of the fiddle-strings of that commonwealth, bad any such custom) called +the bull-running, and he that catches and holds the bull, is the annual +and supreme magistrate of that comitia or congregation, called king +piper, without whose license it is not lawful for any of those citizens +to enjoy the liberty of his calling; nor is he otherwise legitimately +qualified (or civitate donatus) to lead apes or bears in any +perambulation of the same. Mine host of the Bear, in Kiberton, the +father of ale, and patron of good football and cudgel players, has any +time since I can remember been grand-chancellor of this order. + +"Now, say I, seeing great things arise from small beginnings, what +should hinder the people, prone to their own advantage and loving money, +from having intelligence conveyed to them by this same king piper and +his chancellor, with their loyal subjects the minstrels and bear-wards, +masters of ceremonies, to which there is great recourse in their +respective perambulations, and which they will commission and instruct, +with directions to all the tribes, willing and commanding them, that +as they wish their own good, they choose no other into the next primum +mobile but of the ablest cudgel and football players? Which done as +soon as said, your primum mobile, consisting of no other stuff, must of +necessity be drawn forth into your nebulones and your galimofries; and +so the silken purses of your Senate and prerogative being made of sows' +ears, most of them blacksmiths, they will strike while the iron is +hot, and beat your estates into hob-nails, mine host of the Bear being +strategus, and king piper lord orator. Well, my lords, it might have +been otherwise expressed, but this is well enough a-conscience. In your +way, the wit of man shall not prevent this or the like inconvenience; +but if this (for I have conferred with artists) be a mathematical +demonstration, I could kneel to you, that ere it be too late we might +return to some kind of sobriety. If we empty our purses with these +pomps, salaries, coaches, lackeys, and pages, what can the people say +less than that we have dressed a Senate and a prerogative for nothing +but to go to the park with the ladies?" + +My Lord Archon, whose meekness resembled that of Moses, vouchsafed this +answer: + +"My LORDS: + +"For all this, I can see my Lord Epimonus every night in the park, and +with ladies; nor do I blame this in a young man, or the respect which is +and ought to be given to a sex that is one-half of the commonwealth of +mankind, and without which the other would be none: but our magistrates, +I doubt, may be somewhat of the oldest to perform this part with much +acceptation; and, as the Italian proverb says, 'Servire e non gradire +e cosa da far morire.' Wherefore we will lay no certain obligation upon +them in this point, but leave them, if it please you, to their own fate +or discretion. But this (for I know my Lord Epimonus loves me, though +I can never get his esteem) I will say, if he had a mistress should use +him so, he would find it a sad life; or I appeal to your lordships, how +I can resent it from such a friend, that he puts king piper's politics +in the balance with mine. King piper, I deny not, may teach his bears to +dance, but they have the worst ear of all creatures. Now how he +should make them keep time in fifty several tribes, and that two years +together, for else it will be to no purpose, may be a small matter with +my lord to promise; but it seems to me of impossible performance. First, +through the nature of the bean; and, secondly, through that of the +ballot; or how what he has hitherto thought so hard, is now come to be +easy; but he may think that for expedition they will eat up these balls +like apples. + +"However, there is so much more in their way by the constitution of +this, than is to be found in that of any other commonwealth, that I am +reconciled, it now appearing plainly that the points of my lord's +arrows are directed at no other white than to show the excellency of our +government above others; which, as he proceeds further, is yet plainer; +while he makes it appear that there can be no other elected by the +people but smiths: + +"'Brontesque Steropesque et nudus membra Pyracmon:' + +"Othoniel, Aod, Gideon, Jephtha, Samson, as in Israel; Miltiades, +Aristides, Themistocles, Cimon, Pericles, as in Athens; Papyrius, +Cincinnatus, Camillus, Fabius Scipio, as in Rome: smiths of the fortune +of the commonwealth; not such as forged hob-nails, but thunderbolts. +Popular elections are of that kind, that all of the rest of the world +is not able, either in number or glory, to equal those of these three +commonwealths. These indeed were the ablest cudgel and football players; +bright arms were their cudgels, and the world was the ball that lay +at their feet. Wherefore we are not so to understand the maxim of +legislators, which holds all men to be wicked, as if it related to +mankind or a commonwealth, the interests whereof are the only straight +lines they have whereby to reform the crooked; but as it relates to +every man or party, under what color soever he or they pretend to be +trusted apart, with or by the whole. Hence then it is derived, which is +made good in all experience, that the aristocracy is ravenous, and not +the people. Your highwaymen are not such as have trades, or have been +brought up to industry; but such commonly whose education has pretended +to that of gentlemen. My lord is so honest, he does not know the maxims +that are of absolute necessity to the arts of wickedness; for it is +most certain, if there be not more purses than thieves, that the thieves +themselves must be forced to turn honest, because they cannot thrive +by their trade; but now if the people should turn thieves, who sees not +that there would be more thieves than purses? wherefore that a whole +people should turn robbers or levellers, is as impossible in the end as +in the means. + +"But that I do not think your artist which you mentioned, whether +astronomer or arithmetician, can tell me how many barley-corns would +reach to the sun, I could be content he were called to the account, with +which I shall conclude this point: when by the way I have chid my lords +the legislators, who, as if they doubted my tackling could not hold, +would leave me to flag in a perpetual calm, but for my Lord Epimonus, +who breathes now and then into my sails and stirs the waters. A ship +makes not her way so briskly as when she is handsomely brushed by the +waves, and tumbles over those that seem to tumble against her; in which +case I have perceived in the dark that light has been struck even out of +the sea, as in this place, where my Lord Epimonus feigning to give us +a demonstration of one thing, has given it of another, and of a better. +For the people of this nation, if they amount in each tribe to 2,000 +elders and 2,000 youths upon the annual roll, holding a fifth to +the whole tribe, then the whole of a tribe, not accounting women and +children, must amount to 20,000; and so the whole of all the tribes, +being fifty, to 1,000,000. + +"Now you have 10,000 parishes, and reckoning these one with another, +each at L1,000 a year dry-rent, the rent or revenue of the nation, as it +is or might be let to farm, amounts to L10,000,000; and L10,000,000 in +revenue divided equally to 1,000,000 of men, comes but to L10 a year to +each wherewith to maintain himself, his wife and children. But he that +has a cow upon the common, and earns his shilling by the day at his +labor, has twice as much already as this would come to for his share; +because if the land were thus divided, there would be nobody to set him +on work. So my Lord Epimonus's footman, who costs him thrice as much as +one of these could thus get, would certainly lose by his bargain. What +should we speak of those innumerable trades whereupon men live, not only +better than others upon good shares of lands, but become also purchasers +of greater estates? Is not this the demonstration which my lord meant, +that the revenue of industry in a nation, at least in this, is three +or four-fold greater than that of the mere rent? If the people then +obstruct industry, they obstruct their own livelihood; but if they +make a war, they obstruct industry. Take the bread out of the people's +mouths, as did the Roman patricians, and you are sure enough of a war, +in which case they may be levellers; but our agrarian causes their +industry to flow with milk and honey. It will be owned that this is +true, if the people were given to understand their own happiness; but +where is it they do that? Let me reply with the like question, where +do they not? They do not know their happiness it should seem in France, +Spain, and Italy; but teach them what it is, and try whose sense is the +truer. + +"As to the late wars in Germany, it has been affirmed to me there, that +the princes could never make the people to take arms while they had +bread, and have therefore suffered countries now and then to be wasted +that they might get soldiers. This you will find to be the certain pulse +and temper of the people; and if they have been already proved to be the +most wise and constant order of a government, why should we think +(when no man can produce one example of the common soldiery in an army +mutinying because they had not captains' pay) that the prerogative +should jolt the heads of the Senate together because these have the +better salaries, when it must be as evident to the people in a nation, +as to the soldiery in an army, that it is no more possible their +emoluments of this kind should be afforded by any commonwealth in the +world to be made equal with those of the Senate, than that the common +soldiers should be equal with the captains? It is enough for the common +soldier that his virtue may bring him to be a captain, and more to the +prerogative, that each of them is nearer to be a senator. + +"If my lord thinks our salaries too great, and that the commonwealth is +not housewife enough, whether is it better housewifery that she should +keep her family from the snow, or suffer them to burn her house that +they may warm themselves? for one of these must be. Do you think that +she came off at a cheaper rate when men had their rewards by L1,000 or +L2,000 a year in land if inheritance? if you say that they will be +more godly than they have been, it may be ill taken; and if you cannot +promise that, it is time we find out some way of stinting at least, if +not curing them of that same sacra fames. On the other side, if a poor +man (as such a one may save a city) gives his sweat to the public, with +what conscience can you suffer his family in the meantime to starve? +but he that lays his hand to this plough shall not lose by taking it +off from his own, and a commonwealth that will mend this shall be +penny-wise. The Sanhedrim of Israel, being the supreme, and a constant +court of judicature, could not choose but be exceeding gainful. The +Senate of the Bean in Athens, because it was but annual, was moderately +salaried; but that of the Areopagites, being for life, bountifully; and +what advantages the senators of Lacedaemon had, where there was little +money or use of it, were in honors for life. The patricians having no +profit, took all. Venice being a situation where a man goes but to the +door for his employment, the honor is great and the reward very little; +but in Holland a councillor of state has L1,500 Flemish a year, +besides other accommodations. The States-General have more. And that +commonwealth looks nearer her penny than ours needs to do. + +"For the revenue of this nation, besides that of her industry, +it--amounts, as has been shown, to L10,000,000; and the salaries in +the whole come not to L300,000 a year. The beauty they will add to the +commonwealth will be exceeding great, and the people will delight in +this beauty of their commonwealth; the encouragement they will give to +the study of the public being very progitable, the accommodation they +will afford to your magistrates very honorable and easy. And the sum, +when it or twice as much was spent in bunting and housekeeping, was +never any grievance to the people. I am ashamed to stand huckling upon +this point; it is sordid. Your magistrates are rather to be provided +with further accommodations. For what if there should be sickness? +whither will you have them to remove? And this city in the soundest +times, for the heat of the year, is no wholesome abode: have a care of +their healths to whom you commit your own. I would have the Senate and +the people, except they see cause to the contrary, every first of June +to remove into the country air for the space of three months. You are +better fitted with summer-houses for them than if you had built them to +that purpose. + +"There is some twelve miles distant the convallium upon the river +Halcionia, for the tribunes and the prerogative, a palace capable of +1,000 men; and twenty miles distant you have Mount Celia, reverend as +well for the antiquity as state of a castle completely capable of +the Senate, the proposers having lodgings in the convallium, and the +tribunes in Celia, it holds the correspondency between the Senate and +the people exactly And it is a small matter for the proposers, +being attended with the coaches and officers of state, besides other +conveniences of their own, to go a matter of five or ten miles (those +seats are not much farther distant) to meet the people upon any heath or +field that shall be appointed: where, having despatched their business, +they may hunt their own venison (for I would have the great walled +park upon the Halcionia to belong to the signory, and those about the +convallium to the tribunes) and so go to supper. Pray, my lords, see +that they do not pull down these houses to sell the lead of them; for +when--you have considered on it, they cannot be spared. The founders of +the school in Hiera provided that the boys should have a summer seat. +You should have as much care of these magistrates. But there is such a +selling, such a Jewish humor in our republicans, that I cannot tell +what to say to it; only this, any man that knows what belongs to a +commonwealth, or how diligent every nation in that case has been to +preserve her ornaments, and shall see the waste lately made (the woods +adjoining to this city, which served for the delight and health of it, +being cut down to be sold for threepence), will you tell that they who +did such things would never have made a commonwealth. The like may be +said of the ruin or damage done upon our cathedrals, ornaments in which +this nation excels all others. Nor shall this ever be excused upon the +score of religion; for though it be true that God dwells not in houses +made with hands, yet you cannot hold your assemblies but in such houses, +and these are of the best that have been made with hands. Nor is it well +argued that they are pompous, and therefore profane, or less proper for +divine service, seeing the Christians in the primitive Church chose +to meet with one accord in the Temple, so far were they from any +inclination to pull it down." + +The orders of this commonwealth, so far, or near so far as they concern +the elders, together with the several speeches at the institution, which +may serve for the better understanding of them as so many commentaries, +being shown, I should now come from the elders to the youth, or from the +civil constitution of this government to the military, but that I judge +this the fittest place whereinto, by the way, to insert the government +of the city though for the present but perfunctorily. + +"'The metropolis or capital city of Oceana is commonly called Emporium, +though it consists of two cities distinct, as well in name as in +government, whereof the other is called Hiera, for which cause I shall +treat of each apart, beginning with Emporium. + +"Emporium, with the liberties, is under a twofold division, the one +regarding the national, and the other the urban or city government. It +is divided, in regard of the national government, into three tribes, and +in respect of the urban into twenty six, which for distinction's sake +are called wards, being contained under three tribes but unequally; +wherefore the first tribe containing ten wards is called scazon, the +second containing eight metoche, and the third containing as many +telicouta, the bearing of which names in mind concerns the better +understanding of the government. + +"Every ward has her wardmote, court, or inquest, consisting of all that +are of the clothing or liveries of companies residing within the same. + +"Such are of the livery or clothing as have attained to the dignity to +wear gowns and parti- hoods or tippets, according to the rules +and ancient customs of their respective companies. + +"A company is a brotherhood of tradesmen professing the same art, +governed according to their charter by a master and wardens. Of these +there be about sixty, whereof twelve are of greater dignity than the +rest, that is to say, the mercers, grocers, drapers, fishmongers, +goldsmiths, skinners, merchant-tailors, haberdashers, salters, +ironmongers, vintners, clothworkers, which, with most of the rest, have +common halls, divers of them being of ancient and magnificent structure, +wherein they have frequent meetings, at the summons of their master or +wardens, for the managing and regulation of their respective trades and +mysteries. These companies, as I shall show, are the roots of the whole +government of the city. For the liveries that reside in the same ward, +meeting at the wardmote inquest (to which it belongs to take cognizance +of all sorts of nuisances and violations of the customs and orders of +the city, and to present them to the court of aldermen), have also power +to make election of two sorts of magistrates or officers; the first +of elders or aldermen of the ward, the second of deputies of the same, +otherwise called common councilmen. + +"The wards in these elections, because they do not elect all at once, +but some one year and some another, observe the distinction of the three +tribes; for example, the scazon, consisting of ten wards, makes election +the first year of ten aldermen, one in each ward, and of 150 deputies, +fifteen in each ward, all which are triennial magistrates or officers, +that is to say, are to bear their dignity for the space of three years. + +"The second year the metoche, consisting of eight wards, elects eight +aldermen, one in each ward, and 120 deputies, fifteen in each ward, +being also triennial magistrates. + +"The third year telicouta, consisting of a like number of wards, elects +an equal number of like magistrates for a like term. So that the whole +number of the aldermen, according to that of the wards, amounts to +twenty-six; and the whole number of the deputies, to 390. + +"The aldermen thus elected have divers capacities; for, first, they +are justices of the peace for the term, and in consequence of their +election. Secondly, they are presidents of the wardmote and governors +each of that ward whereby he was elected. And last of all, these +magistrates being assembled together, constitute the Senate of the city, +otherwise called the court of aldermen; but no man is capable of this +election that is not worth L10,000. This court upon every new election +makes choice of nine censors out of their own number. + +"The deputies in like manner being assembled together, constitute the +prerogative tribe of the city, otherwise called the common council, by +which means the Senate and the people of the city were comprehended, as +it were, by the motion of the national government, into the same wheel +of annual, triennial, and perpetual revolution. + +"But the liveries, over and above the right of these elections by their +divisions mentioned, being assembled all together at the guild of the +city, constitute another assembly called the common hall. + +"The common hall has the right of two other elections; the one of the +lord mayor, and the other of the two sheriffs, being annual magistrates. +The lord mayor can be elected out of no other than one of the twelve +companies of the first ranks; and the common hall agrees by the +plurality of suffrages upon two names, which, being presented to the +lord mayor for the time being, and the court of the aldermen, they elect +one by their scrutiny. For so they call it, though it differs from +that of the commonwealth. The orator or assistant to the lord mayor +in holding of his courts, is some able lawyer elected by the court of +aldermen, and called the recorder of Emporium. + +"The lord mayor being thus elected, has two capacities: one regarding +the nation, and the other the city. In that which regards the city, +he is president of the court of aldermen, having power to assemble the +same, or any other council of the city, as the common council or common +hall, at his will and pleasure; and in that which regards the nation, he +is commander-in-chief of the three tribes whereinto the city is divided; +one of which he is to bring up in person at the national muster to the +ballot, as his vice-comites, or high sheriffs, are to do by the other +two, each at their distinct pavilion, where the nine aldermen, elected +censors, are to officiate by three in each tribe, according to the rules +and orders already given to the censors of the rustic tribes. And the +tribes of the city have no other than one common phylarch, which is the +court of aldermen and the common council, for which cause they elect not +at their muster the first list called the prime magnitude. + +"The conveniences of this alteration of the city government, besides the +bent of it to a conformity with that of the nation, were many, whereof +I shall mention but a few: as first, whereas men under the former +administration, when the burden of some of these magistracies lay +for life, were oftentimes chosen not for their fitness, but rather +unfitness, or at least unwillingness to undergo such a weight, whereby +they were put at great rates to fine for their ease; a man might now +take his share in magistracy with that equity which is due to the +public, and without any inconvenience to his private affairs. Secondly, +whereas the city (inasmuch as the acts of the aristocracy, or court of +aldermen, in their former way of proceeding, were rather impositions +than propositions) was frequently disquieted with the inevitable +consequence of disorder in the power of debate exercised by the +popular part, or common council; the right of debate being henceforth +established in the court of aldermen, and that of result in the common +council, killed the branches of division in the root. Which for the +present may suffice to have been said of the city of Emporium. + +"That of Hiera consists as to the national government of two tribes, the +first called agoroea, the second propola; but as to the peculiar policy +of twelve manipuls, or wards divided into three cohorts, each cohort +containing four wards, whereof the wards of the first cohort elect for +the first year four burgesses, one in each ward, the wards of the second +cohort for the second year four burgesses, one in each ward, and the +wards of the third cohort for the third year four burgesses, one in each +ward, all triennial magistrates; by which the twelve burgesses, +making one court for the government of this city according to their +instructions by act of Parliament, fall likewise into an annual, +triennial, and perpetual revolution. + +"This court being thus constituted, makes election of divers +magistrates; as first, of a high steward, who is commonly some person of +quality, and this magistracy is elected in the Senate by the scrutiny of +this court; with him they choose some able lawyer to be his deputy, and +to hold the court; and last of all they elect out of their own number +six censors. + +"The high steward is commander-in-chief of the two tribes, whereof he in +person brings up the one at the national muster to the ballot, and his +deputy the other at a distinct pavilion; the six censors chosen by the +court officiating by three in each tribe at the urns; and these tribes +have no other phylarch but this court. + +"As for the manner of elections and suffrage, both in Emporium and +Hiera, it may be said, once for all, that they are performed by ballot, +and according to the respective rules already given. + +"There be other cities and corporations throughout the territory, whose +policy being much of this kind, would be tedious and not worth the labor +to insert, nor dare I stay. Juvenum manus emicat ardens." + +I return, according to the method of the commonwealth, to the remaining +parts of her orbs, which are military and provincial; the military, +except the strategus, and the polemarchs or field-officers, consisting +of the youth only, and the provincial consisting of a mixture both of +elders and of the youth. + +To begin with the youth, or the military orbs, they are circles to +which the commonwealth must have a care to keep close. A man is a spirit +raised by the magic of nature; if she does not stand safe, and so that +she may set him to some good and useful work, he spits fire, and blows +up castles; for where there is life, there must be motion or work; and +the work of idleness is mischief, but the work of industry is health. +To set men to this, the commonwealth must begin betimes with them, or +it will be too late; and the means whereby she sets them to it is +education, the plastic art of government. But it is as frequent as sad +in experience (whether through negligence, or, which in the consequence +is all one or worse, over-fondness in the domestic performance of this +duty) that innumerable children come to owe their utter perdition to +their own parents, in each of which the commonwealth loses a citizen. + +Wherefore the laws of a government, how wholesome soever in themselves, +are such as, if men by a congruity in their education be not bred to +find a relish in them, they will be sure to loathe and detest. The +education therefore of a man's own children is not wholly to be +committed or trusted to himself. You find in Livy the children of +Brutus, having been bred under monarchy, and used to a court life, +making faces at the Commonwealth of Rome: "A king (say they) is a man +with whom you may prevail when you have need there should be law, or +when you have need there should be no law; he has favors in the right, +and he frowns not in the wrong place; he knows his friends from +his enemies. But laws are deaf, inexorable things, such as make no +difference between a gentleman and an ordinary fellow; a man can never +be merry for them, for to trust altogether to his own innocence is a sad +life." Unhappy wantons! Scipio, on the other side, when he was but a boy +(about two or three and twenty), being informed that certain patricians +of Roman