A Essay
Concerning the
true original, extent, and end
of
Civil Government
by John Locke
1690
Converted to HTML by James A. Donald jamesd@echeque.com
Of Political Power
1. It having been shown in the foregoing discourse:*
Firstly. That Adam had not, either by natural right of
fatherhood or by positive donation from God, any such
authority over his children, nor dominion over the world,
as is pretended.
Secondly. That if he had, his heirs yet had no right to
it.
Thirdly. That if his heirs had, there being no law of
Nature nor positive law of God that determines which is
the right heir in all cases that may arise, the right of
succession, and consequently of bearing rule, could not
have been certainly determined.
Fourthly. That if even that had been determined, yet the
knowledge of which is the eldest line of Adam's posterity
being so long since utterly lost, that in the races of
mankind and families of the world, there remains not to
one above another the least pretence to be the eldest
house, and to have the right of inheritance.
All these promises having, as I think, been clearly made
out, it is impossible that the rulers now on earth should
make any benefit, or derive any the least shadow of
authority from that which is held to be the fountain of
all power, "Adam's private dominion and paternal
jurisdiction"; so that he that will not give just
occasion to think that all government in the world is the
product only of force and violence, and that men live
together by no other rules but that of beasts, where the
strongest carries it, and so lay a foundation for
perpetual disorder and mischief, tumult, sedition, and
rebellion (things that the followers of that hypothesis
so loudly cry out against), must of necessity find out
another rise of government, another original of political
power, and another way of designing and knowing the
persons that have it than what Sir Robert Filmer hath
taught us.
2. To this purpose, I think it may not be amiss to set
down what I take to be political power. That the power of
a magistrate over a subject may be distinguished from
that of a father over his children, a master over his
servant, a husband over his wife, and a lord over his
slave. All which distinct powers happening sometimes
together in the same man, if he be considered under these
different relations, it may help us to distinguish these
powers one from another, and show the difference betwixt
a ruler of a commonwealth, a father of a family, and a
captain of a galley.
3. Political power, then, I take to be a right of making
laws, with penalties of death, and consequently all less
penalties for the regulating and preserving of property,
and of employing the force of the community in the
execution of such laws, and in the defence of the
commonwealth from foreign injury, and all this only for
the public good.
Of the State of Nature
4. To understand political power aright, and derive it
from its original, we must consider what estate all men
are naturally in, and that is, a state of perfect freedom
to order their actions, and dispose of their possessions
and persons as they think fit, within the bounds of the
law of Nature, without asking leave or depending upon the
will of any other man.
A state also of equality, wherein all the power and
jurisdiction is reciprocal, no one having more than
another, there being nothing more evident than that
creatures of the same species and rank, promiscuously
born to all the same advantages of Nature, and the use of
the same faculties, should also be equal one amongst
another, without subordination or subjection, unless the
lord and master of them all should, by any manifest
declaration of his will, set one above another, and
confer on him, by an evident and clear appointment, an
undoubted right to dominion and sovereignty.
5. This equality of men by Nature, the judicious Hooker
looks upon as so evident in itself, and beyond all
question, that he makes it the foundation of that
obligation to mutual love amongst men on which he builds
the duties they owe one another, and from whence he
derives the great maxims of justice and charity. His
words are:
"The like natural inducement hath brought men to know
that it is no less their duty to love others than
themselves, for seeing those things which are equal, must
needs all have one measure; if I cannot but wish to
receive good, even as much at every man's hands, as any
man can wish unto his own soul, how should I look to have
any part of my desire herein satisfied, unless myself be
careful to satisfy the like desire, which is undoubtedly
in other men weak, being of one and the same nature: to
have anything offered them repugnant to this desire must
needs, in all respects, grieve them as much as me; so
that if I do harm, I must look to suffer, there being no
reason that others should show greater measure of love to
me than they have by me showed unto them; my desire,
therefore, to be loved of my equals in Nature, as much as
possible may be, imposeth upon me a natural duty of
bearing to themward fully the like affection. From which
relation of equality between ourselves and them that are
as ourselves, what several rules and canons natural
reason hath drawn for direction of life no man is
ignorant." (Eccl. Pol. i.)*
6. But though this be a state of liberty, yet it is not
a state of licence; though man in that state have an
uncontrollable liberty to dispose of his person or
possessions, yet he has not liberty to destroy himself,
or so much as any creature in his possession, but where
some nobler use than its bare preservation calls for it.
The state of Nature has a law of Nature to govern it,
which obliges every one, and reason, which is that law,
teaches all mankind who will but consult it, that being
all equal and independent, no one ought to harm another
in his life, health, liberty or possessions; for men
being all the workmanship of one omnipotent and
infinitely wise Maker; all the servants of one sovereign
Master, sent into the world by His order and about His
business; they are His property, whose workmanship they
are made to last during His, not one another's pleasure.
And, being furnished with like faculties, sharing all in
one community of Nature, there cannot be supposed any
such subordination among us that may authorise us to
destroy one another, as if we were made for one another's
uses, as the inferior ranks of creatures are for ours.
