登陆注册
26488300000022

第22章

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 *******, 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.

同类推荐
  • 啁啾漫记

    啁啾漫记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说慈氏菩萨陀罗尼

    佛说慈氏菩萨陀罗尼

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 礼器

    礼器

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 言兵事书

    言兵事书

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Salammbo

    Salammbo

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 殿下离我远点

    殿下离我远点

    我心里一惊将他推开,他放开我的唇,附在我耳边说道:“吻我!”一个不受宠的丞相府庶女,被姐姐欺,父亲嫌,继母弃。“既然你不愿意娶我,又为何要在天下人面前将我带走,你到底想怎么样?”既然你无意,为何不离我远一点!
  • 愿婚不负我情深

    愿婚不负我情深

    他有旧爱,她有良人,一场联姻,将两个毫不相干的人联系在一起。前男友抢婚,媒体争相报道,他被扣下耻辱的绿帽,一时沦为笑柄。新婚之夜,他冷冷的警告:“顾灵犀,娶了你已经是我的底线,别妄想干涉我的生活。”婚后,他依旧和小三厮混,从来没有正眼看过她。直到奶奶病重,他被迫回家与她同床共枕。工作上他设计逼迫她辞职,生活上对她冷嘲热讽,甚至当着她的面和小三亲热。名存实亡的婚姻让她心如死灰。“和景翼岑离婚,嫁给我。”前男友的出现,让她灰暗的生活燃起了希望。当她终于有勇气挣脱婚姻的枷锁时,那个绝情冷酷的男人却突然将她狠狠的抵在墙角,“顾灵犀,没有我的允许,你休想离开我。”
  • 不是不念只是不见

    不是不念只是不见

    宋诗研究第一人——偃月公子,倾情写意宋诗里的最美时光。“浅笑盈然,顾盼流转,惟愿与君听风望月,看尽花开花落,赏潮起潮生。”唐诗以神韵意趣取胜,以形象丰满见长;宋诗则多有学问知识、议论说理,仔细咂摸,情韵悠长。每一阙诗词,都会说话;每一个文字,都有情感;每一个作者,都有故事。本书以此为出发点,领悟品读宋诗,写下自己对宋诗的体会和感受,启迪读者品诗不是刻意探寻事理,不是为了明辨是非,而是赏玩诗歌,感触万象,鲜活生命。在不知不觉之中,顿悟人生哲理。在诗文中寻找快乐,体验情意。
  • 西藏风俗记

    西藏风俗记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 天才萌宝:教授诱妻成瘾

    天才萌宝:教授诱妻成瘾

    余墨:乖啦,你儿子以后会好好上学的,只是这幼儿园太侮辱我的智商了,这些孩子老是哭我才受不了的,你可以考虑一下让我读小学。过几天。余生眯眼:你做了什么事,要遭报应?左青青趴在桌上,闭着眼,说:教了他一点人情世故……哦,还有……余生16岁车祸,忘了所有事情,大四那年在一个教授讲座上睡觉,教授让她放学别走,教授温和有礼,可是不断刷新的下限怎么回事?还有!教授身份叵测,这样的内幕太惊悚!余生要带着娃娃远离之!可是世上哪有这等好事!腹黑教授情陷余生,自己的老婆,既然忘记了,那就重新爱上吧!
  • 巡洋舰科技知识

    巡洋舰科技知识

    武器是用于攻击的工具,是广大军事爱好者的最爱。特别是武器的科学技术十分具有超前性,往往引领着科学技术不断向前飞速发展。本书主要包括军事枪械、弹药火炮、装甲战车、舰艇航母、航空航天、导弹武器、前沿武器等现代武器的各种类型和品种,具有很强的科学性、知识性、前沿性和系统性。
  • 已尘封的记忆

    已尘封的记忆

    为了组织,他不得不伪装成他。他不甘,明明都是一起进组织,为何要保护工藤新一却要牺牲他?人物完成后,他狠心将他从楼顶推下。“植物人,不可能醒过来了。”
  • 当誓言变成逝言

    当誓言变成逝言

    虽是一本言情小说,但并无过多谈情说爱。这只是一场冒险,而冒险中穿插着恋情。我并不是很会写言情小说,或者说,我也几乎不怎么看这类小说。所以言情很少,更多的是冒险。这是一场悲剧,一场虐恋,一场不该有的爱情。时间错乱,少年十七岁时能力被封,被判死刑,身体与灵魂即将灰飞烟灭。而朋友护其灵魂、助其重生。为了祢补自己的错误,他踏上寻敌之路,收获友情、爱情、背叛……最终他为世界舍弃性命,抛下一切。「这是一个错误,终将注定我们无法双飞。」「这是命运的安排,我们无人能斗得过天……」「当誓言变成逝言,便为我烟消云散之日。」
  • 战世龙君

    战世龙君

    修真界,灵兽横行、修士相斗,宗门相争,这里从来就不是一个平安之地。这是最好的世界,无名之辈们可以偶获奇遇而快速崛起;弱小的门派若能抓住时机,便可成为一方霸主。这也是最坏的世界,天纵之才们会因一时疏忽而命丧黄泉;强悍的宗门也会一着不慎,轰然覆灭。陈招财,这个资质低劣的少年极其侥幸地冲进了喧嚣复杂的修真界。他以一往无前的气势奋斗在这个世界,让这个本就不安生的世界更加疯狂。陈招财:既然这个世界的利益已经被人瓜分完毕,那么就我重新把它划分一次吧!
  • 重生之娱乐天皇

    重生之娱乐天皇

    他用迪加奥特曼打开了孩子们的心灵,仙剑奇侠传引起仙侠风暴,射雕三部曲开创了武侠~~~~~~