gentlemen, through a qualm upon the defeat which Hannibal had +given them at Cannae, were laying their heads together and contriving +their flight with the transportation of their goods out of Rome, drew +his sword, and setting himself at the door of the chamber where they +were at council, protested "that who did not immediately swear not to +desert the commonwealth, he would make his soul to desert his body." Let +men argue as they please for monarchy, or against a commonwealth, the +world shall never see any man so sottish or wicked as in cool blood to +prefer the education of the sons of Brutus before that of Scipio; and +of this mould, except a Melius or a Manlius, was the whole youth of that +commonwealth, though not ordinarily so well cast. + +Now the health of a government and the education of the youth being +of the same pulse, no wonder if it has been the constant practice of +well-ordered commonwealths to commit the care and feeling of it to +public magistrates. A duty that was performed in such a manner by the +Areopagites, as is elegantly praised by Isocrates, "the Athenians (says +he) write not their laws upon dead walls, nor content themselves with +having ordained punishments for crimes, but provide in such a way, by +the education of their youth, that there be no crimes for punishment." +He speaks of those laws which regarded manners, not of those orders +which concerned the administration of the commonwealth, lest you should +think he contradicts Xenophon and Polybius. The children of Lacedaemon, +at the seventh year of their age, were delivered to the poedonomi, or +schoolmasters, not mercenary, but magistrates of the commonwealth, to +which they were accountable for their charge; and by these at the age of +fourteen they were presented to other magistrates called the beidioei, +having the inspection of the games and exercises, among which that of +the platanista was famous, a kind of fight in squadrons, but somewhat +too fierce. When they came to be of military age they were listed of +the mora, and so continued in readiness for public service under the +discipline of the polemarchs. But the Roman education and discipline by +the centuries and classes is that to which the Commonwealth of Oceana +has had a more particular regard in her three essays, being certain +degrees by which the youth commence as it were in arms for magistracy, +as appears by-- + +The twenty-sixth order, instituting, "That if a parent has but one son, +the education of that one son shall be wholly at the disposition of that +parent. But whereas there be free schools erected and endowed, or to +be erected and endowed in every tribe of this nation, to a sufficient +proportion for the education of the children of the same (which schools, +to the end there be no detriment or hindrance to the scholars upon case +of removing from one to another, are every of them to be governed by +the strict inspection of the censors of the tribes, both upon the +schoolmaster's manner of life and teaching, and the proficiency of the +children, after the rules and method of that in Hiera) if a parent has +more sons than one, the censors of the tribes shall animadvert upon and +punish him that sends not his sons within the ninth year of their age to +some one of the schools of a tribe, there to be kept and taught, if he +be able, at his own charges; and if he be not able, gratis, till they +arrive at the age of fifteen years. And a parent may expect of his sons +at the fifteenth year of their age, according to his choice or ability, +whether it be to service in the way of apprentices to some trade or +otherwise, or to further study, as by sending them to the inns of court, +of chancery, or to one of the universities of this nation. But he +that takes not upon him one of the professions proper to some of those +places, shall not continue longer in any of them than till he has +attained to the age of eighteen years; and every man having not at +the age of eighteen years taken upon him, or addicted himself to the +profession of the law, theology, or physic, and being no servant, shall +be capable of the essays of the youth, and no other person whatsoever, +except a man, having taken upon him such a profession, happens to lay +it by ere he arrives at three or four and twenty years of age, and be +admitted to this capacity by the respective. Phylarchs being satisfied +that he kept not out so long with any design to evade the service of the +commonwealth; but, that being no sooner at his own disposal, it was no +sooner in his choice to come in. And if any youth or other person of +this nation have a desire to travel into foreign countries upon occasion +of business, delight, or further improvement of his education, the +same shall be lawful for him upon a pass obtained from the censors in +Parliament, putting a convenient limit to the time, and recommending him +to the ambassadors by whom he shall be assisted, and to whom he shall +yield honor and obedience in their respective residences. Every youth at +his return from his travel is to present the censors with a paper of his +own writing, containing the interest of state or form of government of +the countries, or some one of the countries, where he has been; and +if it be good, the censors shall cause it to be printed and published, +prefixing a line in commendation of the author. + +"Every Wednesday next ensuing the last of December, the whole youth of +every parish, that is to say, every man (not excepted by the foregoing +part of the order), being from eighteen years of age to thirty, shall +repair at the sound of the bell to their respective church, and being +there assembled in presence of the overseers, who are to govern the +ballot, and the constable who is to officiate at the urn, shall, after +the manner of the elders, elect every fifth man of their whole number +(provided that they choose not above one of two brothers at one +election, nor above half if they be four or upward) to be a stratiot +or deputy of the youth; and the list of the stratiots so elected +being taken by the overseers, shall be entered in the parish book, and +diligently preserved as a record, called the first essay. They whose +estates by the law are able, or whose friends are willing, to mount +them, shall be of the horse, the rest are of the foot. And he who has +been one year of this list, is not capable of being re-elected till +after another year's interval. + +"Every Wednesday next ensuing the last of January, the stratiots being +mustered at the rendezvous of their respective hundreds, shall, in the +presence of the jurymen, who are overseers of that ballot, and of the +high constable who is to officiate at the urn, elect out of the horse +of their troop or company one captain, and one ensign or cornet, to +the command of the same. And the jurymen having entered the list of the +hundred into a record to be diligently kept at the rendezvous of the +same, the first public game of this commonwealth shall begin and be +performed in this manner. Whereas there is to be at every rendezvous of +a hundred, one cannon, culverin, or saker, the prize arms being forged +by sworn armorers of this commonwealth, and for their proof, besides +their beauty, viewed and tried at the tower of Emporium, shall be +exposed by the justice of peace appertaining to that hundred (the said +justice with the jurymen being judges of the game), and the judges shall +deliver to the horseman that gains the prize at the career, one suit +of arms being of the value L20, to the pikeman that gains the prize +at throwing the bullet, one suit of arms of the value of L10, to the +musketeer that gains the prize at the mark with his musket, one suit of +arms of the value of L10, and to the cannoneer that gains the prize at +the mark with the cannon, culverin, or saker, a chain of silver being +the value of L10, provided that no one man at the same muster plays +above one of the prizes. Whosoever gains a prize is bound to wear it +(if it be his lot) upon service; and no man shall sell or give away any +armor thus won, except he has lawfully attained to two or more of them +at the games. + +"The games being ended, and the muster dismissed, the captain of the +troop or company shall repair with a copy of the list to the lord +lieutenant of the tribe, and the high constable with a duplicate of +the same to the custos rotulorum, or muster-master general, to be also +communicated to the censors; in each of which the jurymen, giving a +note upon every name of an only son, shall certify the list is without +subterfuge or evasion; or, if it be not, an account of those upon whom +the evasion or subterfuge lies, to the end that the phylarch or the +censors may animadvert accordingly. + +"And every Wednesday next ensuing the last of February, the lord +lieutenant, custos rotulorum, the censors, and the conductor, shall +receive the whole muster of the youth of that tribe at the rendezvous of +the same, distributing the horse and foot with their officers, according +to the directions given in the like case for the distribution of the +elders; and the whole squadron being put by that means in battalia, +the second game of this commonwealth shall begin by the exercise of the +youth in all the parts of their military discipline according to the +orders of Parliament, or direction of the Council of War in that case. +And the L100 allowed by the Parliament for the ornament of the muster +in every tribe, shall be expended by the phylarch upon such artificial +castles, citadels, or the like devices, as may make the best and most +profitable sport for the youth and their spectators. + +"Which being ended, the censors having prepared the urns by putting +into the horse-urn 220 gold balls, whereof ten are to be marked with +the letter M and other ten with the letter P; into the foot-urn 700 gold +balls, whereof fifty are to be marked, with the letter M and fifty with +the letter P; and after they have made the gold balls in each urn, by +the addition of silver balls to the same, in number equal with the horse +and foot of the stratiots, the lord lieutenant shall call the stratiots +to the urns, where they that draw the silver balls shall return to +their places, and they that draw the gold balls shall fall off to the +pavilion, where, for the space of one hour, they may chop and change +their balls according as one can agree with another, whose lot he likes +better. + +"But the hour being out, the conductor separating them whose gold balls +have no letter from those whose balls are marked, shall cause the crier +to call the alphabet, as first A; whereupon all they whose gold balls +are not marked, and whose surnames begin with the letter A, shall repair +to a clerk appertaining to the custos rotulorum, who shall first take +the names of that letter; then those of B, and so on, till all the names +be alphabetically enrolled. And the youth of this list being 600 foot +in a tribe, that is, 30,000 foot in all the tribes; and 200 horse in a +tribe, that is, 10,000 horse in all the tribes, are the second essay of +the stratiots, and the standing army of this commonwealth to be always +ready upon command to march. They whose balls are marked with M, +amounting, by twenty horse and fifty foot in a tribe, to 2,500 foot and +500 horse in all the tribes, and they whose balls are marked with P, in +every point correspondent, are parts of the third essay; they in M being +straight to march for Marpesia, and they of P for Panopea, to the ends +and according to the further directions following in the order for the +provincial orbs. + +"If the polemarchs or field officers be elected by the scrutiny of the +Council of War, and the strategus commanded by the Parliament or the +Dictator to march, the lord lieutenants (who have power to muster and +discipline the youth so often as they receive orders for the same from +the Council of War) are to deliver the second essay, or so many of them +as shall be commanded, to the conductors, who shall present them to the +lord strategus at the time and place appointed by his Excellency to be +the general rendezvous of Oceana, where the Council of War shall have +the accommodation of horses and arms for his men in readiness; and the +lord strategus having armed, mounted, and distributed them, whether +according to the recommendation of their prize arms, or otherwise, +shall lead them away to his shipping, being also ready and provided with +victuals, ammunition, artillery, and all other necessaries; commanding +them, and disposing of the whole conduct of the war by his sole power +and authority. And this is the third essay of the stratiots, which being +shipped, or marched out of their tribes, the lord lieutenants shall +re-elect the second essay out of the remaining part of the first, and +the Senate another strategus. + +"If any veteran or veterans of this nation, the term of whose youth or +militia is expired, having a desire to be entertained in the further +service of the commonwealth, shall present him or themselves at the +rendezvous of Oceana to the strategus, it is in his power to take on +such and so many of them as shall be agreed by the polemarchs, and to +send back an equal number of the stratiots. + +"And for the better managing of the proper forces of this nation, the +lord strategus, by appointment of the Council of War, and out of such +levies as they shall have made in either or both of the provinces to +that end, shall receive auxiliaries by sea or elsewhere at some certain +place, not exceeding his proper arms in number. + +"And whosoever shall refuse any one of his three essays, except upon +cause shown, he be dispensed withal by the phylarch, or, if the phylarch +be not assembled, by the censors of his tribe, shall be deemed a helot +or public servant, shall pay a fifth part of his yearly revenue, +besides all other taxes, to the commonwealth for his protection, and be +incapable of bearing any magistracy except such as is proper to the law. +Nevertheless if a man has but two sons, the lord lieutenant shall not +suffer above one of them to come to the Urn at one election of the +second essay, and though he has above two sons, there shall not come +above half the brothers at one election; and if a man has but one son, +he shall not come to the urn at all without the consent of his parents, +or his guardians, nor shall it be any reproach to him or impediment to +his bearing of magistracy." + +This order, with relation to foreign expeditions, will be proved and +explained together with-- + +The twenty-seventh order, "Providing, in case of invasion apprehended, +that the lords high sheriffs of the tribes, upon commands received from +the Parliament or the Dictator, distribute the bands of the elders into +divisions, after the nature of the essays of the youth; and that the +second division or essay of the elders, being made and consisting of +30,000 foot and 10,000 horse, be ready to march with the second essay of +the youth, and be brought also by the conductors to the strategus. + +"The second essay of the elders and youth being marched out of their +tribes, the lords high sheriffs and lieutenants shall have the remaining +part of the annual bands both of elders and youth in readiness, which, +if the beacons be fired, shall march to the rendezvous to be in that +case appointed by the Parliament or the Dictator: And the beacons being +fired, the curiata comitia, or parochial congregations, shall elect a +fourth both of elders and youth to be immediately upon the guard of the +tribes, and dividing themselves as aforesaid, to march also in their +divisions according to orders, which method in case of extremity shall +proceed to the election of a third, or the levy of a second, or of the +last man in the nation, by the power of the lords high sheriffs, to the +end that the commonwealth in her utmost pressure may show her trust that +God in his justice will remember mercy, by humbling herself, and yet +preserving her courage, discipline, and constancy, even to the last drop +of her blood and the utmost farthing. + +"The services performed by the youth, or by the elders, in case of +invasion, and according to this order, shall be at their proper cost and +charges that are any ways able to endure it; but if there be such as are +known in their parishes to be so indigent that they cannot march out of +their tribes, nor undergo the burden in this case incumbent, then the +congregations of their parishes shall furnish them with sufficient sums +of money to be repaid upon the certificate of the same by the Parliament +when the action shall be over. And of that which is respectively +enjoined by this order, any tribe, parish, magistrate, or person that +shall fail, is to answer for it, at the Council of War, as a deserter of +his country." + +The Archon, being the greatest captain of his own, if not of any age, +added much to the glory of this commonwealth, by interweaving the +militia with more art and lustre than any legislator from or before the +time of Servius Tullius, who constituted the Roman militia. But as the +bones or skeleton of a man, though the greatest part of his beauty be +contained in their proportion or symmetry, yet shown without flesh are a +spectacle that is rather horrid than entertaining, so without discourses +are the orders of a commonwealth; which, if she goes forth in that +manner, may complain of her friends that they stand mute and staring +upon her. Wherefore this order was thus fleshed by the Lord Archon: + +"MY LORDS: + +"Diogenes seeing a young fellow drunk, told him that his father was +drunk when he begot him. For this, in natural generation, I must confess +I see no reason; but in the political it is right. The vices of the +people are from their governors; those of their governors from +their laws or orders; and those of their laws or orders from their +legislators. Whatever was in the womb imperfect, as to her proper work, +comes very rarely or never at all to perfection afterward; and the +formation of a citizen in the womb of the commonwealth is his education. + +"Education by the first of the foregoing orders is of six kinds: at the +school, in the mechanics, at the universities, at the inns of court or +chancery, in travels, and in military discipline, some of which I shall +but touch, and some I shall handle more at large. + +"That which is proposed for the erecting and endowing of schools +throughout the tribes, capable of all the children of the same, and able +to give to the poor the education of theirs gratis, is only matter of +direction in case of very great charity, as easing the needy of the +charge of their children from the ninth to the fifteenth year of their +age, during which time their work cannot be profitable; and restoring +them when they may be of use, furnished with tools whereof there are +advantages to be made in every work, seeing he that can read and use his +pen has some convenience by it in the meanest vocation. And it cannot +be conceived but that which comes, though in small parcels, to the +advantage of every man in his vocation, must amount to the advantage of +every vocation, and so to that of the whole commonwealth. Wherefore this +is commended to the charity of every wise-hearted and well-minded man, +to be done in time, and as God shall stir him up or enable him; there +being such provision already in the case as may give us leave to proceed +without obstruction. + +"Parents, under animadversion of the censors, are to dispose of their +children at the fifteenth year of their age to something; but what, is +left, according to their abilities or inclination, at their own choice. +This, with the multitude, must be to the mechanics, that is to say to +agriculture or husbandry, to manufactures, or to merchandise. + +"Agriculture is the bread of the nation; we are hung upon it by the +teeth; it is a mighty nursery of strength, the best army, and the most +assured knapsack; it is managed with the least turbulent or ambitious, +and the most innocent hands of all other arts. Wherefore I am of +Aristotle's opinion, that a commonwealth of husbandmen--and such is +ours--must be the best of all others. Certainly my lords, you have no +measure of what ought to be, but what can be, done for the encouragement +of this profession. I could wish I were husband good enough to direct +something to this end; but racking of rents is a vile thing in the +richer sort, an uncharitable one to the poorer, a perfect mark of +slavery, and nips your commonwealth in the fairest blossom. On the other +side, if there should be too much ease given in this kind, it would +occasion sloth, and so destroy industry, the principal nerve of a +commonwealth. But if aught might be done to hold the balance even +between these two, it would be a work in this nation equal to that for +which Fabius was surnamed Maximus by the Romans. + +"In manufactures and merchandise the Hollander has gotten the start of +us; but at the long run it will be found that a people working upon a +foreign commodity does but farm the manufacture, and that it is really +entailed upon them only where the growth of it is native; as also that +it is one thing to have the carriage of other men's goods, and another +for a man to bring his own to the best market. Wherefore (nature having +provided encouragement for these arts in this nation above all others, +where, the people growing, they of necessity must also increase) it +cannot but establish them upon a far more sure and effectual foundation +than that of the Hollanders. But these educations are in order to +the first things or necessities of nature; as husbandry to the food, +manufacture to the clothing, and merchandise to the purse of the +commonwealth. + +"There be other things in nature, which being second as to their order, +for their dignity and value are first; and such to which the other +are but accommodations; of this sort are especially these: religion, +justice, courage, and wisdom. + +"The education that answers to religion in our government is that of the +universities. Moses, the divine legislator, was not only skilful in +all the learning of the Egyptians, but took also into the fabric of his +commonwealth the learning of the Midianites in the advice of Jethro; and +his foundation of a university laid in the tabernacle, and finished in +the Temple, became that pinnacle from whence (according to many Jewish +and Christian authors) all the learning in the world has taken wing; as +the philosophy of the Stoics from the Pharisees; that of the Epicureans +from the Sadducees; and from the learning of the Jews, so often quoted +by our Saviour, and fulfilled in him, the Christian religion. Athens +was the most famous university in her days; and her senators, that is to +say, the Areopagites, were all philosophers. Lacedaemon, to speak truth, +though she could write and read, was not very bookish. But he that +disputes hence against universities, disputes by the same argument +against agriculture, manufacture, and merchandise; every one of these +having been equally forbid by Lycurgus, not for itself (for if he had +not been learned in all the learning of Crete, and well travelled in the +knowledge of other governments, he had never made his commonwealth), +but for the diversion which they must have given his citizens from their +arms, who, being but few, if they had minded anything else, must have +deserted the commonwealth. For Rome, she had ingenium par ingenio, was +as learned as great, and held our College of Augurs in much reverence. +Venice has taken her religion upon trust. Holland cannot attend it to +be very studious. Nor does Switzerland mind it much; yet are they all +addicted to their universities. We cut down trees to build houses; but +I would have somebody show me, by what reason or experience the cutting +down of a university should tend to the setting up of a commonwealth. +Of this I am sure, that the perfection of a commonwealth is not to be +attained without the knowledge of ancient prudence, nor the knowledge of +ancient prudence without learning, nor learning without schools of good +literature, and these are such as we call universities. + +"Now though mere university learning of itself be that which (to speak +the words of Verulamius) 'crafty men contemn, and simple men only +admire, yet is it such as wise men have use of; for studies do not +teach their own use, but that is a wisdom without and above them, won by +observation. Expert men may execute, and perhaps judge, of particulars +one by one; but the general councils and the plots, and the marshalling +of affairs, come best from those that are learned.' Wherefore if you +would have your children to be statesmen, let them drink by all means of +these fountains, where perhaps there were never any. But what though the +water a man drinks be not nourishment, it is the vehicle without which +he cannot be nourished. + +"Nor is religion less concerned in this point than government: for +take away your universities, and in a few years you lose it. "The holy +Scriptures are written in Hebrew and Greek; they that have neither of +these languages may think light of both; but find me a man that has one +in perfection, the study of whose whole life it has not been. Again, +this is apparent to us in daily conversation, that if four or five +persons that have lived together be talking, another speaking the same +language may come in, and yet understand very little of their discourse, +in that it relates to circumstances, persons, things, times and places +which he knows not. It is no otherwise with a man, having no insight +of the times in which they were written, and the circumstances to which +they relate, in the reading of ancient books, whether they be divine or +human. For example, when we fall upon the discourse about baptism and +regeneration that was between our Saviour and Nicodemus, where Christ +reproaches him with his ignorance in this matter. 'Art thou a doctor in +Israel, and understandest not these things?' What shall we think of it? +or wherefore should a doctor in Israel have understood these things more +than another, but that both baptism and regeneration, as was showed at +large by my Lord Phosphorus, were doctrines held in Israel? I instance +in one place of a hundred, which he, that has not mastered the +circumstances to which they relate, cannot understand. Wherefore to +the understanding of the Scripture, it is necessary to have ancient +languages, and the knowledge of ancient times, or the aid of them who +have such knowledge; and to have such as may be always able and ready to +give such aid (unless you would borrow it of another nation, which would +not only be base, but deceitful) it is necessary to a commonwealth that +she have schools of good literature, or universities of her own. + +"We are commanded, as has been said more than once, to search the +Scriptures; and which of them search the Scriptures, they that take +this pains in ancient languages and learning, or they that will not, +but trust to translations only, and to words as they sound to present +circumstances? than which nothing is more fallible, or certain to lose +the true sense of Scriptures, pretended to be above human understanding, +for no other cause than that they are below it. But in searching +the Scriptures by the proper use of our universities, we have been +heretofore blest with greater victories and trophies against the purple +hosts and golden standards of the Romish hierarchy than any nation; and +therefore why we should relinquish this upon the presumption of some, +that because there is a greater light which they have, I do not know. +There is a greater light than the sun, but it does not extinguish the +sun, nor does any light of God's giving extinguish that of nature, +but increase and sanctify it. Wherefore, neither the honor bore by the +Israelitish, Roman, or any other commonwealth that I have shown, +to their ecclesiastics, consisted in being governed by them, but in +consulting them in matters of religion, upon whose responses or oracles +they did afterward as they thought fit. + +"Nor would I be here mistaken, as if, by affirming the universities to +be, in order both to religion and government, of absolute necessity, I +declared them or the ministry in any wise fit to be trusted, so far +as to exercise any power not derived from the civil magistrate in the +administration of either, if the Jewish religion were directed and +established by Moses, it was directed and established by the civil +magistrate; or if Moses exercised this administration as a prophet, the +same prophet did invest with the same administration the Sanhedrim, and +not the priests; and so does our commonwealth the Senate, and not the +clergy. They who had the supreme administration or government of +the national religion in Athens, were the first Archon, the rex +sacrificulus, or high-priest, and a polemarch, which magistrates +were ordained or elected by the holding up of hands in the church, +congregation, or comitia of the people. The religion of Lacedaemon was +governed by the kings, who were also high-priests, and officiated at the +sacrifice; these had power to substitute their pythii, ambassadors, +or nuncios, by which, not without concurrence of the Senate, they +held intelligence with the oracle of Apollo at Delphos. And the +ecclesiastical part of the Commonwealth of Rome was governed by the +pontifex maximus, the rex sacrificulus, and the Flamens, all ordained +or elected by the people, the pontifex by the tribes, the King by the +centuries, and the Flamens by the parishes. + +"I do not mind you of these things, as if, for the matter, there were +any parallel to be drawn out of their superstitions to our religion, +but to show that for the manner, ancient prudence is as well a rule in +divine as human things; nay, and such a one as the apostles themselves, +ordaining elders by the holding up of hands in every congregation, have +exactly followed; for some of the congregations where they thus ordained +elders were those of Antioch, Iconium, Lystra, Derbe, the countries of +Lycaona, Pisidia, Pamphilia, Perga, with Attalia. Now that these cities +and countries, when the Romans propagated their empire into Asia, were +found most of them commonwealths, and that many of the rest were endued +with like power, so that the people living under the protection of the +Roman emperors continued to elect their own magistrates, is so known +a thing, that I wonder whence it is that men, quite contrary to the +universal proof of these examples, will have ecclesiastical government +to be necessarily distinct from civil power, when the right of the +elders ordained by the holding up of hands in every congregation to +teach the people, was plainly derived from the same civil power by which +they ordained the rest of their magistrates. And it is not otherwise in +our commonwealth, where the parochial congregation elects or ordains its +pastor. To object the Commonwealth of Venice in this place, were to show +us that it has been no otherwise but where the civil power has lost the +liberty of her conscience by embracing popery; as also that to take away +the liberty of conscience in this administration from the civil power, +were a proceeding which has no other precedent than such as is popish. + +"Wherefore your religion is settled after the following manner: the +universities are the seminaries of that part which is national, by which +means others with all safety may be permitted to follow the liberty of +their own consciences, in regard that, however they behave themselves, +the ignorance of the unlearned in this case cannot lose your religion +nor disturb your government, which otherwise it would most certainly do; +and the universities with their emoluments, as also the benefices of +the whole nation, are to be improved by such augmentations as may make +a very decent and comfortable subsistence for the ministry, which is +neither to be allowed synods nor assemblies, except upon the occasion +shown in the universities, when they are consulted by the Council +of State, and suffered to meddle with affairs of religion, nor to be +capable of any other public preferment whatsoever; by which means the +interest of the learned can never come to corrupt your religion, nor +disturb your government, which otherwise it would most certainly do. +Venice, though she does not see, or cannot help the corruption of her +religion, is yet so circumspect to avoid disturbance of her government +in this kind, that her Council proceeds not to election of magistrates +till it be proclaimed fora papalini, by which words such as have +consanguinity with red hats, or relation to the Court of Rome, are +warned to withdraw. + +"If a minister in Holland meddles with matter of state, the magistrate +sends him a pair of shoes; whereupon, if he does not go, he is driven +away from his charge. I wonder why ministers, of all men, should be +perpetually tampering with government; first because they, as well as +others, have it in express charge to submit themselves to the ordinances +of men; and secondly because these ordinances of men must go upon such +political principles as they of all others, by anything that can be +found in their writings or actions, least understand: whence you have +the suffrage of all nations to this sense, that an ounce of wisdom is +worth a pound of clergy. Your greatest clerks are not your wisest men: +and when some foul absurdity in state is committed, it is common +with the French, and even the Italians, to call it 'pas de clerc,' +or 'governo de prete.' They may bear with men that will be preaching +without study, while they will be governing without prudence. My lords, +if you know not how to rule your clergy, you will most certainly, like +a man that cannot rule his wife, have neither quiet at home nor honor +abroad. Their honest vocation is to teach your children at the schools +and the universities, and the people in the parishes, and yours is +concerned to see that they do not play the shrews, of which parts +does consist the education of your commonwealth, so far as it regards +religion. + +"To justice, or that part of it which is commonly executive, answers the +education of the inns of court and chancery. Upon which to philosophize, +requires a public kind of learning that I have not. But they who take +upon them any profession proper to the educations mentioned--that is, +theology, physic, or law--are not at leisure for the essays. +Wherefore the essays, being degrees whereby the youth commence for all +magistracies, offices, and honors in the parish, hundred, tribe, Senate, +or prerogative; divines, physicians, and lawyers not taking these +degrees, exclude themselves from all such magistracies, offices, and +honors. And whereas lawyers are likest to exact further reason for +this, they (growing up from the most gainful art at the bar to those +magistracies upon the bench which are continually appropriated to +themselves, and not only endowed with the greatest revenues, but also +held for life) have the least reason of all the rest to pretend to +any other, especially in an equal commonwealth, where accumulation of +magistracy or to take a person engaged by his profit to the laws, as +they stand, into the power, which is legislative, and which should keep +them to what they were, or ought to he, were a solecism in prudence. +It is true that the legislative power may have need of advice and +assistance from the executive magistracy, or such as are learned in +the law; for which cause the judges are, as they have heretofore been, +assistants in the Senate. Nor, however it came about, can I see any +reason why a judge, being but an assistant or lawyer, should be member +of a legislative council. + +"I deny not that the Roman patricians were all patrons, and that the +whole people were clients, some to one family and some to another, +by which means they had their causes pleaded and defended in some +appearance gratis; for the patron took no money, though if he had a +daughter to marry, his clients were to pay her portion, nor was this so +great a grievance. But if the client accused his patron, gave testimony +or suffrage against him, it was a crime of such a nature that any man +might lawfully kill him as a traitor; and this, as being the nerve of +the optimacy, was a great cause of ruin to that commonwealth; for +when the people would carry anything that pleased not the Senate, the +senators were ill provided if they could not intercede-that is, oppose +it by their clients; with whom, to vote otherwise than they pleased, +was the highest crime. The observation of this bond till the time of the +Gracchi--that is to say, till it was too late, or to no purpose to break +it--was the cause why, in all the former heats and disputes that had +happened between the Senate and the people, it never came to blows, +which indeed was good; but withal, the people could have no remedy, +which was certainly evil. Wherefore I am of opinion that a senator +ought not to be a patron or advocate, nor a patron or advocate to be a +senator; for if his practice be gratis it debauches the people, and if +it be mercenary it debauches himself: take it which way you will, when +he should be making of laws, he will be knitting of nets. + +"Lycurgus, as I said, by being a traveller became a legislator, but in +times when prudence was another thing. Nevertheless we may not shut +out this part of education in a commonwealth, which will be herself +a traveller; for those of this make have seen the world, especially +because this is certain (though it be not regarded in our times, when +things being left to take their chance, it fares with us accordingly) +that no man can be a politician except he be first a historian or a +traveller; for except he can see what must be, or what may be, he is no +politician. Now if he has no knowledge in history he cannot tell what +has been, and if he has not been a traveller, he cannot tell what is; +but he that neither knows what has been, nor what is, can never tell +what must be, or what may be. Furthermore, the embassies-in-ordinary by +our constitution are the prizes of young men, more especially such as +have been travellers. Wherefore they of these inclinations, having leave +of the censors, owe them an account of their time, and cannot choose but +lay it out with some ambition of praise or reward, where both are open, +whence you will have eyes abroad, and better choice of public ministers, +your gallants showing themselves not more to the ladies at their balls +than to your commonwealth at her Academy when they return from their +travels. + +"But this commonwealth being constituted more especially of two +elements, arms and councils, drives by a natural instinct at courage and +wisdom; which he who has attained is arrived at the perfection of human +nature. It is true that these virtues must have some natural root in him +that is capable of them; but this amounts not to so great a matter +as some will have it. For if poverty makes an industrious, a moderate +estate a temperate, and a lavish fortune a wanton man, and this be +the common course of things, wisdom then is rather of necessity than +inclination. And that an army which was meditating upon flight, has been +brought by despair to win the field, is so far from being strange, +that like causes will evermore produce like effects. Wherefore this +commonwealth drives her citizens like wedges; there is no way with them +but thorough, nor end but that glory whereof man is capable by art or +nature. That the genius of the Roman families commonly preserved itself +throughout the line (as to instance in some, the Manlii were still +severe, the Publicolae lovers, and the Appii haters of the people) is +attributed by Machiavel to their education; nor, if interest might add +to the reason why the genius of a patrician was one thing, and that of +a plebeian another, is the like so apparent between different nations, +who, according to their different educations, have yet as different +manners. It was anciently noted, and long confirmed by the actions of +the French, that in their first assaults their courage was more +than that of men, and for the rest less than that of women, which +nevertheless, through the amendment of their discipline, we see now to +be otherwise. I will not say but that some man or nation upon an equal +improvement of this kind may be lighter than some other; but certainly +education is the scale without which no man or nation can truly know +his or her own weight or value. By our histories we can tell when one +Marpesian would have beaten ten Oceaners, and when one Oceaner would +have beaten ten Marpesians. Marc Antony was a Roman, but how did that +appear in the embraces of Cleopatra? You must have some other education +for your youth, or they, like that passage, will show better in romance +than true story. + +"The custom of the Commonwealth of Rome in distributing her magistracies +without respect of age, happened to do well in Corvinus and Scipio; for +which cause Machiavel (with whom that which was done by Rome, and that +which is well done, are for the most part all one) commends this course. +Yet how much it did worse at other times, is obvious in Pompey and +Caesar, examples by which Boccalini illustrates the prudence of Venice +in her contrary practice, affirming it to have been no small step to the +ruin of the Roman liberty, that these (having tasted in their youth +of the supreme honors) had no greater in their age to hope for, but by +perpetuating of the same in themselves; which came to blood and ended in +tyranny. The opinion of Verulamius is safe: 'The errors,' says he, 'of +young men are the ruin of business; whereas the errors of old men amount +but to this, that more might have been done, or sooner.' But though +their wisdom be little, their courage is great; wherefore (to come to +the main education of this commonwealth) the militia of Oceana is the +province of youth. + +"The distribution of this province by the essays is so fully described +in the order, that I need repeat nothing; the order itself being but a +repetition or copy of that original, which in ancient prudence is of all +others the fairest, as that from whence the Commonwealth of Rome more +particularly derived the empire of the world. And there is much more +reason in this age, when governments are universally broken, or swerved +from their foundations, and the people groan under tyranny, that the +same causes (which could not be withstood when the world was full of +popular governments) should have the like effects. + +"The causes in the Commonwealth of Rome, whereof the empire of the +world was not any miraculous, but a natural (nay, I may safely say a +necessary) consequence, are contained in that part of her discipline +which was domestic, and in that which she exercises in her provinces or +conquest. Of the latter I shall have better occasion to speak when we +come to our provincial orbs; the former divided the whole people by +tribes, amounting, as Livy and Cicero show, at their full growth to +thirty-five, and every tribe by the sense or valuation of estates into +five classes: for the sixth being proletary, that is the nursery, or +such as through their poverty contributed nothing to the commonwealth +but children, was not reckoned nor used in arms. And this is the first +point of the militia, in which modern prudence is quite contrary to the +ancient; for whereas we, excusing the rich and arming the poor, become +the vassals of our servants, they, by excusing the poor and arming +such as were rich enough to be freemen, became lords of the earth. The +nobility and gentry of this nation, who understand so little what it is +to be the lords of the earth that they have not been able to keep their +own lands, will think it a strange education for their children to be +common soldiers, and obliged to all the duties of arms; nevertheless it +is not for four shillings a week, but to be capable of being the best +man in the field or in the city the latter part of which consideration +makes the common soldier herein a better man than the general of any +monarchical army. + +"And whereas it may be thought that this would drink deep of noble +blood, I dare boldly say, take the Roman nobility in the heat of their +fiercest wars, and you shall not find such a shambles of them as has +been made of ours by mere luxury and slothfulness; which, killing the +body, kill the soul also: Animasque in vulnere ponunt. Whereas common +right is that which he who stands in the vindication of, has used that +sword of justice for which he receives the purple of magistracy. The +glory of a man on earth can go no higher, and if he falls he rises +again, and comes sooner to that reward which is so much higher as heaven +is above the earth. To return to the Roman example: every class was +divided, as has been more than once shown, into centuries, and every +century was equally divided into youth and elders; the youth for foreign +service, and the elders for the guard of the territory. In the first +class were about eighteen centuries of horse, being those which, by +the institution of Servius, were first called to the suffrage in the +centurial assemblies. But the delectus, or levy of an army, which is the +present business, proceeded, according to Polybius, in this manner: + +"Upon a war decreed, the Consuls elected four-and-twenty military +tribunes or colonels, whereof ten, being such as had merited their tenth +stipend, were younger officers. The tribunes being chosen, the Consuls +appointed a day to the tribes, when those in them of military age were +to appear at the capitol. The day being come, and the youth assembled +accordingly, the Consuls ascended their tribunal, and the younger +tribunes were straight divided into four parts after this manner: four +were assigned to the first legion (a legion at the most consisted of +6,000 foot and 300 horse), three to the second, four to the third, and +three to the fourth. The younger tribunes being thus distributed, two of +the elder were assigned to the first legion, three to the second, two to +the third, and three to the fourth; and the officers of each legion thus +assigned, having drawn the tribes by lot, and being seated according to +their divisions at a convenient distance from each other, the tribe of +the first lot was called, whereupon they that were of it knowing the +business, and being prepared, presently bolted out four of their number, +in the choice whereof such care was taken that they offered none that +was not a citizen, no citizen that was not of the youth, no youth that +was not of some one of the five classes, nor any one of the five classes +that was not expert at his exercises. Moreover, they used such diligence +in matching them for age and stature, that the officers of the legion, +except they happened to be acquainted with the youth so bolted, were +forced to put themselves upon fortune, while they of the first legion +chose one, they of the second the next, they of the third another and +the fourth youth fell to the last legion; and thus was the election (the +legions and the tribes varying according to their lots) carried on till +the foot were complete. + +"The like course with little alteration was taken by the horse officers +till the horse also were complete. This was called giving of names, +which the children of Israel did also by lot; and if any man refused to +give his name, he was sold for a slave, or his estate confiscated to the +commonwealth. 'When Marcus Curius the Consul was forced to make a sudden +levy, and none of the youth would give in their names, all the tribes +being put to the lot, he commanded the first name drawn out of the urn +of the Pollian tribe (which happened to come first) to be called; but +the youth not answering, he ordered his goods to be sold; which was +conformable to the law in Israel, according to which Saul took a yoke +of oxen, and hewed them in pieces, and sent them throughout the tribes, +saying, 'Whosoever comes not forth to battle after Saul and Samuel, so +shall it be done to his oxen.' By which you may observe also that they +who had no cattle were not of the militia in Israel. But the age of +the Roman youth by the Tullian law determined at thirty; and by the law +(though it should seem by Machiavel and others that this was not +well observed) a man could not stand for magistracy till he was miles +emeritus, or had fulfilled the full term of his militia, which was +complete in his tenth stipend or service, nor was he afterward obliged +under any penalty to give his name, except the commonwealth were +invaded, in which case the elders were as well obliged as the youth. The +Consul might also levy milites evocatos, or soldiers, commanded men +out of such as had served their turn, and this at his discretion. The +legions being thus complete, were divided by two to each consul, and +in these no man had right to serve but a Roman citizen; now because two +legions made but a small army, the Romans added to every one of their +arms an equal number of foot, and a double number of horse levied among +their Latin or Italian associates; so a consular army, with the legions +and auxiliaries, amounted to about 30,000, and whereas they commonly +levied two such armies together, these being joined made about 60,000. + +"The steps whereby our militia follows the greatest captain, are the +three essays; the first, elected by a fifth man in the parishes, +and amounting in the whole to 100,000, choose their officers at the +hundreds, where they fall also to their games or exercises, invited by +handsome prizes, such as for themselves and the honor of them will be +coveted, such as will render the hundred a place of sports, and exercise +of arms all the year long, such as in the space of ten years will equip +30,000 men horse and foot, with such arms for their forge, proof, and +beauty, as (notwithstanding the argyraspides, or silver shields of +Alexander's guards) were never worn by so many, such as will present +marks of virtue and direction to your general or strategus in the +distribution of his army, which doubles the value of them to the +proprietors, who are bound to wear them, and eases the commonwealth of +so much charge, so many being armed already. + +"But here will be the objection now. How shall such a revenue be +compassed? Fifty pounds a year in every hundred is a great deal, not so +easily raised; men will not part with their money, nor would the sum, +as it is proposed by the order of Pompey, rise in many years. These +are difficulties that fit our genius exactly, and yet L1,000 in each +hundred, once levied, establishes the revenue forever. Now the hundreds +one with another are worth L10,000 a year dry-rent, over and above +personal estates, which bring it to twice the value, so that a twentieth +part of one year's revenue of the hundred does it, if you cannot afford +this while you pay taxes, though from henceforth they will be but small +ones, do it when you pay none, if it be then too much for one year, do +it in two; if it be too much for two years, do it in four. What husbands +have we hitherto been? what is become of greater sums? My lords, if you +should thus cast your bread upon the waters, after many days you shall +find it; stand not huckling when you are offered corn and your money +again in the mouth of the sack. + +"But to proceed: the first essay being officered at the hundreds, and +mustered at the tribes (where they are entertained with other sports, +which will be very fine ones), proceeds to the election of the second +essay, or standing army of this nation, consisting of 30,000 foot and +10,000 horse; and these, upon a war decreed, being delivered at the +rendezvous of Oceana to the strategus, are the third essay, which +answers to the Roman legions. But you may observe, that whereas the +consuls elected the military tribunes, and raised commanded men out of +the veterans at their own discretion, our polemarchs, or field officers, +are elected by the scrutiny of the Council of War, and our veterans +not otherwise taken on than as volunteers, and with the consent of the +polemarchs, which may serve for the removal of certain scruples which +might otherwise be incident in this place, though without encouragement +by the Roman way of proceeding, much less by that which is proposed. +But whereas the Roman legions in all amounted not in one army to above +30,000 men, or little more, you have here 40,000; and whereas they +added auxiliaries, it is in this regard that Marpesia will be a greater +revenue to you than if you had the Indies; for whereas heretofore she +has yielded you nothing but her native thistles, in ploughing out the +rankness of her aristocracy by your agrarian, you will find her an +inexhaustible magazine of men, and to her own advantage, who will make a +far better account by the arms than by the pins of Poland. Wherefore as +a consular army consisted of about an equal number of auxiliaries added +to their legions by their Latin or Italian associates, you may add to a +parliamentary army an equal number of Marpesians or Panopeans, as +that colony shall hereafter be able to supply you, by which means the +commonwealth will be able to go forth to battle with 80,000 men. + +"To make wars with small forces is no husbandry, but a waste, a disease, +a lingering and painful consumption of men and money the Romans making +theirs thick, made them short, and had little regard to money, as that +which they who have men enough can command where it is fittest that it +should be levied. All the ancient monarchies by this means got on wing, +and attained to vast riches. Whereas your modern princes being dear +purchasers of small parcels, have but empty pockets. But it may be some +will accuse the order of rashness, in that it commits the sole conduct +of the war to the general; and the custom of Venice by her proveditori, +or checks upon her commanders-in-chief, may seem to be of greater +prudence; but in this part of our government neither Venice nor any +nation that makes use of mercenary forces is for our instruction. A +mercenary army, with a standing general, is like the fatal sister that +spins; but proper forces, with an annual magistrate, are like her that +cuts the thread. Their interests are quite contrary, and yet you have a +better proveditor than the Venetian, another strategus sitting with an +army standing by him; whereupon that which is marching, if there were +any probability it should, would find as little possibility that it +could recoil, as a foreign enemy to invade you. These things considered, +a war will appear to be of a contrary nature to that of all other +reckonings, inasmuch as of this you must never look to have a good +account if you be strict in imposing checks. Let a council of huntsmen, +assembled beforehand, tell you which way the stag shall run, where you +shall cast about at the fault, and how you shall ride to be in at the +chase all the day; but these may as well do that, as a council of war +direct a general. The hours that have painted wings, and of different +colors, are his council; he must be like the eye that makes not the +scene, but has it so soon as it changes. That in many counsellors there +is strength, is spoken of civil administrations; as to those that are +military, there is nothing more certain than that in many counsellors +there is weakness. Joint commissions in military affairs, are like +hunting your hounds in their couples. In the Attic War Cleomenes and +Demaratus, Kings of Lacedaemon, being thus coupled, tugged one against +another; and while they should have joined against the Persian, were the +cause of the common calamity, whereupon that commonwealth took better +counsel, and made a law whereby from henceforth there went at once but +one of her kings to battle. + +"'The Fidenati being in rebellion, and having slain the colony of the +Romans, four tribunes with consular power were created by the people of +Rome, whereof one being left for the guard of the city, the other three +were sent against the Fidenati, who, through the division that happened +among them, brought nothing home but dishonor, whereupon the Romans +created the Dictator, and Livy gives his judgment in these words: "The +three tribunes with consular power were a lesson how useless in war +is the joint command of several generals; for each following his own +counsels, while they all differed in their opinions, gave by this +opportunity an advantage to the enemy." When the consuls Quintus and +Agrippa were sent against the AEqui, Agrippa for this reason refused +to go with his colleague, saying: "That in the administration of great +actions it was most safe that the chief command should be lodged in one +person." And if the ruin of modern armies were well considered, most of +it would be found to have fallen upon this point, it being in this case +far safer to trust to any one man of common prudence, than to any two or +more together of the greatest parts.' The consuls indeed, being equal in +power, while one was present with the Senate, and the other in the field +with the army, made a good balance; and this with us is exactly followed +by the election of a new strategus upon the march of the old one. + +"The seven-and-twentieth order, whereby the elders in case of invasion +are obliged to equal duty with the youth, and each upon their own +charge, is suitable to reason (for every man defends his own estate) and +to our copy, as in the war with the Samnites and Tuscans. 'The Senate +ordered a vacation to be proclaimed, and a levy to be made of all sorts +of persons, and not only the freemen and youths were listed, but cohorts +of the old men were likewise formed.' This nation of all others is the +least obnoxious to invasion. Oceana, says a French politician, is +a beast that cannot be devoured but by herself. Nevertheless, that +government is not perfect which is not provided at all points; and in +this (ad triarios res rediit) the elders being such as in a martial +state must be veterans, the commonwealth invaded gathers strength like +Antaeus by her fall, while the whole number of the elders, consisting +of 500,000, and the youth of as many, being brought up according to the +order, give twelve successive battles, each battle consisting of +80,000 men, half elders and half youth. And the commonwealth, whose +constitution can be no stranger to any of those virtues which are to be +acquired in human life, grows familiar with death ere she dies. If the +hand of God be upon her for her transgressions, she shall mourn for +her sins, and lie in the dust for her iniquities, without losing her +manhood. + + "'Si fractus illabatur orbis, + Impavidam ferient ruinoe.'" + +The remaining part, being the constitution of the provincial orb, is +partly civil, or consisting of the elders; and partly military, or +consisting of the youth. The civil part of the provincial orb is +directed by-- + +The twenty-eighth order, "Whereby the council of a province being +constituted of twelve knights, divided by four into three regions (for +their term and revolution conformable to the Parliament), is perpetuated +by the annual election at the tropic of four knights (being triennial +magistrates) out of the region of the Senate whose term expires; and +of one knight out of the same region to be strategus or general of the +province, which magistracy is annual. The strategus or magistrate thus +chosen shall be as well president of the provincial council with power +to propose to the same, as general of the army. The council for the +rest shall elect weekly provosts, having any two of them also right +to propose after the manner of the senatorian councils of Oceana. And +whereas all provincial councils are members of the Council of State, +they may and ought to keep diligent correspondence with the same, which +is to be done after this manner: Any opinion or opinions legitimately +proposed and debated at a provincial council, being thereupon signed +by the strategus or any two of the provosts, may be transmitted to the +Council of State in Oceana; and the Council of State proceeding upon +the same in their natural course (whether by their own power, if it be +a matter within their instructions; or by authority of the Senate +thereupon consulted, if it be a matter of state which is not in their +instructions; or by authority of the Senate and command of the people, +if it be a matter of law, as for the levies of men or money upon common +use and safety) shall return such answers, advice, or orders as in any +of the ways mentioned shall be determined upon the case. + +"The provincial councils of Marpesia and Panopea respectively shall take +special care that the agrarian laws, as also all other laws that be +or shall from time to time be enacted by the Parliament of Oceana, for +either of them, be duly put in execution; they shall manage and receive +the customs of either nation for the shipping of Oceana, being the +common guard; they shall have a care that moderate and sufficient +pay upon the respective province be duly raised for the support and +maintenance of the officers and soldiers, or army of the same, in the +most effectual, constant, and convenient way; they shall receive +the regalia, or public revenues of those nations, out of which every +councillor shall have for his term, and to his proper use, the sum of +L500 per annum, and the strategus L500 as president, beside his pay as +general, which shall be L1,000, the reminder to go to the use of the +knights and deputies of the respective provinces, to be paid, if it +will reach, according to the rates of Oceana; if not, by an equal +distribution, respectively, or the overplus, if there be any, to be +returned to the Treasury of Oceana. They shall manage the lands (if +there be any such held in either of the provinces by the commonwealth +of Oceana, in dominion) and return the rents into the Exchequer. If the +commonwealth comes to be possessed of richer provinces, the pay of +the general or strategus, and of the councils, may be respectively +increased. The people for the rest shall elect their own magistrates, +and be governed by their own laws, having power also to appeal from +their native or provincial magistrates, if they please, to the people of +Oceana. And whereas there may be such as receiving injury, are not +able to prosecute their appeals at so great a distance, eight +sergeants-at-law, being sworn by the commissioners of the seal, shall +be sent by four into each province once in two years; who, dividing +the same by circuits, shall hear such causes, and having gathered and +introduced them, shall return to the several appellants, gratis, the +determinations and decrees of the people in their several cases. + +"The term of a knight in a provincial orb, as to domestic magistracies, +shall be esteemed a vacation, and no bar to present election to any +other honor, his provincial magistracy being expired. + +"The quorum of a provincial council, as also of every other council +or assembly in Oceana, shall in time of health consist of two parts in +three of the whole number proper to that council or assembly; and in a +time of sickness, of one part in three; but of the Senate there can be +no quorum without three of the signory, nor of a council without two of +the provosts." + +The civil part of the provincial orb being declared by the foregoing +order, the military part of the same is constituted by-- + +The twenty-ninth order, "Whereby the stratiots of the third essay having +drawn the gold balls marked with the letter M, and being ten horse and +fifty foot in a tribe, that is to say, 500 horse and 2,500 foot in +all, the tribes shall be delivered by the respective conductors to +the provincial strategus or general, at such a time and place, or +rendezvous, as he shall appoint by order and certificate of his +election, and the strategus having received the horse and foot +mentioned, which are the third classes of his provincial guard or army, +shall forthwith lead them away to Marpesia, where the army consists of +three classes, each class containing 3,000 men, whereof 500 are horse; +and receiving the new strategus with the third class, the old strategus +with the first class shall be dismissed by the provincial council. The +same method with the stratiots of the letter P, is to be observed for +the provincial orb of Panopea; and the commonwealth coming to acquire +new provinces, the Senate and the people may erect new orbs in like +manner, consisting of greater or less numbers, according as is required +by the respective occasion. If a stratiot has once served his term in a +provincial orb, and happens afterward to draw the letter of a province +at the election of the second essay, he may refuse his lot; and if he +refuses it, the censor of that urn shall cause the files balloting at +the same to make a halt; and if the stratiot produces the certificate of +his strategus or general, that he has served his time accordingly, the +censor throwing the ball that he drew into the urn again, and taking out +a blank, shall dismiss the youth, and cause the ballot to proceed." + +To perfect the whole structure of this commonwealth, some directions are +given to the third essay, or army marching, in-- + +The thirtieth order. "'When thou goest to battle against thy enemies, +and seest horses and chariots, and a people more than thou, be not +afraid of them, for the Lord thy God is he that goes with thee to fight +for thee against thy enemies. And when thou dividest the spoil, it shall +be as a statute and an ordinance to thee, that as his part is that goes +down to the battle, so shall his part be that tarries by the stuff; +that is (as to the commonwealth of Oceana) the spoil takin of the enemy +(except clothes, arms, horses, ammunition, and victuals, to be divided +to the soldiery by the strategus and the polemarchs upon the place +according to their discretion) shall be delivered to four commissaries +of the spoils elected and sworn by the Council of War, which +commissaries shall be allowed shipping by the State, and convoys +according as occasion shall require by the strategus, to the end that +having a bill of lading signed by three or more of the polemarchs, +they may ship and bring, or cause such spoils to be brought to the +prize-office in Oceana, where they shall be sold, and the profit arising +by such spoils shall be divided into three parts, whereof one shall go +to the Treasury, another shall be paid to the soldiery of this nation, +and a third to the auxiliaries at their return from their service, +provided that the said auxiliaries be equal in number to the proper +forces of this nation, otherwise their share shall be so much less as +they themselves are fewer in number; the rest of the two-thirds to go +to the officers and soldiers of the proper forces. And the spoils so +divided to the proper forces, shall be subdivided into three equal +parts, whereof one shall go to the officers, and two to the common +soldiers, the like for the auxiliaries. And the share allotted the +officers shall be divided into four equal parts, whereof one shall go to +the strategus, another to the polemarchs, a third to the colonels, and a +fourth to the captains, cornets, ensigns, and under-officers, +receiving their share of the spoil as common soldiers, the like for the +auxiliaries. And this upon pain, in the case of failure, of what the +people of Oceana (to whom the cognizance of peculation or crimes of this +nature is properly appertaining) shall adjudge or decree." + +Upon these three last orders the Archon seemed to be haranguing at the +head of his army in this manner: + +"MY DEAR LORDS AND EXCELLENT PATRIOTS: + +"A government of this make is a commonwealth for increase. Of those for +preservation, the inconveniences and frailties have been shown: their +roots are narrow, such as do not run, have no fibres; their tops weak +and dangerously exposed to the weather, except you chance to find +one, as Venice, planted in a flower-pot, and if she grows, she grows +topheavy, and falls, too. But you cannot plant an oak in a flowerpot; +she must have earth for her root, and heaven for her branches. + +"'Imperium Oceano, famam quoe terminet astris.' + +"Rome was said to be broken by her own weight, but poetically; for that +weight by which she was pretended to be ruined was supported in her +emperors by a far slighter foundation. And in the common experience of +good architecture, there is nothing more known than that buildings stand +the firmer and the longer for their own weight, nor ever swerve through +any other internal cause than that their materials are corruptible; but +the people never die, nor, as a political body, are subject to any other +corruption than that which derives from their government. Unless a man +will deny the chain of causes, in which he denies God, he must also +acknowledge the chain of effects; wherefore there can be no effect in +nature that is not from the first cause, and those successive links of +the chain without which it could not have been. Now except a man can +show the contrary in a commonwealth, if there be no cause of corruption +in the first make of it, there can never be any such effect. Let no +man's superstition impose profaneness upon this assertion; for as man is +sinful, but yet the universe is perfect, so may the citizen be sinful, +and yet the commonwealth be perfect. And as man, seeing the world is +perfect, can never commit any such sin as shall render it imperfect, +or bring it to a natural dissolution, so the citizen, where the +commonwealth is perfect, can never commit any such crime as will render +it imperfect, or bring it to a natural dissolution. + +"To come to experience: Venice, notwithstanding we have found some flaws +in it, is the only commonwealth in the make whereof no man can find +a cause of dissolution; for which reason we behold her (though she +consists of men that are not without sin) at this day with 1,000 years +upon her back, yet for any internal cause, as young, as fresh, and free +from decay, or any appearance of it, as she was born; but whatever in +nature is not sensible of decay by the course of 1,000 years, is capable +of the whole age of nature; by which calculation, for any check that +I am able to give myself, a commonwealth, rightly ordered, may for any +internal causes be as immortal or long-lived as the world. But if +this be true, those commonwealths that are naturally fallen, must have +derived their ruin from the rise of them. Israel and Athens died, not +natural, but violent deaths, in which manner the world itself is to +die. We are speaking of those causes of dissolution which are natural to +government; and they are but two, either contradiction or inequality. If +a commonwealth be a contradiction, she must needs destroy herself; and +if she be unequal, it tends to strife, and strife to ruin. By the former +of these fell Lacedaemon, by the latter Rome. Lacedaemon being made +altogether for war, and yet not for increase, her natural progress +became her natural dissolution, and the building of her own victorious +hand too heavy for her foundation, so that she fell, indeed, by her own +weight. But Rome perished through her native inequality, which how it +inveterated the bosoms of the Senate and the people each against other, +and even to death, has been shown at large. + +"Look well to it, my lords, for if there be a contradiction or +inequality in your commonwealth, it must fall; but if it has neither of +these, it has no principle of mortality. Do not think me impudent; if +this be truth, I shall commit a gross indiscretion in concealing it. +Sure I am that Machiavel is for the immortality of a commonwealth upon +far weaker principles. 'If a commonwealth,' says he, 'were so happy +as to be provided often with men, that, when she is swerving from +her principles, should reduce her to her institution, she would be +immortal.' But a commonwealth, as we have demonstrated, swerves not from +her principles, but by and through her institution; if she brought no +bias into the world with her, her course for any internal cause must +be straightforward, as we see is that of Venice. She cannot turn to the +right hand nor to the left, but by some rub, which is not an internal, +but external, cause: against such she can be no way fortified but +through her situation, as is Venice, or through her militia, as was +Rome, by which examples a commonwealth may be secure of those also. +Think me not vain, for I cannot conceal my opinion here; a commonwealth +that is rightly instituted can never swerve, nor one that is not +rightly instituted be secured from swerving by reduction to her +first principles; wherefore it is no less apparent in this place that +Machiavel understood not a commonwealth as to the whole piece, than +where having told you that a tribune, or any other citizen of Rome, +might propose a law to the people, and debate it with them, he adds, +'this order was good while the people were good; but when the people +became evil, it became most pernicious.' As if this order (through +which, with the like, the people most apparently became evil) could ever +have been good, or that the people or the commonwealth could ever have +become good, by being reduced to such principles as were the original of +their evil. + +"The disease of Rome was, as has been shown, from the native inequality +of her balance, and no otherwise from the empire of the world, than as, +this falling into one scale, that of the nobility (an evil in such a +fabric inevitable) kicked out the people. Wherefore a man that could +have made her to throw away the empire of the world, might in that have +reduced her to her principles, and yet have been so far from rendering +her immortal that, going no further, he should never have cured her. But +your commonwealth is founded upon an equal agrarian; and if the earth be +given to the sons of men, this balance is the balance of justice, such a +one as in having due regard to the different industry of different men, +yet faithfully judges the poor' And the king that faithfully judges +the poor, his throne shall be established forever;, much more the +commonwealth, seeing that equality, which is the necessary dissolution +of monarchy, is the generation, the very life and soul, of a +commonwealth. And now, if ever, I may be excusable, seeing my assertion, +that the throne of a commonwealth may be established forever, is +consonant to the holy Scriptures. + +"The balance of a commonwealth that is equal is of such a nature that +whatever falls into her empire must fall equally; and if the whole +earth falls into your scales, it must fall equally, and so you may be +a greater people and yet not swerve from your principles one hair. Nay, +you will be so far from that that you must bring the world in such a +case to your balance, even to the balance of justice. But hearken, my +lords; are we on earth, do we see the sun, or are we visiting those +shady places which are feigned by the poets? + +"'Continuo auditoe voces, vagitus et ingens.' + +"These Gothic empires that are yet in the world, were at the first, +though they had legs of their own, but a heavy and unwieldy burden; but +their foundations being now broken, the iron of them enters even into +the souls of the oppressed; and hear the voice of their comforters: +'My father hath chastised you with whips, but I will chastise you with +scorpions.' Hearken, I say, if thy brother cries to thee in affliction, +wilt thou not hear him? This is a commonwealth of the fabric that has +an open ear and a public concern; she is not made for herself only, but +given as a magistrate of God to mankind, for the vindication of common +right and the law of nature. Wherefore says Cicero of the like, that of +the Romans, 'We have rather undertaken the patronage than the empire of +the world.' If you, not regarding this example, like some other nations +that are upon the point to smart for it, shall, having attained to your +own liberty, bear the sword of your common magistracy in vain, sit still +and fold your arms, or, which is worse, let out the blood of your people +to tyrants, to be shed in the defence of their yokes like water, and +so not only turn the grace of God into wantonness, but his justice into +wormwood: I say if you do thus, you are not now making a commonwealth, +but heaping coals of fire upon your own heads. A commonwealth of this +make is a minister of God upon earth, to the end that the world may be +governed with righteousness. For which cause (that I may come at length +to our present business) the orders last rehearsed are buds of +empire, such as with the blessing of God may spread the arms of your +commonwealth, like a holy asylum, to the distressed world, and give the +earth her sabbath of years, or rest from her labors, under the shadow +of your wings. It is upon this point where the writings of Machiavel, +having for the rest excelled all other authors, come as far to excel +themselves. + +"Commonwealths, says he, have had three ways of propagating themselves: +One after the manner of monarchies, by imposing the yoke, which was the +way of Athens, and, toward the latter times, of Lacedaemon; another by +equal leagues, which is the way of Switzerland (I shall add of Holland, +though since his time); a third by unequal leagues, which, to the shame +of the world, was never practised, nay, nor so much as seen or minded, +by any other commonwealth but that only of Rome. They will each of them, +either for caution or imitation, be worthy to be well weighed, which +is the proper work of this place. Athens and Lacedaemon have been the +occasion of great scandal to the world, in two, or at least one of two +regards: the first, their emulation, which involved Greece in perpetual +wars; the second, their way of propagation, which by imposing yokes upon +others, was plainly contradictory to their own principles. + +"For the first: governments, be they of what kind soever, if they be +planted too close, are like trees, that impatient in their growth to +have it hindered, eat out one another. It was not unknown to these in +speculation, or, if you read the story of Agesilaus, in action, that +either of them with 30,000 men might have mastered the East; and +certainly, if the one had not stood in the other's light, Alexander had +come too late to that end, which was the means (and would be if they +were to live again) of ruin, at least to one of them; wherefore with any +man that understands the nature of government this is excusable. So +it was between Oceana and Marpesia; so it is between France and Spain, +though less excusable; and so it ever will be in the like cases. But to +come to the second occasion of scandal by them given, which was in the +way of their propagation, it is not excusable; for they brought their +confederates under bondage, by which means Athens gave occasion of +the Peloponnesian War, the wound of which she died stinking, when +Lacedaemon, taking the same infection from her carcass, soon followed. + +"Wherefore, my lords, let these be warnings to you not to make that +liberty which God has given you a snare to others in practising this +kind of enlargement to yourselves. + +"The second way of propagation or enlargement used by commonwealths is +that of Switzerland and Holland, equal leagues; this, though it be +not otherwise mischievous, is useless to the world, and dangerous to +themselves: useless to the world, for as the former governments were +storks, these are blocks, have no sense of honor, or concern in the +sufferings of others. But as the AEtolians, a state of the like fabric, +were reproached by Philip of Macedon to prostitute themselves; by +letting out their arms to the lusts of others, while they leave their +own liberty barren and without legitimate issue; so I do not defame +these people; the Switzer for valor has no superior, the Hollander for +industry no equal; but themselves in the meantime shall so much the less +excuse their governments, seeing that to the Switz it is well enough +known that the ensigns of his commonwealth have no other motto than in +te converte manus; and that of the Hollander, though he sweats more gold +than the Spaniard digs, lets him languish in debt; for she herself lives +upon charity. These are dangerous to themselves, precarious governments, +such as do not command, but beg their bread from province to province, +in coats that being patched up of all colors are in effect of none. That +their cantons and provinces are so many arrows, is good; but they are so +many bows too, which is naught. + +"Like to these was the commonwealth of the ancient Tuscans, hung +together like bobbins, without a hand to weave with them; therefore +easily overcome by the Romans, though at that time, for number, a far +less considerable people. If your liberty be not a root that grows, +it will be a branch that withers, which consideration brings me to the +paragon, the Commonwealth of Rome. + +"The ways and means whereby the Romans acquired the patronage, and in +that the empire, of the world were different, according to the different +condition of their commonwealth in her rise and in her growth: in her +rise she proceeded rather by colonies, in her growth by unequal leagues. +Colonies without the bounds of Italy she planted none (such dispersion +of the Roman citizen as to plant him in foreign parts, till the contrary +interest of the emperors brought in that practice, was unlawful), nor +did she ever demolish any city within that compass, or divest it of +liberty; but whereas the most of them were commonwealths, stirred 'up by +emulation of her great felicity to war against her, if she overcame +any, she confiscated some part of their lands that were the greatest +incendiaries, or causes of the trouble, upon which she planted colonies +of her own people, preserving the rest of their lands and liberties for +the natives or inhabitants. By this way of proceeding, that I may be as +brief as possible, she did many and great things. For in confirming +of liberty, she propagated her empire; in holding the inhabitants from +rebellion, she put a curb upon the incursion of enemies; in exonerating +herself of the poorer sort, she multiplied her citizens; in rewarding +her veterans, she rendered the rest less seditious; and in acquiring to +herself the reverence of a common parent, she from time to time became +the mother of new-born cities. + +"In her further growth the way of her propagation went more upon +leagues, which for the first division were of two kinds, social and +provincial. + +"Again, social leagues, or leagues of society, were of two kinds: + +"The first called Latinity or Latin, the second Italian right." The +league between the Romans and the Latins, or Latin right, approached +nearest to jus quiritium, or the right of a native Roman. The man or +the city that was honored with this right, was civitate donatus cum +suffragio, adopted a citizen of Rome, with the right of giving suffrage +with the people in some cases, as those of conformation of law, or +determination in judicature, if both the Consuls were agreed, not +otherwise; wherefore that coming to little, the greatest and most +peculiar part of this privilege was, that who had borne magistracy (at +least that of oedile or quoestor) in any Latin city, was by consequence +of the same a citizen of Rome at all points. + +"Italian right was also a donation of the city, but without suffrage: +they who were in either of these leagues, were governed by their own +laws and magistrates, having all the rights, as to liberty, of citizens +of Rome, yielding and praying to the commonwealth as head of the league, +and having in the conduct of all affairs appertaining to the common +cause, such aid of men and money as was particularly agreed to upon the +merit of the cause, and specified in their respective leagues, whence +such leagues came to be called equal or unequal accordingly. + +"Provincial leagues were of different extension, according to the merit +and capacity of a conquered people; but they were all of one kind, for +every province was governed by Roman magistrates, as a praetor or a +proconsul, according to the dignity of the province, for the civil +administration and conduct of the provincial army, and a quaestor for +the gathering of the public revenue, from which magistrates a province +might appeal to Rome. + +"For the better understanding of these particulars, I shall exemplify in +as many of them as is needful, and first in Macedon: + +"The Macedonians were thrice conquered by the Romans, first under the +conduct of Titus Quintus Flaminius; secondly, under that of Lucius +AEmilius Paulus; and, thirdly under that of Quintus Caecilius Metellus, +thence called Macedonicus. + +"For the first time Philip of Macedon, who (possessed of Acrocorinthus) +boasted no less than was true, that he had Greece in fetters, being +overcome by Flaminius, had his kingdom restored to him, upon condition +that he should immediately set all the cities which he held in Greece +and in Asia at liberty, and that he should not make war out of Macedon +but by leave of the Senate of Rome; which Philip (having no other way to +save anything) agreed should be done accordingly. + +"The Grecians being at this time assembled at the isthmian games, where +the concourse was mighty great, a crier, appointed to the office by +Flaminius, was heard among them proclaiming all Greece to be free; +to which the people being amazed at so hopeless a thing, gave little +credit, till they received such testimony of the truth as put it past +all doubt, whereupon they fell immediately on running to the proconsul +with flowers and garlands, and such violent expressions of their +admiration and joy, as, if Flaminius, a young man, about thirty-three, +had not also been very strong, he must have died of no other death than +their kindness, while everyone striving to touch his hand, they bore him +up and down the field with an unruly throng, full of such ejaculations +as these: How is there a people in the world, that at their own charge, +at their own peril, will fight for the liberty of another? Did they +live at the next door to the fire? Or what kind of men are these, whose +business it is to pass the seas, that the world may be governed with +righteousness? The cities of Greece and of Asia shake off their iron +fetters at the voice of a crier was it madness to imagine such a thing, +and is it done? O virtue! O felicity! O fame! + +"In this example your lordships have a donation of liberty or of Italian +right to a people, by restitution to what they had formerly enjoyed; and +some particular men, families or cities, according to their merit of the +Romans, if not upon this, yet upon the like occasions, were gratified +with Latinity." But Philip's share by this means did not please him, +wherefore the league was broken by his son Perseus; and the Macedonians +thereupon for the second time conquered by AEmilius Paulus, their King +taken, and they some time after the victory summoned to the tribunal of +the general; where, remembering how little hope they ought to have of +pardon, they expected some dreadful sentence: when AEmilius, in the +first place, declared the Macedonians to be free, in the full possession +of their lands, goods, and laws, with right to elect annual magistrates, +yielding and paying to the people of Rome one-half of the tribute which +they were accustomed to pay to their own kings. This done he went on, +making so skilful a division of the country in order to the methodizing +of the people, and casting them into the form of popular government, +that the Macedonians, being first surprised with the virtue of the +Romans, began now to alter the scene of their admiration, that a +stranger should do such things for them in their own country, and with +such facility as they had never so much as once imagined to be possible. +Nor was this all; for AEmilius, as if not dictating to conquered +enemies, but to some well-deserving friends, gave them in the last place +laws so suitable, and contrived with such care and prudence, that long +use and experience (the only correctness of works of this nature) could +never find a fault in them. + +"In this example you have a donation of liberty, or of Italian right, +to a people that had not tasted of it before, but were now taught how to +use it. + +"My lords, the royalists should compare what we are doing, and we what +hitherto we have done for them, with this example. It is a shame that +while we are boasting up ourselves above all others, we should yet be +so far from imitating such examples as these, that we do not so much as +understand that if government be the parent of manners, where there are +no heroic virtues, there is no heroic government. + +"But the Macedonians rebelling, at the name of a false Philip, the third +time against the Romans, were by them judged incapable of liberty, and +reduced by Metellus to a province. + +"Now whereas it remains that I explain the nature of a province, I shall +rather choose that of Sicily, because, having been the first which the +Romans made, the descriptions of the rest relate to it. + +"'We have so received the Sicilian cities into amity,' says Cicero, +'that they enjoy their ancient laws; and upon no other condition than of +the same obedience to the people of Rome, which they formerly yielded to +their own princes or superiors.' So the Sicilians, whereas they had been +parcelled out to divers princes, and into divers states (the cause of +perpetual wars, whereby, hewing one another down, they became sacrifices +to the ambition of their neighbors, or of some invader), were now +received at the old rate into a new protection which could hold them, +and in which no enemy durst touch them; nor was it possible, as the +case then stood, for the Sicilians to receive, or for the Romans to give +more. + +"A Roman province is defined by Sigonius as a region having provincial +right. Provincial right in general was to be governed by a Roman +praetor, or consul, in matters at least of state, and of the militia; +and by a quaeStor, whose office it was to receive the public revenue. +Provincial right in particular was different, according to the different +leagues or agreements between the commonwealth, and the people reduced +into a province. 'Siculi hoc jure sunt, ut quod civis cum cive agat, +domi certet suis legibus; quod siculus cum siculo non ejusdem civitatis, +ut de eo proetor judices, ex P. Rupilii decreto, sortiatur. Quod +privatus a populo petit, aut populus a privato, senatus ex aliqua +civitate, qui judicet, datur, cui alternoe civitates rejectoe sunt. Quod +vivis Romanus a siculo petit, siculus judex datur quod siculus a cive +Romano, civis Romanus datur. Coeterarum rerum selecti judices ex civium +Romanorum conventu proponi solent. Inter aratores et decumanos lege +frumentaria, quam Hieronicam appellant, judicia fiunt.' Because the +rest would oblige me to a discourse too large for this place, it shall +suffice that I have showed you how it was in Sicily. + +"My lords, upon the fabric of your provincial orb I shall not hold you; +because it is sufficiently described in the order, and I cannot believe +that you think it inferior to the way of a praetor and a quaestor. But +whereas the provincial way of the Roman Commonwealth was that whereby it +held the empire of the world, and your orbs are intended to be capable +at least of the like use, there may arise many controversies, as whether +such a course be lawful, whether it be feasible; and, seeing that the +Romans were ruined upon that point, whether it would not be to the +destruction of the commonwealth. + +"For the first: if the empire of a commonwealth be an occasion to ask +whether it be lawful for a commonwealth to aspire to the empire of the +world, it is to ask whether it be lawful for it to do its duty, or to +put the world into a better condition than it was before. + +"And to ask whether this be feasible, is to ask why the Oceaner, being +under the like administration of government, may not do as much with +200 men as the Roman did with 100; for comparing their commonwealths in +their rise, the difference is yet greater: now that Rome (seris avaritia +luxuriaque), through the natural thirst of her constitution, came at +length with the fulness of her provinces to burst herself, this is no +otherwise to be understood than as when a man that from his own evil +constitution had contracted the dropsy, dies with drinking, it being +apparent that in case her agrarian had held, she could never have been +thus ruined, and I have already demonstrated that your agrarian being +once poised, can never break or swerve. + +"Wherefore to draw toward some conclusion of this discourse, let me +inculcate the use, by selecting a few considerations out of many. The +regard had in this place to the empire of the world appertains to a +well-ordered commonwealth, more especially for two reasons: + +"1. The facility of this great enterprise, by a government of the model +proposed; + +"2. The danger that you would run in the omission of such a government. + +"The facility of this enterprise, upon the grounds already laid, must +needs be great, forasmuch as the empire of the world has been, both in +reason and experience, the necessary consequence of a commonwealth of +this nature only; for though it has been given to all kinds to drive at +it, since that of Athens or Lacedaemon, if the one had not hung in the +other's light, might have gained it, yet could neither of them have held +it; not Athens, through the manner of her propagation, which, being +by downright tyranny, could not preserve what she had, nor Lacedaemon, +because she was overthrown by the weight of a less conquest. The +facility then of this great enterprise being peculiar to popular +government, I shall consider it, first, in gaining, and secondly, in +holding. + +"For the former, volenti non fit injuria. It is said of the people under +Eumenes, that they would not have changed them no their subjection for +liberty; wherefore the Romans gave disturbance. If a people be contented +with their government, it is a certain sign that it is good, and much +good do them with it. The sword of your magistracy is for a terror to +them that do evil. Eumenes had the fear of God, or of the Romans, before +his eyes; concerning such he has given you no commission. + +"But till we can say, here are the Romans, where is Eumenes? do not +think that the late appearances of God to you have been altogether for +yourselves; 'He has surely seen the affliction of your brethren, +and heard their cry by reason of their task masters.' For to believe +otherwise is not only to be mindless of his ways, but altogether deaf. +If you have ears to hear, this is the way in which you will certainly be +called upon; for if, while there is no stock of liberty no sanctuary +of the afflicted, it be a common object to behold a people casting +themselves out of the pan of one prince into the fire of another, what +can you think, but if the world should see the Roman 'eagle again, she +would renew her age and her flight? Nor did ever she spread her wings +with better omen than will be read in your ensigns; which if, called in +by an oppressed people they interpose between them and their yoke, the +people themselves must either do nothing in the meantime or have no more +pains to take for their wished fruit than to gather it, if that be not +likewise done for them. Wherefore this must needs be easy, and yet you +have a greater facility than is in the arm of flesh; for if the cause of +mankind be the cause of God, the Lord of Hosts will be your captain, and +you shall be a praise to the whole earth. + +"The facility of holding is in the way of your propagation; if you take +that of Athens and Lacedemon, you shall rain snares, but either catch or +hold nothing. Lying lips are an abomination to the Lord: if setting up +for liberty you impose yokes, he will infallibly destroy you. On the +other side, to go about a work of this nature by a league without a +head, is to abdicate that magistracy wherewith he has not only endued +you, but whereof he will require an account of you; for, 'cursed is he +that does the work of the Lord negligently.' Wherefore you are to take +the course of Rome: if you have subdued a nation that is capable of +liberty, you shall make them a present of it, as did Flaminius to +Greece, and AEmilius to Macedon, reserving to yourselves some part of +that revenue which was legally paid to the former government, together +with the right of being head of the league, which includes such levies +of men and money as shall be necessary for the carrying on of the public +work. + +"For if a people have by your means attained to freedom, they owe both +to the cause and you such aid as may propagate the like fruit to the +rest of the world. But whereas every nation is not capable of her +liberty to this degree, lest you be put to doing and undoing of things, +as the Romans were in Macedon, you shall diligently observe what nation +is fit for her liberty to this degree, and what not; which is to be done +by two marks, the first if she be willing to 'help the Lord against the +mighty;' for if she has no care of the liberty of mankind she deserves +not her own. But because in this you may be deceived by pretences, +which, continuing for a while specious, may afterward vanish; the other +is more certain, and that is if she be capable of an equal agrarian; +which that it was not observed by excellent AEmilius in his donation of +liberty, and introduction of a popular state among the Macedonians, I +am more than moved to believe for two reasons; the first, because at the +same time the agrarian was odious to the Roman patricians; the second, +that the pseudo-Philip could afterward so easily recover Macedon, which +could not have happened but by the nobility, and their impatience, +having great estates, to be equalled with the people; for that the +people should otherwise, at the mere sound of a name, have thrown away +their liberty, is incredible. Wherefore be assured that the nation where +you cannot establish an equal agrarian, is incapable of its liberty +as to this kind of donation. For example, except the aristocracy in +Marpesia be dissolved, neither can that people have their liberty there, +nor you govern at home; for they continuing still liable to be sold +by their lords to foreign princes, there will never (especially in a +country of which there is no other profit to be made) be want of such +merchants and drovers, while you must be the market where they are to +receive their second payment. + +"Nor can the aristocracy there be dissolved but by your means, in +relation whereto you are provided with your provincial orb; which, being +proportioned to the measure of the nation that you have vindicated or +conquered, will easily hold it: for there is not a people in the +world more difficult to be held than the Marpesians, which, though by +themselves it be ascribed to their own nature, is truly to be attributed +to that of their country. Nevertheless, you having 9,000 men upon the +continual guard of it, that, threatened by any sudden insurrection, have +places of retreat, and an army of 40,000 men upon a day's warning ready +to march to their rescue, it is not to be rationally shown which way +they can possibly slip out of your hands. And if a man should think that +upon a province more remote and divided by the sea, you have not the +like hold, he has not so well considered your wings as your talons, +your shipping being of such a nature as makes the descent of your armies +almost of equal facility in any country, so that what you take you hold, +both because your militia, being already populous, will be of great +growth in itself, and also through your confederates, by whom in taking +and holding you are still more enabled to do both. + +"Nor shall you easier hold than the people under your empire or +patronage may be held. My lords, I would not go to the door to see +whether it be close shut; this is no underhand dealing, nor a game at +which he shall have any advantage against you who sees your cards, but, +on the contrary the advantage shall be your own: for with 18,000 men +(which number I put, because it circulates your orb by the annual change +of 6,000) having established your matters in the order shown, you will, +be able to hold the greatest province; and 18,000 men, allowing them +greater pay than any prince ever gave, will not stand the province in +L1,000,000 revenue; in consideration whereof, they shall have their +own estates free to themselves, and be governed by their own laws and +magistrates; which, if the revenue of the province be in dry-rent (as +there may be some that are four times as big as Oceana) L40,000,000, +will bring it with that of industry, to speak with the least, to twice +the value: so that the people there, who at this day are so oppressed +that they have nothing at all whereon to live, shall for L1,000,000 paid +to you, receive at least L79,000,000 to their proper use: in which place +I appeal to any man, whether the empire described can be other than the +patronage of the world. + +"Now if you add to the propagation of civil liberty (so natural to this +commonwealth that it cannot be omitted) the propagation of the liberty +of conscience, this empire, this patronage of the world, is the kingdom +of Christ: for as the kingdom of God the Father was a commonwealth, so +shall the kingdom of God the Son; 'the people shall be willing in the +day of his power.' + +"Having showed you in this and other places some of those inestimable +benefits of this kind of government, together with the natural and +facile emanation of them from their fountain, I come (lest God who +has appeared to you, for he is the God of nature, in the glorious +constellation of these subordinate causes, whereof we have hitherto been +taking the true elevation, should shake off the dust of his feet against +you) to warn you of the dangers which you, not taking the opportunity, +will incur by omission. + +"Machiavel, speaking of the defect of Venice, through her want of proper +arms, cries out, 'This cut her wings, and spoiled her mount to heaven.' +If you lay your commonwealth upon any other foundation than the people, +you frustrate yourself of proper arms, and so lose the empire of the +world; nor is this all, but some other nation will have it. + +"Columbus offered gold to one of your kings, through whose happy +incredulity another prince has drunk the poison, even to the consumption +of his people; but I do not offer you a nerve of war that is made +of purse-strings, such a one as has drawn the face of the earth into +convulsions, but such as is natural to her health and beauty. Look you +to it, where there is tumbling and tossing upon the bed of sickness, it +must end in death or recovery. Though the people of the world, in the +dregs of the Gothic empire, be yet tumbling and tossing upon the bed of +sickness, they cannot die; nor is there any means of recovery for them +but by ancient prudence, whence of necessity it must come to pass that +this drug be better known, if France, Italy, and Spain were not all +sick, all corrupted together, there would be none of them so; for the +sick would not be able to withstand the sound, nor the sound to preserve +their health, without curing of the sick. The first of these nations +(which if you stay her leisure, will in my mind be France) that recovers +the health of ancient prudence, shall certainly govern the world; for +what did Italy when she had it? and as you were in that, so shall you in +the like case be reduced to a province; I do not speak at random. Italy, +in the consulship of Lucius AEmilius Papus and Caius Attilius Regulus, +armed, upon the Gallic tumult that then happened of herself, and without +the aid of foreign auxiliaries, 70,000 horse and 700,000 foot; but as +Italy is the least of those three countries in extent, so is France now +the most populous. + +"'I, decus, I, nostrum, melioribus utere fatis.' + +"My dear lords, Oceana is as the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the +valley. As the lily among thorns, such is my love among the daughters. +She is comely as the tents of Kedar, and terrible as an army with +banners. Her neck is as the tower of David, builded for an armory, +whereon there hang 1,000 bucklers and shields of mighty men. Let me hear +thy voice in the morning, whom my soul loves. The south has dropped, +and the west is breathing upon thy garden of spices. Arise, queen of the +earth, arise, holy spouse of Jesus; for lo, the winter is past, the +rain is over and gone; the flowers appear on the earth, the time for the +singing of birds is come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in our +land. Arise, I say, come forth, and do not tarry: ah! wherefore should +my eyes behold thee by the rivers of Babylon, hanging thy harps upon the +willows, thou fairest among women? + +"Excellent patriots, if the people be sovereign, here is that which +establishes their prerogative; if we be sincere, here is that which +disburdens our souls, and makes good all our engagements; if we be +charitable, here is that which embraces all parties; if we would be +settled, here is that which will stand, and last forever. + +"If our religion be anything else but a vain boast, scratching and +defacing human nature or reason, which, being the image of God, makes +it a kind of murder, here is that empire whence 'justice shall run down +like a river, and judgment like a mighty stream.' Who is it then that +calls us? or, what is in our way? A lion! Is it not the dragon, that old +serpent? For what wretched shifts are these? Here is a great deal; might +we not have some of this at one time, and some at another? + +"My lords, permit me to give you the sum, or brief: + +EPITOME OF THE WHOLE COMMONWEALTH + +"The centre or fundamental laws are, first, the agrarian, proportioned +at L2,000 a year in land, lying and being within the proper territory of +Oceana, and stating property in land at such a balance, that the power +can never swerve out of the hands of the many. + +"Secondly, the ballot conveying this equal sap from the root, by an +equal election or rotation, into the branches of magistracy or sovereign +power. + +"The orbs of this commonwealth being civil, military, or provincial, +are, as it were, cast upon this mould or centre by the divisions of +the people; first, into citizens and servants; secondly, into youth +and elders; thirdly, into such as have L100 a year in lands, goods, or +moneys, who are of the horse; and such as have under, who are of the +foot; fourthly, they are divided by their usual residence into parishes, +hundreds, and tribes. + +"The civil orbs consist of the elders, and are thus created: every +Monday next ensuing the last of December, the elders in every parish +elect the fifth man to be a deputy, which is but half a day's work; +every Monday next ensuing the last of January, the deputies meet at +their respective hundred, and elect out of their number one justice of +the peace, one juryman, one coroner, and one high constable of the foot, +one day's work. + +"Every Monday next ensuing the last of February, the hundreds meet +at their respective tribe, and there elect the lords high sheriff, +lieutenant, custos rotulorum, the conductor, the two censors out of +the horse, the magistrates of the tribe and of the hundreds, with the +jurymen constituting the phylarch, and who assist in their respective +offices at the assizes, hold the quarter-sessions, etc. The day +following the tribe elects the annual galaxy, consisting of two knights +and three deputies out of the horse, with four deputies out of the foot, +thereby endued with power, as magistrates of the whole nation, for the +term of three years. An officer chosen at the hundred may not be elected +a magistrate of the tribe; but a magistrate or officer either of the +hundred or of the tribe, being elected into the galaxy, may substitute +any one of his office in the hundred or in own order to his magistracy +or office in the hundred or in the tribe. This of the muster is two +days' work. So the body of the people is annually, at the charge of +three days' work and a half, in their own tribes, for the perpetuation +of their power, receiving over and above the magistracies so divided +among them. + +"Every Monday next ensuing the last of March, the knights, being 100 +in all the tribes, take their places in the Senate. The knights, having +taken their places in the Senate, make the third region of the same, and +the house proceeds to the senatorian elections. Senatorian elections are +annual, biennial, or emergent. + +"The annual are performed by the tropic. + +"The tropic is a schedule consisting of two parts; the first by which +the senatorian magistrates are elected; and the second, by which the +senatorian councils are perpetuated. + +"The first part is of this tenor: + + The lord strategus, + The lord orator, + The first censor, + The second censor, + +"Annual magistrates and therefore such as may be elected out of any +region; the term of every region having at the tropic one year at the +least unexpired. + + The third commissioner of the seal, + The third commissioner of the Treasury. + +"Triennial magistrates, and therefore such as can be chosen out of the +third region only, as that alone which has the term of three years +unexpired. + +"The strategus and the orator sitting, are consuls, or presidents of the +Senate. + +"The strategus marching is general of the army, in which case a new +strategus is to be elected in his room. + +"The strategus sitting with six commissioners, being councillors of the +nation, are the signory of the commonwealth." + +The censors are magistrates of the ballot, presidents of the Council for +Religion, and chancellors of the universities. + +"The second part of the tropic perpetuates the Council of State, by the +election of five knights out of the first region of the Senate, to be +the first region of that council consisting of fifteen knights, five in +every region. + +"The like is done by the election of four into the Council of Religion, +and four into the Council of Trade, out of the same region in the +Senate; each of these councils consisting of twelve knights, four in +every region. + +"But the Council of War, consisting of nine knights, three in every +region, is elected by and out of the Council of State, as the other +councils are elected by and out of the Senate. And if the Senate add a +juncta of nine knights more, elected out of their own number, for the +term of three months, the Council of War, by virtue of that addition, is +Dictator of Oceana for the said term. + +"The signory jointly or severally has right of session and suffrage in +every senatorial council, and to propose either to the Senate, or any of +them. And every region in a council electing one weekly provost, any +two of those provosts have power also to propose to their respective +council, as the proper and peculiar proposers of the same, for which +cause they hold an academy, where any man, either by word of mouth or +writing, may propose to the proposers. + +"Next to the elections of the tropic is the biennial election of one +ambassador-in-ordinary, by the ballot of the house, to the residence +of France; at which time the resident of France removes to Spain, he +of Spain to Venice, he of Venice to Constantinople, and he of +Constantinople returns. So the orb of the residents is wheeled about in +eight years, by the biennial election of one ambassador-in-ordinary. + +"The last kind of election is emergent. Emergent elections are made by +the scrutiny. Election by scrutiny is when a competitor, being made by +a council, and brought into the Senate, the Senate chooses four more +competitors to him, and putting all five to the ballot, he who has most +above half the suffrages is the magistrate. The polemarchs or +field officers are chosen by the scrutiny of the Council of War; an +ambassador-extraordinary by the scrutiny of the Council of State; the +judges and sergeants-at-law by the scrutiny of the seal; and the barons +and prime officers of the Exchequer, by the scrutiny of the Treasury.. + +"The opinion or opinions that are legitimately proposed to any council +must be debated by the same, and so many as are resolved upon the debate +are introduced into the Senate, where they are debated and resolved, or +rejected by the whole house; that which is resolved by the Senate is +a decree which is good in matters of state, but no law, except it be +proposed to and resolved by the prerogative. + +"The deputies of the galaxy being three horse and four foot in a tribe, +amount in all the tribes to 150 horse and 200 foot; which, having +entered the prerogative, and chosen their captains, cornet, and ensign +(triennial officers), make the third class, consisting of one troop +and one company; and so, joining with the whole prerogative, elect four +annual magistrates, called tribunes, whereof two are of the horse and +two of the foot. These have the command of the prerogative sessions, +and suffrage in the Council of War, and sessions without suffrage in the +Senate. + +"The Senate having passed a decree which they would propose to the +people, cause it to be printed and published, or promulgated for the +space of six weeks, which, being ordered, they choose their proposers. +The proposers must be magistrates, that is, the commissioners of the +seal, those of the Treasury, or the censors. These being chosen, desire +the muster of the tribunes, and appoint the day. The people being +assembled at the day appointed, and the decree proposed, that which is +proposed by authority of the Senate, and commanded by the people, is the +law of Oceana, or an act of Parliament. + +"So the Parliament of Oceana consists of the Senate proposing, and the +people resolving. + +"The people or prerogative are also the supreme judicatory of this +nation, having power of hearing and determining all causes of appeal +from all magistrates, or courts provincial or domestic, as also to +question any magistrate, the term of his magistracy being expired, if +the case be introduced by the tribunes, or any one of them. + +"The military orbs consist of the youth, that is, such as are from +eighteen to thirty years of age; and are created in the following +manner: + +"Every Wednesday next ensuing the last of December, the youth of +every parish, assembling, elect the fifth of their number to be their +deputies; the deputies of the youth are called stratiots, and this is +the first essay. + +"Every Wednesday next ensuing the last of January, the stratiots, +assembling at the hundred, elect their captain and their ensign, and +fall to their games and sports. + +"Every Wednesday next ensuing the last of February the stratiots are +received by the lord lieutenant, their commander-in-chief, with the +conductors and the censors; and, having been disciplined and entertained +with other games, are called to the urns, where they elect the second +essay, consisting of 200 horse and 600 foot in a tribe; that is, of +10,000 horse and 30,000 foot in all the tribes, which is the standing +army of this nation, to march at any warning. They also elect at the +same time a part of the third essay, by the mixture of balls marked with +the letter M and the letter P, for Marpesia and Panopea; they of either +mark being ten horse and fifty foot in a tribe, that is, 500 horse and +2,500 foot in all the tribes, which are forthwith to march to their +respective provinces. + +"But the third essay of this nation more properly so called, is when the +strategus with the polemarchs (the Senate and the people or the Dictator +having decreed a war) receive in return of his warrants the second essay +from the hands of the conductors at the rendezvous of Oceana; which +army, marching with all accommodations provided by the Council of War, +the Senate elects a new strategus, and the lords-lieutenant a new second +essay. + +"A youth, except he be an only son, refusing any one of his three +essays, without sufficient cause shown to the phylarch or the censors, +is incapable of magistracy, and is fined a fifth part of his yearly +rent, or of his estate, for protection. In case of invasion the elders +are obliged to like duty with the youth, and upon their own charge. + +"The provincial orb consisting in part of the elders, and in part of the +youth, is thus created: + +"Four knights out of the first region falling, are elected in the Senate +to be the first region of the provincial orb of Marpesia; these, being +triennial magistrates, take their places in the provincial council, +consisting of twelve knights, four in every region, each region choosing +their weekly provosts of the council thus constituted. One knight more, +chosen out of the same region in the Senate, being an annual magistrate, +is president, with power to propose; and the opinions proposed by the +president, or any two of the provosts, are debated by the council, and, +if there be occasion of further power or instruction than they yet have, +transmitted to the Council of State, with which the provincial is to +hold intelligence. + +"The president of this council is also strategus or general of the +provincial army; wherefore the conductors, upon notice of his election, +and appointment of his rendezvous, deliver to him the stratiots of his +letter, which he takes with him into his province; and the provincial +army having received the new strategus with the third class, the council +dismisses the old strategus with the first class. The like is done for +Panopea, or any other province. + +"But whereas the term of every other magistracy or election in this +commonwealth, whether annual or triennial, requires an equal vacation, +the term of a provincial councillor or magistrate requires no vacation +at all. The quorum of a provincial, as also that of every other council +and assembly, requires two-thirds in a time of health, and one-third in +a time of sickness. + +"I think I have omitted nothing but the props and scaffolds, which +are not of use but in building. And how much is here? Show me another +commonwealth in this compass? how many things? Show me another entire +government consisting but of thirty orders. If you now go to law with +anybody, there lie to some of our courts 200 original writs: if you stir +your hand, there go more nerves and bones to that motion; if you play, +you have more cards in the pack; nay, you could not sit with your ease +in that chair, if it consisted not of more parts. Will you not then +allow to your legislator, what you can afford your upholsterer, or to +the throne, what is necessary to a chair? + +"My lords, if you will have fewer orders in a commonwealth, you will +have more; for where she is not perfect at first, every day, every hour +will produce a new order, the end whereof is to have no order at all, +but to grind with the clack of some demagogue. Is he providing already +for his golden thumb? Lift up your heads; away with ambition, that +fulsome complexion of a statesman, tempered, like Sylla's, with blood +and muck. 'And the Lord give to his senators wisdom; and make our faces +to shine, that we may be a light to them that sit in darkness and the +shadow of death, to guide their feet in the way of peace.'--In the name +of God, what's the matter?" + +Philadelphus, the secretary of the council, having performed his task +in reading the several orders as you have seen, upon the receipt of +a packet from his correspondent Boccalini, secretary of Parnassus, in +reading one of the letters, burst forth into such a violent passion of +weeping and downright howling, that the legislators, being startled with +the apprehension of some horrid news, one of them had no sooner snatched +the letter out of his hand, than the rest crying, "Read, read," he +obeyed in this manner: + +"The 3d instant his Phoebean majesty having taken the nature of free +states into his royal consideration, and being steadily persuaded that +the laws in such governments are incomparably better and more surely +directed to the good of mankind than in any other; that the courage of +such a people is the aptest tinder to noble fire; that the genius of +such a soil is that wherein the roots of good literature are least +worm-eaten with pedantism, and where their fruits have ever come to the +greatest maturity and highest relish, conceived such a loathing of +their ambition and tyranny, who, usurping the liberty of their native +countries, become slaves to themselves, inasmuch as (be it never so +contrary to their own nature or consciences) they have taken the earnest +of sin, and are engaged to persecute all men that are good with the same +or greater rigor than is ordained by laws for the wicked, for none ever +administered that power by good which he purchased by ill arts--Phoebus, +I say, having considered this, assembled all the senators residing in +the learned court at the theatre of Melpomene, where he caused Caesar +the Dictator to come upon the stage, and his sister Actia, his nephew +Augustus, Julia his daughter, with the children which she had by +Marcus Agrippa, Lucius and Caius Caesars, Agrippa Posthumus, Julia, +and Agrippina, with the numerous progeny which she bore to her renowned +husband Germanicus, to enter. A miserable scene in any, but most +deplorable in the eyes of Caesar, thus beholding what havoc his +prodigious ambition, not satisfied with his own bloody ghost, had made +upon his more innocent remains, even to the total extinction of his +family. For it is (seeing where there is any humanity, there must +be some compassion) not to be spoken without tears, that of the full +branches deriving from Octavia the eldest sister, and Julia the daughter +of Augustus, there should not be one fruit or blossom that was not cut +off or blasted by the sword, famine, or poison. + +"Now might the great soul of Caesar have been full; and yet that which +poured in as much or more was to behold that execrable race of the +Claudii, having hunted and sucked his blood, with the thirst of tigers, +to be rewarded with the Roman Empire, and remain in full possession +of that famous patrimony: a spectacle to pollute the light of heaven! +Nevertheless, as if Caesar had not yet enough, his Phoeban majesty +caused to be introduced on the other side of the theatre, the most +illustrious and happy prince Andrea Doria, with his dear posterity, +embraced by the soft and constant arms of the city of Genoa, into whose +bosom, ever fruitful in her gratitude, he had dropped her fair liberty +like the dew of heaven, which, when the Roman tyrant beheld, and how +much more fresh that laurel was worn with a firm root in the hearts of +the people than that which he had torn off, he fell into such a horrid +distortion of limbs and countenance, that the senators, who had thought +themselves steel and flint at such an object, having hitherto stood +in their reverend snow-like thawing Alps, now covered their faces with +their large sleeves." + +"My lords," said the Archon, rising, "witty Philadelphus has given us +grave admonition in dreadful tragedy. Discite justitiam moniti, et non +temnere divos. Great and glorious Caesar the highest character of flesh, +yet could not rule but by that part of man which is the beast; but a +commonwealth is a monarchy; to her God is king, inasmuch as reason, his +dictate, is her sovereign power." Which said, he adjourned the Council. +And the model was soon after promulgated. Quod bonum, foelix, faustumque +sit huic reipublicoe. Agite quirites, censuere patres, jubeat populus. +(The sea roared, and the floods clapped their hands.) + + LIBERTAS + +The Proclamation of his Highness the Lord Archon of Oceana upon +Promulgation of the Model, + +"Whereas his Highness and the Council, in the framing of the model +promulgated, have not had any private interest or ambition but the fear +of God and the good of this people before their eyes; and it remains +their desire that this great work may be carried on accordingly. This +present greeting is to inform the good people of this land, that as the +Council of Prytans sat during the framing of the model, to receive from +time to time such propositions as should be offered by any wise-hearted +or public-spirited man, toward the institution of a well-ordered +commonwealth, so the said Council is to sit as formerly in the great +hall of the Pantheon during promulgation (which is to continue for +the space of three months) to receive, weigh, and, as there shall be +occasion, transmit to the Council of Legislators, all such objections +as shall be made against the said model, whether in the whole or in any +part. Wherefore that nothing be done rashly or without the consent of +the people, such, of what party soever, with whom there may remain any +doubts or difficulties, are desired with all convenient speed to address +themselves to the said prytans; where, if such objections, doubts, or +difficulties receive solution to the satisfaction of the auditory, +they shall have public thanks, but if the said objections, doubts, or +difficulties receive no solution to the satisfaction of the auditory, +then the model promulgated shall be reviewed, and the party that was the +occasion of the review, shall receive public thanks, together with +the best horse in his Highness's stable, and be one of the Council of +Legislators. And so God have you in his keeping." + +I should now write the same Council of the Prytans, but for two reasons: +the one, that having had but a small time for that which is already +done, I am over-labored; the other, that there may be new objections. +Wherefore, if my reader has any such as to the model, I entreat him to +address himself by way of oration, as it were, to the prytans, that +when this rough draught comes to be a work, his speech being faithfully +inserted in this place, may give or receive correction to amendment; for +what is written will be weighed. But conversation, in these days, is a +game at which they are best provided that have light gold; it is like +the sport of women that make flowers of straws, which must be stuck +up but may not be touched. Nor, which is worse, is this the fault of +conversation only: but to the examiner I say if to invent method and +teach an art be all one, let him show that this method is not truly +invented, or this art is faithfully taught. + +I cannot conclude a circle (and such is this commonwealth) without +turning the end into the beginning. The time of promulgation being +expired, the surveyors were sent down, who having in due season made +report that their work was perfect, the orators followed, under the +administration of which officers and magistrates the commonwealth was +ratified and established by the whole body of the people, in their +parochial, hundred, and county assemblies. And the orators being, by +virtue of their scrolls or lots, members of their respective tribes, +were elected each the first knight of the third list, or galaxy; +wherefore, having at their return assisted the Archon in putting the +Senate and the people or prerogative into motion, they abdicated the +magistracy both of orators and legislators. + + + + +PART IV. THE COROLLARY + +FOR the rest (says Plutarch, closing up the story of Lycurgus) when he +saw that his government had taken root, and was in the very plantation +strong enough to stand by itself, he conceived such a delight within +him, as God is described by Plato to have done when he had finished the +creation of the world, and saw his own orbs move below him: for in the +art of man (being the imitation of nature, which is the art of God) +there is nothing so like the first call of beautiful order out of chaos +and confusion, as the architecture of a well-ordered commonwealth. +Wherefore Lycurgus, seeing in effect that his orders were good, fell +into deep contemplation how he might render them, so far as could be +effected by human providence, unalterable and immortal. To which end he +assembled the people, and remonstrated to them: That for aught he could +perceive, their policy was already such, and so well established, as was +sufficient to entail upon them and theirs all that virtue and felicity +whereof human life is capable: nevertheless that there being another +thing of greater concern than all the rest, whereof he was not yet +provided to give them a perfect account, nor could till he had consulted +the oracle of Apollo, he desired that they would observe his laws +without any change or alteration whatsoever till his return from +Delphos; to which all the people cheerfully and unanimously engaged +themselves by promise, desiring him that he would make as much haste +as he could. But Lycurgus, before he went, began with the kings and the +senators, and thence taking the whole people in order, made them all +swear to that which they had promised, and then took his journey. Being +arrived at Delphos, he sacrificed to Apollo, and afterward inquired +if the policy which he had established was good and sufficient for a +virtuous and happy life? + +By the way, it has been a maxim with legislators not to give checks to +the present superstition, but to make the best use of it, as that which +is always the most powerful with the people; otherwise, though Plutarch, +being a priest, was interested in the cause, there is nothing plainer +than Cicero, in his book "De Divinatione" has made it, that there was +never any such thing as an oracle, except in the cunning of the priests. +But to be civil to the author, the god answered to Lycurgus that +his policy was exquisite, and that his city, holding to the strict +observation of his form of government, should attain to the height of +fame and glory. Which oracle Lycurgus causing to be written, failed not +of transmitting to his Lacedaemon. This done, that his citizens might +be forever inviolably bound by their oath, that they would alter nothing +till his return, he took so firm a resolution to die in the place, that +from thenceforward, receiving no manner of food, he soon after performed +it accordingly. Nor was he deceived in the consequence; for his city +became the first in glory and excellency of government in the whole +world. And so much for Lycurgus, according to Plutarch. + +My Lord Archon, when he beheld not only the rapture of motion, but +of joy and harmony, into which his spheres (without any manner of +obstruction or interfering, but as if it had been naturally) were +cast, conceived not less of exultation in his spirit; but saw no more +necessity or reason why he should administer an oath to the Senate and +the people that they would observe his institutions, than to a man +in perfect health and felicity of constitution that he would not kill +himself. Nevertheless whereas Christianity, though it forbids violent +hands, consists no less in self-denial than any other religion, he +resolved that all unreasonable desires should die upon the spot; to +which end that no manner of food might be left to ambition, he entered +into the Senate with a unanimous applause, and having spoken of his +government as Lycurgus did when he assembled the people, he abdicated +the magistracy of Archon. The Senate, as struck with astonishment, +continued silent, men upon so sudden an accident being altogether +unprovided of what to say; till the Archon withdrawing, and being almost +at the door, divers of the knights flew from their places, offering as +it were to lay violent hands on him, while he escaping, left the Senate +with the tears in their eyes, of children that had lost their father and +to rid himself of all further importunity, retired to a country house of +his, being remote, and very private, insomuch that no man could tell for +some time what was become of him. + +Thus the law-maker happened to be the first object and reflection of the +law made; for as liberty of all things is the most welcome to a people, +so is there nothing more abhorrent from their nature than ingratitude. +We, accusing the Roman people of this crime against some of their +greatest benefactors, as Camillus, heap mistake upon mistake; for being +not so competent judges of what belongs to liberty as they were, we take +upon us to be more competent judges of virtue. And whereas virtue, for +being a vulgar thing among them, was of no less rate than jewels are +with such as wear the most, we are selling this precious stone, which +we have ignorantly raked out of the Roman ruins, at such a rate as the +Switzers did that which they took in the baggage of Charles of Burgundy. +For that Camillus had stood more firm against the ruin of Rome than her +capitol, was acknowledged; but on the other side, that he stood as firm +for the patricians against the liberty of the people, was as plain; +wherefore he never wanted those of the people that would die at his foot +in the field, nor that would withstand him to his beard in the city. +An example in which they that think Camillus had wrong, neither do +themselves right, nor the people of Rome; who in this signify no less +than that they had a scorn of slavery beyond the fear of ruin, which is +the height of magnanimity. + +The like might be shown by other examples objected against this and +other popular governments, as in the banishment of Aristides the Just +from Athens, by the ostracism, which, first, was no punishment, nor +ever understood for so much as a disparagement; but tended only to the +security of the commonwealth, through the removal of a citizen (whose +riches or power with a party was suspected) out of harm's way for the +space of ten years, neither to the diminution of his estate or +honor. And next, though the virtue of Aristides might in itself be +unquestioned, yet for him under the name of the Just to become universal +umpire of the people in all cases, even to the neglect of the legal ways +and orders of the commonwealth, approached so much to the prince, that +the Athenians, doing Aristides no wrong, did their government no more +than right in removing him; which therefore is not so probable to have +come to pass, as Plutarch presumes, through the envy of Themistocles, +seeing Aristides was far more popular than Themistocles, who soon after +took the same walk upon a worse occasion. Wherefore as Machiavel, +for anything since alleged, has irrefragably proved that popular +governments are of all others the least ungrateful, so the obscurity, +I say, into which my Lord Archon had now withdrawn himself caused a +universal sadness and clouds in the minds of men upon the glory of his +rising commonwealth. + +Much had been ventilated in private discourse, and the people (for +the nation was yet divided into parties that had not lost their +animosities), being troubled, bent their eyes upon the Senate, +when after some time spent in devotion, and the solemn action of +thanksgiving, his Excellency Navarchus de Paralo in the tribe of Dorean, +lord strategus of Oceana (though in a new commonwealth a very prudent +magistrate) proposed his part or opinion in such a manner to the Council +of State, that, passing the ballot of the same with great unanimity +and applause, it was introduced into the Senate, where it passed with +greater. Wherefore the decree being forthwith printed and published, +copies were returned by the secretaries to the phylarchs (which is the +manner of promulgation) and the commissioners of the seal, that is +to say, the Right Honorable Phosphorus de Auge in the tribe of Eudia, +Dolabella d'Enyo in the tribe of Turmae, and Linceus de Stella in the +tribe of Nubia, being elected proposers pro tempore, bespoke of the +tribunes a muster of the people to be held that day six weeks, which was +the time allowed for promulgation at the halo. + +The satisfaction which the people throughout the tribes received upon +promulgation of the decree, loaded the carriers with weekly letters +between friend and friend, whether magistrates or private persons. But +the day for proposition being come, and the prerogative upon the place +appointed in discipline, Sanguine de Ringwood in the tribe of Saltum, +captain of the Phoenix, marched by order of the tribunes with his troop +to the piazza of the Pantheon, where his trumpets, entering into the +great hall, by their blazon gave notice of his arrival; at which the +sergeant of the house came down, and returning, in formed the proposers, +who descending, were received at the foot of the stairs by the captain, +and attended to the coaches of state, with which Calcar de Gilvo in +the tribe of Phalera, master of the horse, and the ballotins upon their +great horses, stood waiting at the gate. + +The proposers being in their coaches, the train for the pomp, the same +that is used at the reception of ambassadors, proceeded in this order. +In the front marched the troop with the cornet in the van and the +captain in the rear; next the troop came the twenty messengers or +trumpets, the ballotins upon the curvet with their usher in the van, +and the master of the horse in the rear; next the ballotins, Bronchus de +Rauco, in the tribe of Bestia, king of the heralds, with his fraternity +in their coats-of-arms, and next to Sir Bronchus, Boristhenes de +Holiwater in the tribe of Ave, master of the ceremonies; the mace and +the seal of the chancery went immediately before the coaches, and +on either side, the doorkeepers or guard of the Senate, with their +pole-axes, accompanied with some 300 or 400 footmen belonging to the +knights or senators, the trumpeters, ballotins, guards, postilions, +coachmen and footmen, being very gallant in the liveries of the +commonwealth, but all, except the ballotins, without hats, in lieu +whereof they wore black velvet calots, being pointed with a little peak +at the forehead. After the proposers came a long file of coaches full of +such gentlemen as use to grace the commonwealth upon the like occasions. +In this posture they moved slowly through the streets (affording, in the +gravity of the pomp and the welcomeness of the end, a most reverend and +acceptable prospect to the people all the way from the Pantheon, +being about half a mile) and arrived at the halo, where they found the +prerogative in a close body environed with scaffolds that were covered +with spectators. The tribunes received the proposers, and conducted them +into a seat placed in the front of the tribe, like a pulpit, but that it +was of some length, and well adorned by the heralds with all manner of +birds and beasts, except that they were ill-painted, and never a one of +his natural color. The tribunes were placed at a table that stood below +the long seat, those of the horse in the middle, and those of the foot +at either end, with each of them a bowl or basin before him, that on the +right hand being white, and the other green: in the middle of the table +stood a third, which was red. And the housekeepers of the pavilion, who +had already delivered a proportion of linen balls or pellets to +every one of the tribe, now presented boxes to the ballotins. But the +proposers as they entered the gallery, or long seat, having put off +their hats by way of salutation, were answered by the people with a +shout; whereupon the younger commissioners seated themselves at either +end; and the first, standing in the middle, spoke after this manner: + +"MY LORDS, THE PEOPLE OF OCEANA: + +"While I find in myself what a felicity it is to salute you by this +name, and in every face, anointed as it were with the oil of gladness, +a full and sufficient testimony of the like sense, to go about to feast +you with words, who are already filled with that food of the mind which, +being of pleasing and wholesome digestion, takes in the definition of +true joy, were a needless enterprise. I shall rather put you in mind +of that thankfulness which is due, than puff you up with anything that +might seem vain. Is it from the arms of flesh that we derive these +blessings? Behold the Commonwealth of Rome falling upon her own +victorious sword. Or is it from our own wisdom, whose counsels had +brought it even to that pass, that we began to repent ourselves of +victory? Far be it from us, my lords, to sacrifice to our own nets, +which we ourselves have so narrowly escaped! Let us rather lay our +mouths in the dust, and look up (as was taught the other day when we +were better instructed in this lesson) to the hills with our gratitude. +Nevertheless, seeing we read how God upon the neglect of his prophets +has been provoked to wrath, it must needs follow that he expects +honor should be given to them by whom he has chosen to work as his +instruments. For which cause, nothing doubting of my warrant, I shall +proceed to that which more particularly concerns the present occasion, +the discovery of my Lord Archon's virtues and merit, to be ever placed +by this nation in their true meridian. + +"My lords, I am not upon a subject which persuades me to balk, but +necessitates me to seek out the greatest examples. To begin with +Alexander, erecting trophies common to his sword and the pestilence: to +what good of mankind did he infect the air with his heap of carcasses? +The sword of war, if it be any otherwise used than as the sword of +magistracy, for the fear and punishment of those that do evil, is as +guilty in the sight of God as the sword of a murderer; nay more, for if +the blood of Abel, of one innocent man, cried in the ears of the Lord +for vengeance, what shall the blood of an innocent nation? Of this kind +of empire, the throne of ambition, and the quarry of a mighty hunter, it +has been truly said that it is but a great robbery. But if Alexander +had restored the liberty of Greece, and propagated it to mankind, he had +done like my Lord Archon, and might have been truly called the Great. +Alexander cared not to steal a victory that would be given; but my Lord +Archon has torn away a victory which had been stolen, while we went +tamely yielding up obedience to a nation reaping in our fields, +whose fields he has subjected to our empire, and nailed them with his +victorious sword to their native Caucasus. + +"Machiavel gives a handsome caution: 'Let no man,' says he, 'be +circumvented with the glory of Caesar, from the false reflection of +their pens, who through the longer continuance of his empire in the name +than in the family, changed their freedom for flattery. But if a man +would know truly what the Romans thought of Caesar, let them observe +what they said of Catiline.'" And yet by how much he who has perpetrated +some heinous crime is more execrable than he who did but attempt it, by +so much is Caesar more execrable than Catiline. On the contrary, let +him that would know what ancient and heroic times, what the Greeks and +Romans would both have thought and said of my Lord Archon, observe what +they thought and said of Solon, Lycurgus, Brutus, and Publicola. And yet +by how much his virtue, that is crowned with the perfection of his work, +is beyond theirs, who were either inferior in their aim, or in their +performance; by so much is my Lord Archon to be preferred before Solon, +Lycurgus, Brutus, and Publicola. + +"Nor will we shun the most illustrious example of Scipio: this +hero, though never so little less, yet was he not the founder of a +commonwealth; and for the rest, allowing his virtue to have been of the +most untainted ray in what did it outshine this of my Lord Archon? But +if dazzling the eyes of the magistrates it overawed liberty, Rome might +be allowed some excuse that she did not like it, and I, if I admit not +of this comparison: for where is my Lord Archon? Is there a genius, how +free soever, which in his presence would not find itself to be under +power? He is shrunk into clouds, he seeks obscurity in a nation that +sees by his light. He is impatient of his own glory, lest it should +stand between you and your liberty." + +Liberty! What is even that, if we may not be grateful? And if we may, we +have none: for who has anything that he does not owe? My lords, there be +some hard conditions of virtue: if this debt were exacted, it were not +due; whereas being cancelled, we are all entered into bonds. On the +other side, if we make such a payment as will not stand with a free +people, we do not enrich my Lord Archon, but rob him of his whole estate +immense glory. + +"These particulars had in due deliberation and mature debate, according +to the order of this commonwealth, it is proposed by authority of the +Senate, to you my lords the people of Oceana: + +"I. That the dignity and office of Archon, or protector of the +commonwealth of Oceana, be and are hereby conferred, by the Senate +and the people of Oceana, upon the most illustrious Prince and sole +legislator of this commonwealth, Olphaus Megaletor, pater patrioe, whom +God preserve, for the term of his natural life, yet remaining of the +ancient. + +"II. That L350,000 per annum revenue, be estated upon the said +illustrious Prince, or Lord Archon, for the said term, and to the proper +and peculiar use of his Highness. + +"III. That the Lord Archon have the reception of all foreign ambassadors, +by and with the Council of State, according to the orders of this +commonwealth. + +"IV. That the Lord Archon have a standing army of 12,000 defrayed upon a +monthly tax, during the term of three years, for the protection of this +commonwealth against dissenting parties, to be governed, directed, and +commanded by and with the advice of the Council of War, according to the +orders of this commonwealth. + +"V. That this commonwealth make no distinction of persons or parties, +but every man being elected and sworn, according to the orders of the +same, be equally capable of magistracy, or not elected, be equally +capable of liberty, and the enjoyment of his estate free from all other +than common taxes. + +"VI. That a man putting a distinction upon himself, refusing oath upon +election, or declaring himself of a party not conformable to the civil +government, may within any time of his the three years' standing of +the army transport himself and his estate, without molestation or +impediment, into any other nation. + +"VII. That in case there remains any distinction of parties not +conforming to the civil government of this commonwealth, after the +three years of the standing army being expired, and the commonwealth +be thereby forced to prolong the term of the said army, the pay from +henceforth of the said army be levied upon the estates of such parties +so remaining unconformable to the civil government." + +The proposer having ended his oration, the trumpets sounded; and the +tribunes of the horse being mounted to view the ballot, caused the tribe +(which thronging up to the speech, came almost round the gallery) +to retreat about twenty paces, when Linceus de Stella, receiving the +propositions, repaired with Bronchus de Rauco the herald, to a little +scaffold erected in the middle of the tribe, where he seated himself, +the herald standing bare upon his right hand. The ballotins, having +their boxes ready, stood before the gallery, and at the command of the +tribunes marched, one to every troop on horseback, and one to every +company on foot, each of them being followed by other children that bore +red boxes: now this is putting the question whether the question should +be put. And the suffrage being very suddenly returned to the tribunes at +the table, and numbered in the view of the proposers, the votes were all +in the affirmative, whereupon the red or doubtful boxes were laid aside, +it appearing that the tribe, whether for the negative or affirmative, +Was clear in the matter. Wherefore the herald began from the scaffold +in the middle of the tribe, to pronounce the first proposition, and the +ballotins marching with the negative or affirmative only, Bronchus, with +his voice like thunder, continued to repeat the proposition over and +over again, so long as it was in balloting. The like was done for every +clause, till the ballot was finished, and the tribunes assembling, had +signed the points, that is to say, the number of every suffrage, as it +was taken by the secretary upon the tale of the tribunes, and in the +sight of the proposers; for this may not be omitted: it is the pulse +of the people. Now whereas it appertains to the tribunes to report the +suffrage of the people to the Senate, they cast the lot for this office +with three silver balls and one gold one; and it fell upon the Right +Worshipful Argus de Crookhorn, in the tribe of Pascua, first tribune of +the foot. Argus, being a good sufficient man in his own country, was +yet of the mind that he should make but a bad spokesman, and therefore +became something blank at his luck, till his colleagues persuaded him +that it was no such great matter, if he could but read, having his paper +before him. The proposers, taking coach, received a volley upon the +field, and returned in the same order, save that, being accompanied with +the tribunes, they were also attended by the whole prerogative to the +piazza of the Pantheon, where, with another volley, they took their +leaves. Argus, who had not thought upon his wife and children all the +way, went very gravely up: and everyone being seated, the Senate by +their silence seemed to call for the report, which Argus, standing up, +delivered in this wise: + +"RIGHT HONORABLE LORDS AND FATHERS ASSEMBLED IN PARLIAMENT: + +"So it is, that it has fallen to my lot to report to your excellencies +in the votes of the people, taken upon the 3d instant, in the first year +of this commonwealth, at the halo; the Right Honorable Phosphorus de +Auge in the tribe of Eudia, Dolabella d'Enyo in the tribe of Turmae, +and Linceus de Stella in the tribe of Nubia, lords commissioners of the +great seal of Oceana, and proposers pro temporibus, together with my +brethren the tribunes, and myself being present. Wherefore these are to +certify to your fatherhoods, that the said votes of the people were as +follows, that is to say: + +To the first proposition, nemine contradicente; + +To the second, nemine contradicente; + +To the third, the like; + +To the fourth, 211, above half; + +To the fifth, 201, above half; + +To the sixth, 150, above half, in the affirmative; + +To the seventh, nemine contradicente again, and so forth. + +"My Lords, it is a language that is out of my prayers, and if I be out +at it, no harm-- + +"But as concerning my Lord Archon (as I was saying) these are to signify +to you the true-heartedness and goodwill which are in the people, seeing +by joining with you, as one man, they confess that all they have to give +is too little for his highness. For truly fathers, if he who is able to +do harm, and does none, may well be called honest; what shall we say to +my Lord Archon's highness, who having had it in his power to have done +us the greatest mischief that ever befell a poor nation, so willing +to trust such as they thought well of, has done us so much good, as +we should never have known how to do ourselves? Which was so sweetly +delivered by my Lord Chancellor Phosphorus to the people, that I dare +say there was never a one of them could forbear to do as I do-and, it +please your fatherhoods, they be tears of joy. Aye, my Lord Archon shall +walk the streets (if it be for his ease I mean) with a switch, while the +people run after him and pray for him; he shall not wet his foot; they +will strew flowers in his way; he shall sit higher in their hearts, +and in the judgment of all good men, than the kings that go upstairs +to their seats; and one of these had as good pull two or three of his +fellows out of their great chairs as wrong him or meddle with him; he +has two or three hundred thousand men, that when you say the word, shall +sell themselves to their shirts for him, and die at his foot. His pillow +is of down, and his grave shall be as soft, over which they that are +alive shall wring their hands. And to come to your fatherhoods, most +truly so called, as being the loving parents of the people, truly you +do not know what a feeling they have of your kindness, seeing you are so +bound up, that if there comes any harm, they may thank themselves. And, +alas! poor souls, they see that they are given to be of so many minds, +that though they always mean well, yet if there comes any good, they +may thank them that teach them better. Wherefore there was never such a +thing as this invented, they do verily believe that it is no other than +the same which they always had in their very heads, if they could +have but told how to bring it out. As now for a sample: my lords the +proposers had no sooner said your minds, than they found it to be that +which heart could wish. And your fatherhoods may comfort yourselves, +that there is not a people in the world more willing to learn what is +for their own good, nor more apt to see it, when you have showed it +them. Wherefore they do love you as they do their own selves; honor you +as fathers; resolve to give you as it were obedience forever, and so +thanking you for your most good and excellent laws, they do pray for +you as the very worthies of the land, right honorable lords and fathers +assembled in Parliament." + +Argus came off beyond his own expectation; for thinking right, and +speaking as he thought, it was apparent by the house and the thanks they +gave him, that they esteemed him to be absolutely of the best sort of +orators; upon which having a mind that till then misgave him, he became +very crounse, and much delighted with that which might go down the next +week in print to his wife and neighbors. Livy makes the Roman tribunes +to speak in the same style with the consuls, which could not be, and +therefore for aught in him to the contrary, Volero and Canuleius might +have spoken in no better style than Argus. However, they were not +created the first year of the commonwealth; and the tribunes of Oceana +are since become better orators than were needful. But the laws being +enacted, had the preamble annexed, and were delivered to Bronchus, who +loved nothing in the earth so much as to go staring and bellowing up +and down the town, like a stag in a forest, as he now did, with his +fraternity in their coats-of-arms, and I know not how many trumpets, +proclaiming the act of parliament; when, meeting my Lord Archon, whom +from a retreat that was without affectation, as being for devotion only +and to implore a blessing by prayer and fasting upon his labors, now +newly arrived in town, the herald of the tribe of Bestia set up his +throat, and having chanted out his lesson, passed as haughtily by him as +if his own had been the better office, which in this place was very well +taken, though Bronchus for his high mind happened afterward upon some +disasters, too long to tell, that spoiled much of his embroidery. + +My Lord Archon's arrival being known, the signory, accompanied by the +tribunes, repaired to him, with the news he had already heard by the +herald, to which my lord strategus added that his highness could not +doubt upon the demonstrations given, but the minds of men were firm in +the opinion that he could be no seeker of himself in the way of earthly +pomp and glory, and that the gratitude of the Senate and the people +could not therefore be understood to have any such reflection upon him. +But so it was, that in regard of dangers abroad, and parties at home, +they durst not trust themselves without a standing army, nor a standing +army in any man's hands but those of his highness. + +The Archon made answer, that he ever expected this would be the sense +of the Senate and the people; and this being their sense, he should have +been sorry they had made choice of any other than himself for a standing +general; first, because it could not have been more to their own safety, +and secondly because so long as they should have need of a standing +army, 'his work was, not done, that he would not dispute against +the judgment of the Senate and the people, nor ought that to be. +Nevertheless, he made little doubt but experience would show every party +their own interest in this government, and that better improved +than they could expect from any other; that men's animosities should +overbalance their interest for any time was impossible, that humor could +never be lasting, nor through the constitution of the government of any +effect at the first charge. For supposing the worst, and that the people +had chosen no other into the Senate and the prerogative than royalists, +a matter of 1,400 men must have taken their oaths at their election, +with an intention to go quite contrary not only to their oaths so taken, +but to their own interest; for being estated in the sovereign power, +they must have decreed it from themselves (such an example for which +there was never any experience, nor can there be any reason), or holding +it, it must have done in their hands as well every wit as in any other. +Furthermore, they must have removed the government from a foundation +that apparently would hold, to set it upon another which apparently +would not hold; which things if they could not come to pass, the Senate +and the people consisting wholly of royalists, much less by a parcel of +them elected. But if the fear of the Senate and of the people derived +from a party without, such a one as would not be elected, nor engage +themselves to the commonwealth by an oath; this again must be so large, +as would go quite contrary to their own interest, they being as free and +as fully estated in their liberty as any other, or so narrow that they +could do no hurt, while the people being in arms, and at the beck of the +strategus, every tribe would at any time make a better army than such +a party; and there being no parties at home, fears from abroad would +vanish. But seeing it was otherwise determined by the Senate and the +people, the best course was to take that which they held the safest, in +which, with his humble thanks for their great bounty, he was resolved to +serve them with all duty and obedience. + +A very short time after the royalists, now equal citizens, made good +the Archon's judgment, there being no other that found anything near so +great a sweet in the government. For he who has not been acquainted with +affliction, says Seneca, knows but half the things of this world. + +Moreover they saw plainly, that to restore the ancient government they +must cast up their estates into the hands of 300 men; wherefore in case +the Senate and the prerogative, consisting of 1,300 men, had been all +royalists, there must of necessity have been, and be forever, 1,000 +against this or any such vote. But the Senate, being informed by the +signory that the Archon had accepted of his dignity and office, caused +a third chair to be set for his Highness, between those of the strategus +and the orator in the house, the like at every council; to which he +repaired, not of necessity, but at his pleasure, being the best, and as +Argus not vainly said, the greatest prince in the world; for in the +pomp of his court he was not inferior to any, and in the field he was +followed with a force that was formidable to all. Nor was there a cause +in the nature of this constitution to put him to the charge of guards, +to spoil his stomach or his sleep: insomuch, as being handsomely +disputed by the wits of the academy, whether my Lord Archon, if he had +been ambitious, could have made himself so great, it was carried +clear in the negative; not only for the reasons drawn from the present +balance, which was popular, but putting the case the balance had been +monarchical. For there be some nations, whereof this is one, that will +bear a prince in a commonwealth far higher than it is possible for them +to bear a monarch. Spain looked upon the Prince of Orange as her most +formidable enemy; but if ever there be a monarch in Holland, he will +be the Spaniard's best friend. For whereas a prince in a commonwealth +derives his greatness from the root of the people, a monarch derives his +from one of those balances which nip them in the root; by which means +the Low Countries under a monarch were poor and inconsiderable, but in +bearing a prince could grow to a miraculous height, and give the +glory of his actions by far the upper hand of the greatest king in +Christendom. There are kings in Europe, to whom a king of Oceana would +be put a petit companion. But the Prince of this commonwealth is the +terror and judge of them all. + +That which my Lord Archon now minded most was the agrarian, upon which +debate he incessantly thrust the Senate and the Council of State, to the +end it might be planted upon some firm root, as the main point and basis +of perpetuity to the commonwealth. + +And these are some of the most remarkable passages that happened in the +first year of this government. About the latter end of the second, the +army was disbanded, but the taxes continued at L30,000 a month, for +three years and a half. By which means a piece of artillery was planted, +and a portion of land to the value of L50 a year purchased for the +maintenance of the games, and of the prize arms forever, in each +hundred. + +With the eleventh year of the commonwealth, the term of the excise, +allotted for the maintenance of the Senate and the people and for the +raising of a public revenue, expired. By which time the Exchequer, over +and above the annual salaries, amounting to L300,000 accumulating every +year out of L1,000,000 income, L700,000 in banco, brought it with a +product of the sum, rising to about L8,000,000 in the whole: whereby at +several times they had purchased to the Senate and the people L400,000 +per annum solid revenue; which, besides the lands held in Panopea, +together with the perquisites of either province, was held sufficient +for a public revenue. Nevertheless, taxes being now wholly taken off, +the excise, of no great burden (and many specious advantages not vainly +proposed in the heightening of the public revenue), was very cheerfully +established by the Senate and the people, for the term of ten years +longer, and the same course being taken, the public revenue was found in +the one-and-twentieth year of the commonwealth to be worth L1,000,000 +in good land. Whereupon the excise was so abolished for the present, +as withal resolved to be the best, the most fruitful and easy way of +raising taxes, according to future exigencies. + +But the revenue being now such as was able to be a yearly purchaser, +gave a jealousy that by this means the balance of the commonwealth, +consisting in private fortunes, might be eaten out, whence this year is +famous for that law whereby the Senate and the people, forbidding any +further purchase of lands to the public within the dominions of Oceana +and the adjacent provinces, put the agrarian upon the commonwealth +herself. These increases are things which men addicted to monarchy +deride as impossible, whereby they unwarily urge a strong argument +against that which they would defend. For having their eyes fixed upon +the pomp and expense, by which not only every child of a king, being +a prince, exhausts his father's coffers, but favorites and servile +spirits, devoted to the flattery of those princes, grow insolent and +profuse, returning a fit gratitude to their masters, whom, while they +hold it honorable to deceive, they suck and keep eternally poor: +it follows that they do not see how it should be possible for a +commonwealth to clothe herself in purple, and thrive so strangely upon +that which would make a prince's hair grow through his hood, and not +afford him bread. As if it were a miracle that a careless and prodigal +man should bring L10,000 a year to nothing, or that an industrious and +frugal man brings a little to L10,000 a year. But the fruit of one man's +industry and frugality can never be like that of a commonwealth; first, +because the greatness of the increase follows the greatness of the stock +or principal; and, secondly, because a frugal father is for the most +part succeeded by a lavish son; whereas a commonwealth is her own heir. + +This year a part was proposed by the Right Honorable Aureus de Woolsack +in the tribe of Pecus, first commissioner of the Treasury, to the +Council of State, which soon after passed the ballot of the Senate +and the people, by which the lands of the public revenue, amounting +to L1,000,000, were equally divided into L5,000 lots, entered by their +names and parcels into a lot-book preserved in the Exchequer. And if +any orphan, being a maid, should cast her estate into the Exchequer for +L1,400, the Treasury was bound by the law to pay her quarterly L200 a +year, free from taxes, for her life, and to assign her a lot for her +security; if she married, her husband was neither to take out the +principal without her consent (acknowledged by herself to one of the +commissioners of the Treasury, who, according as he found it to be free, +or forced, was to allow or disallow of it), nor any other way engage +it than to her proper use. But if the principal were taken out, the +Treasury was not bound to repay any more of it than L1,000, nor might +that be repaid at any time, save within the first year of her marriage: +the like was to be done by a half or quarter lot respectively. + +This was found to be a great charity to the weaker sex, and as some say, +who are more skilful in the like affairs than myself, of good profit to +the commonwealth. + +Now began the native spleen of Oceana to be much purged, and men not to +affect sullenness and pedantism. The elders could remember that they had +been youths. Wit and gallantry were so far from being thought crimes in +themselves, that care was taken to preserve their innocence. For which +cause it was proposed to the Council for Religion by the Right Honorable +Cadiscus de Clero, in the tribe of Stamnum, first censor, that such +women as, living in gallantry and view about the town, were of evil +fame, and could not show that they were maintained by their own estates +or industry, or such as, having estates of their own, were yet wasteful +in 'their way of life, and of ill-example to others, should be obnoxious +to the animadversion of the Council of Religion, or of the censors: in +which the proceeding should be after this manner. Notice should be first +given of the scandal to the party offending, in private: if there were +no amendment within the space of six months, she should be summoned +and rebuked before the said Council or censors; and, if after other six +months it were found that neither this availed, she should be censored +not to appear at any public meetings, games, or recreations, upon +penalty of being taken up by the doorkeepers or guards of the Senate, +and by them to be detained, till for every such offence L5 were duly +paid for her enlargement. + +Furthermore, if any common strumpet should be found or any scurrility +or profaneness represented at either of the theatres, the prelates for +every such offence should be fined L20 by the said Council, and the +poet, for every such offence on his part, should be whipped. This law +relates to another, which was also enacted the same year upon this +occasion. + +The youth and wits of the Academy having put the business so home in the +defence of comedies that the provosts had nothing but the consequences +provided against by the foregoing law to object, prevailed so far that +two of the provosts of the Council of State joined in a proposition, +which after much ado came to a law, whereby L100,000 was allotted for +the building of two theatres on each side of the piazza of the halo: and +two annual magistrates called prelates, chosen out of the knights, +were added to the tropic, the one called the prelate of the buskin, +for inspection of the tragic scene called Melpomene; and the other the +prelate of the sock, for the comic called Thalia, which magistrates had +each L500 a year allowed out of the profits of the theatres; the rest, +except L800 a year to four poets, payable into the Exchequer. A poet +laureate created in one of these theatres by the strategus, receives +a wreath of L500 in gold, paid out of the said profits. But no man +is capable of this creation that had not two parts in three of the +suffrages at the Academy, assembled after six weeks' warning and upon +that occasion. + +These things among us are sure enough to be censured, but not know the +nature of a commonwealth; that they are free, and yet to curb the genius +in a lawful recreation to which they are naturally is to tell a tale of +a tub. I have heard the Protestant ministers in France, by men that +were wise and of their own profession, much blamed in that they forbade +dancing, a recreation to which the genius of that air is so inclining +that they lost many who would not lose that: nor do they less than blame +the former determination of rashness, who now gently connive at that +which they had so roughly forbidden. These sports in Oceana are so +governed, that they are pleasing for private diversion, and profitable +to the public: for the theatres soon defrayed their own charge, and +now bring in a good revenue. All this is so far from the detriment +of virtue, that it is to the improvement of it, seeing women that +heretofore made havoc of their honor that they might have their +pleasures are now incapable of their pleasures if they lose their honor. + +About the one-and-fortieth year of the commonwealth, the censors, +according to their annual custom, reported the pillar of Nilus, by +which it was found that the people were increased very near one-third. +Whereupon the Council of War was appointed by the Senate to bring in a +state of war, and the treasurers the state of the Treasury. The state of +war, or the pay and charge of an army, was soon after exhibited by the +Council in this account: + + THE FIELD PAY OF A PARLIAMENTARY ARMY + + The lord strategus, marching L10,000 + Polemarches-- + + General of the horse... 2,000 + + Lieutenant-general... 2,000 + + General of the artillery.... 1,000 + + Commissary-general... 1,000 + + Major-general.... 1,000 + + Quartermaster-general... 1,000 + Two adjutants to the major-general... 1,000 + Forty colonels..... 40,000 + 100 captains of horse, at L500 a man... 50,000 + 300 captains of foot, at L300 a man... 90,000 + 100 cornets, at L100 a man.... 10,000 + 300 ensigns, at L50 a man.... 15,000 + 800 Quartermasters, Sergeants, Trumpeters, + + Drummers, 20,000 + 10,000 horse, at 2s 6d per day each... 470,000 + 30,000 foot, at 1s per day each.... 500,000 + Chirurgeons... 400 + 40,000 auxiliaries, amounting to within a + + little as much... 1,100,000 + The charge of mounting 20,000 horse.. 300,000 + The train of artillery, holding a 3d to + + the whole 900,000 + + Sum total L3,514,400 + + Arms and ammunition are not reckoned, as those which are + furnished out of the store or arsenal of Emporium: nor wastage, + as that which goes upon the account of the fleet, maintained by + the customs; which customs, through the care of the Council for + Trade and growth of traffic, were long since improved to about + L1,000,000 revenue. The house being thus informed of a state of + war, the commissioners brought in-- + + THE STATE OF THE TREASURY THIS PRESENT YEAR, BEING THE + ONE-AND-FORTIETH OF THE COMMONWEALTH + + Received from the one-and-twentieth of the commonwealth: + + By L700,000 a year in bank, with the product of the sum + + rising.............. + L16,000,000 + + Expended from the one-and-twentieth of this commonwealth: + + Imprimis, for the addition of arms for 100,000 men to + + the arsenal, or tower of Emporium......... + L1,000,000 + For the storing of the same with artillery... + 300,000 + For the storing of the same with ammunition... + 200,000 + For beautifying the cities, parks, gardens, public walks, + + and places for recreation of Emporium and Hiera, with + + public buildings, aqueducts, statues, + + and fountains, etc...... + 1,500,000 + Extraordinary embassies... + 150,000 + + Sum........ + L3,150,000 + + Remaining in the Treasury, the salaries of the + + Exchequer being defalked....... + L12,000,000 + +By comparison of which accounts if a war with an army of 80,000 men were +to be made by the penny, yet was the commonwealth able to maintain such +a one above three years without levying a tax. But it is against all +experience, sense, and reason that such an army should not be soon +broken, or make a great progress; in either of which cases, the charge +ceases; or rather if a right course be taken in the latter, profit comes +in: for the Romans had no other considerable way but victory whereby to +fill their treasury, which nevertheless was seldom empty. Alexander +did not consult his purse upon his design for Persia: it is observed by +Machiavel, that Livy, arguing what the event in reason must have been +had that King invaded Rome, and diligently measuring what on each +side was necessary to such a war, never speaks a word of money. No +man imagines that the Gauls, Goths, Vandals, Huns, Lombards, Saxons, +Normans, made their inroads or conquests by the strength of the purse; +and if it be thought enough, according to the dialect of our age, to say +in answer to these things that those times are past and gone: what money +did the late Gustavus, the most victorious of modern princes, bring out +of Sweden with him into Germany? An army that goes upon a golden leg +will be as lame as if it were a wooden one; but proper forces have +nerves and muscles in them, such for which, having L4,000,000 or +L5,000,000, a sum easy enough, with a revenue like this of Oceana, to be +had at any time in readiness, you need never, or very rarely, charge the +people with taxes. What influence the commonwealth by such arms has had +upon the world, I leave to historians, whose custom it has been of old +to be as diligent observers of foreign actions as careless of those +domestic revolutions which (less pleasant it may be, as not partaking +so much of the romance) are to statesmen of far greater profit; and this +fault, if it be not mine, is so much more frequent with modern writers, +as has caused me to undertake this work; on which to give my own +judgment, it is performed as much above the time I have been about it, +as below the dignity of the matter. + +But I cannot depart out of this country till I have taken leave of my +Lord Archon, a prince of immense felicity who having built as high with +his counsels as he digged deep with his sword, had now seen fifty years +measured with his own unerring orbs. + +Timoleon (such a hater of tyrants that, not able to persuade his brother +Timophanes to relinquish the tyranny of Corinth, he slew him) was +afterward elected by the people (the Sicilians groaning to them from +under the like burden) to be sent to their relief: whereupon Teleclides, +the man at that time of most authority in the Commonwealth of Corinth, +stood up, and giving an exhortation to Timoleon, how he should behave +himself in this expedition, told him that if he restored the Sicilians +to liberty, it would be acknowledged that he destroyed a tyrant; if +otherwise, he must expect to hear he had murdered a king. Timoleon, +taking his leave with a very small provision for so great a design, +pursued it with a courage not inferior to, and a felicity beyond, any +that had been known to that day in mortal flesh, having in the space +of eight years utterly rooted out of all Sicily those weeds of tyranny, +through the detestation whereof men fled in such abundance from their +native country that whole cities were left desolate, and brought it +to such a pass that others, through the fame of his virtues and the +excellency of the soil, flocked as fast from all quarters to it as to +the garden of the world: while he, being presented by the people of +Syracuse with his town-house and his country retreat, the sweetest +places in either, lived with his wife and children a most quiet, happy, +and holy life; for he attributed no part of his success to himself, but +all to the blessing and providence of the gods. As he passed his time +in this manner, admired and honored by mankind, Laphistius, an envious +demagogue, going to summon him upon some pretence or other to answer for +himself before the assembly, the people fell into such a mutiny as could +not be appeased but by Timoleon, who, understanding the matter, reproved +them, by repeating the pains and travel which he had gone through, to +no other end than that every man might have the free use of the laws. +Wherefore when Daemenetus, another demagogue, had brought the same +design about again, and blamed him impertinently to the people for +things which he did when he was general, Timoleon answered nothing, +but raising up his hands, gave the gods thanks for their return to his +frequent prayers, that he might but live to see the Syracusans so free, +that they could question whom they pleased. + +Not long after, being old, through some natural imperfection, he fell +blind; but the Syracusans by their perpetual visits held him, though he +could not see, their greatest object: if there arrived strangers, they +brought him to see this sight. Whatever came in debate at the assembly, +if it were of small consequence, they determined it themselves; but if +of importance, they always sent for Timoleon, who, being brought by his +servants in a chair, and set in the middle of the theatre, there ever +followed a great shout, after which some time was allowed for the +benedictions of the people; and then the matter proposed, when Timoleon +had spoken to it, was put to the suffrage; which given, his servants +bore him back in his chair, accompanied by the people clapping their +hands, and making all expressions of joy and applause, till, leaving him +at his house, they returned to the despatch of their business. And this +was the life of Timoleon, till he died of age, and dropped like a mature +fruit, while the eyes of the people were as the showers of autumn. + +The life and death of my Lord Archon (but that he had his senses to the +last, and that his character, as not the restorer, but the founder of a +commonwealth, was greater) are so exactly the same, that (seeing by men +wholly ignorant of antiquity I am accused of writing romance) I shall +repeat nothing: but tell you that this year the whole nation of Oceana, +even to the women and children, were in mourning, where so great or +sad a funeral pomp had never been seen or known. Some time after the +performance of the obsequies a Colossus, mounted on a brazen horse of +excellent fabric, was erected in the piazza of the Pantheon, engraved +with this inscription on the eastern side of the pedestal: + + HIS NAME + + IS AS + + PRECIOUS OINTMENT + + And on the wester with the following: + + GRATA PATRIA + + Piae et Perpetuae Memorie + + D.D. + + OLPHAUS MEGALETOR + + LORD ARCHON, AND SOLE LEGISLATOR + + OF + + OCEANA + + PATER PATRIAE + + Invincible in the Field The Greatest of Captains + Inviolable in his Faith The Best of Princes + Unfeigned in his Zeal The Happiest of Legislators + Immortal in his Fame The Most Sincere of Christians + + Who setting the Kingdoms of Earth at Liberty, + Took the Kingdom of the Heavens by Violence. + + Anno AEtat. suoe 116 + + Hujus Reipub. 50 + + + + +DESCRIPTION OF OCEANA + +OCEANA is saluted by the panegyrist after this manner: "O the most +blessed and fortunate of all countries, Oceana! how deservedly has +nature with the bounties of heaven and earth endued thee! Thy ever +fruitful womb not closed with ice nor dissolved by the raging star; +where Ceres and Bacchus are perpetual twins: thy woods are not the +harbor of devouring beasts, nor thy continual verdure the ambush of +serpents, but the food of innumerable herds and flocks presenting thee, +their shepherdess, with distended dugs or golden fleeces. The wings of +thy night involve thee not in the horror of darkness, but have still +some white feather; and thy day is (that for which we esteem life) the +longest." But this ecstasy of Pliny, as is observed by Bertius, seems +to allude as well to Marpesia and Panopea, now provinces of this +commonwealth, as to Oceana itself. + +To speak of the people in each of these countries. This of Oceana, for +so soft a one, is the most martial in the whole world. "Let States that +aim at greatness," says Verulamius, "take heed how their nobility and +gentlemen multiply too fast, for that makes the common subject grow to +be a peasant and base swain driven out of heart, and in effect but a +gentleman's laborer; just as you may see in coppice woods, if you leave +the staddels too thick, you shall never have clean underwood, but shrubs +and bushes; so in countries, if the gentlemen be too many, the commons +will be base; and you will bring it to that at last, that not the +hundreth poll will be fit for a helmet, specially as to the infantry, +which is the nerve of an army, and so there will be great population and +little strength. This of which I speak has been nowhere better seen than +by comparing of Oceana and France, whereof Oceana, though far less in +territory and population, has been nevertheless an overmatch, in regard +the middle people of Oceana make good solders, which the peasants in +France do not." In which words Verulamius, as Machiavel has done before +him, harps much upon a string which he has not perfectly tuned, and that +is, the balance of dominion or property, as it follows more plainly, in +his praise "of the profound and admirable device of Panurgus, King of +Oceana, in making farms and houses of husbandry of a standard; that is, +maintained with such a proportion of land to them as may breed a subject +to live in convenient plenty, and no servile condition, and to keep the +plough in the hands of the owners, and not mere hirelings. And thus, +indeed," says he, "you shall attain to Virgil's character which he gives +of ancient Italy." But the tillage, bringing up a good soldiery, brings +up a good commonwealth; which the author in the praise of Panurgus did +not mind, nor Panurgus in deserving that praise; for where the owner of +the plough comes to have the sword, too, he will use it in defence of +his own; whence it has happened that the people of Oceana, in proportion +to their property, have been always free. And the genius of this nation +has ever had some resemblance with that of ancient Italy, which was +wholly addicted to commonwealths, and where Rome came to make the +greatest account of her rustic tribes, and to call her consuls from the +plough; for in the way of parliaments, which was the government of this +realm, men of country lives have been still intrusted with the greatest +affairs, and the people have constantly had an aversion to the ways of +the court. Ambition, loving to be gay and to fawn, has been a gallantry +looked upon as having something in it of the livery; and husbandry, or +the country way of life, though of a grosser spinning, as the best stuff +of a commonwealth, according to Aristotle, such a one being the most +obstinate assertress of her liberty and the least subject to innovation +or turbulency. Wherefore till the foundations, as will be hereafter +shown, were removed, this people was observed to be the least subject +to shakings and turbulency of any; whereas commonwealths, upon which +the city life has had the stronger influence, as Athens, have seldom or +never been quiet, but at the best are found to have injured their own +business by overdoing it. Whence the urban tribes of Rome, consisting +of the Turba forensis, and libertines that had received their freedom by +manumission, were of no reputation in comparison of the rustics. It +is true that with Venice it may seem to be otherwise, in regard +the gentlemen (for so are all such called as have a right to that +government) are wholly addicted to the city life; but then the Turba +forensis, the secretaries, Cittadini, with the rest of the populace, +are wholly excluded. Otherwise a commonwealth consisting but of one city +would doubtless be stormy, in regard that ambition would be every man's +trade; but where it consists of a country, the plough in the hands of +the owner finds him a better calling, and produces the most innocent and +steady genius of a commonwealth, such as is that of Oceana. + +Marpesia, being the northern part of the same island, is the dry-nurse +of a populous and hardy nation, but where the staddels have been +formerly too thick, whence their courage answered not their hardiness, +except in the nobility, who govern much after the manner of Poland, but +that the King was not elective till the people received their liberty; +the yoke of the nobility being broken by the commonwealth of Oceana, +which in grateful return is thereby provided with an inexhaustible +magazine of auxiliaries. + +Panopea, the soft mother of a slothful and pusillanimous people, is a +neighbor island, anciently subjected by the arms of Oceana; since almost +depopulated for shaking the yoke, and at length replanted with a new +race. But, through what virtues of the soil or vice of the air soever it +be, they come still to degenerate. Wherefore seeing it is neither likely +to yield men fit for arms, nor necessary it should, it had been the +interest of Oceana so to have disposed of this province, being both rich +in the nature of the soil, and full of commodious ports for trade, that +it might have been ordered for the best in relation to her purse, which +in my opinion, if it had been thought upon in time, might have been best +done by planting it with Jews, allowing them their own rites and laws; +for that would have brought them suddenly from all parts of the world, +and in sufficient numbers. And though the Jews be now altogether for +merchandise, yet in the land of Canaan (except since their exile +from whence they have not been landlords) they were altogether for +agriculture; and there is no cause why a man should doubt, but having a +fruitful country and excellent ports, too, they would be good at both. +Panopea, well peopled, would be worth a matter of L4,000,000 dry-rents; +that is, besides the advantage of the agriculture and trade, which, +with a nation of that industry, come at least to as much more. Wherefore +Panopea, being farmed out to the Jews and their heirs forever, for the +pay of a provincial army to protect them during the term of seven years, +and for L2,000,000 annual revenue from that time forward, besides the +customs, which would pay the provincial army, would have been a bargain +of such advantage, both to them and this commonwealth, as is not to be +found otherwise by either. To receive the Jews after any other manner +into a commonwealth were to maim it; for they of all nations never +incorporate, but taking up the room of a limb, are of no use office to +the body, while they suck the nourishment which would sustain a natural +and useful member. + +If Panopea had been so disposed of, that knapsack, with the Marpesian +auxiliary, had been an inestimable treasure; the situation of these +countries being islands (as appears by Venice how advantageous such a +one is to the like government) seems to have been designed by God for +a commonwealth. And yet that, through the straitness of the place +and defect of proper arms, can be no more than a commonwealth for +preservation; whereas this, reduced to the like government, is a +commonwealth for increase, and upon the mightiest foundation that any +has been laid from the beginning of the world to this day. + + "Illam arcta capiens Neptunus compede stringit: + Hanc autem glaucis captus complectitur ulnis." + +The sea gives law to the growth of Venice, but the growth of Oceana +gives law to the sea. + +These countries, having been anciently distinct and hostile kingdoms, +came by Morpheus the Marpesian, who succeeded by hereditary right to the +crown of Oceana, not only to be joined under one head, but to be cast, +as it were by a charm, into that profound sleep, which, broken at length +by the trumpet of civil war, has produced those effects that have given +occasion to the preceding discourse, divided into four parts. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Commonwealth of Oceana, by James Harrington + +*** \ No newline at end of file