Every one as he is bound to preserve himself, and not to
quit his station wilfully, so by the like reason, when
his own preservation comes not in competition, ought he
as much as he can to preserve the rest of mankind, and
not unless it be to do justice on an offender, take away
or impair the life, or what tends to the preservation of
the life, the liberty, health, limb, or goods of another.
7. And that all men may be restrained from invading
others' rights, and from doing hurt to one another, and
the law of Nature be observed, which willeth the peace
and preservation of all mankind, the execution of the law
of Nature is in that state put into every man's hands,
whereby every one has a right to punish the transgressors
of that law to such a degree as may hinder its violation.
For the law of Nature would, as all other laws that
concern men in this world, be in vain if there were
nobody that in the state of Nature had a power to execute
that law, and thereby preserve the innocent and restrain
offenders; and if any one in the state of Nature may
punish another for any evil he has done, every one may do
so. For in that state of perfect equality, where
naturally there is no superiority or jurisdiction of one
over another, what any may do in prosecution of that law,
every one must needs have a right to do.
8. And thus, in the state of Nature, one man comes by a
power over another, but yet no absolute or arbitrary
power to use a criminal, when he has got him in his
hands, according to the passionate heats or boundless
extravagancy of his own will, but only to retribute to
him so far as calm reason and conscience dictate, what is
proportionate to his transgression, which is so much as
may serve for reparation and restraint. For these two are
the only reasons why one man may lawfully do harm to
another, which is that we call punishment. In
transgressing the law of Nature, the offender declares
himself to live by another rule than that of reason and
common equity, which is that measure God has set to the
actions of men for their mutual security, and so he
becomes dangerous to mankind; the tie which is to secure
them from injury and violence being slighted and broken
by him, which being a trespass against the whole species,
and the peace and safety of it, provided for by the law
of Nature, every man upon this score, by the right he
hath to preserve mankind in general, may restrain, or
where it is necessary, destroy things noxious to them,
and so may bring such evil on any one who hath
transgressed that law, as may make him repent the doing
of it, and thereby deter him, and, by his example, others
from doing the like mischief. And in this case, and upon
this ground, every man hath a right to punish the
offender, and be executioner of the law of Nature.
9. I doubt not but this will seem a very strange doctrine
to some men; but before they condemn it, I desire them to
resolve me by what right any prince or state can put to
death or punish an alien for any crime he commits in
their country? It is certain their laws, by virtue of any
sanction they receive from the promulgated will of the
legislature, reach not a stranger. They speak not to him,
nor, if they did, is he bound to hearken to them. The
legislative authority by which they are in force over the
subjects of that commonwealth hath no power over him.
Those who have the supreme power of making laws in
England, France, or Holland are, to an Indian, but like
the rest of the world- men without authority. And
therefore, if by the law of Nature every man hath not a
power to punish offences against it, as he soberly judges
the case to require, I see not how the magistrates of any
community can punish an alien of another country, since,
in reference to him, they can have no more power than
what every man naturally may have over another.
10. Besides the crime which consists in violating the
laws, and varying from the right rule of reason, whereby
a man so far becomes degenerate, and declares himself to
quit the principles of human nature and to be a noxious
creature, there is commonly injury done, and some person
or other, some other man, receives damage by his
transgression; in which case, he who hath received any
damage has (besides the right of punishment common to
him, with other men) a particular right to seek
reparation from him that hath done it. And any other
person who finds it just may also join with him that is
injured, and assist him in recovering from the offender
so much as may make satisfaction for the harm he hath
suffered.
11. From these two distinct rights (the one of punishing
the crime, for restraint and preventing the like offence,
which right of punishing is in everybody, the other of
taking reparation, which belongs only to the injured
party) comes it to pass that the magistrate, who by being
magistrate hath the common right of punishing put into
his hands, can often, where the public good demands not
the execution of the law, remit the punishment of
criminal offences by his own authority, but yet cannot
remit the satisfaction due to any private man for the
damage he has received. That he who hath suffered the
damage has a right to demand in his own name, and he
alone can remit. The damnified person has this power of
appropriating to himself the goods or service of the
offender by right of self-preservation, as every man has
a power to punish the crime to prevent its being
committed again, by the right he has of preserving all
mankind, and doing all reasonable things he can in order
to that end. And thus it is that every man in the state
of Nature has a power to kill a murderer, both to deter
others from doing the like injury (which no reparation
can compensate) by the example of the punishment that
attends it from everybody, and also to secure men from
the attempts of a criminal who, having renounced reason,
the common rule and measure God hath given to mankind,
hath, by the unjust violence and slaughter he hath
committed upon one, declared war against all mankind, and
therefore may be destroyed as a lion or a tiger, one of
those wild savage beasts with whom men can have no
society nor security. And upon this is grounded that
great law of nature, "Whoso sheddeth man's blood, by man
shall his blood be shed." And Cain was so fully convinced
that every one had a right to destroy such a criminal,
that, after the murder of his brother, he cries out,
"Every one that findeth me shall slay me," so plain was
it writ in the hearts of all mankind.
12. By the same reason may a man in the state of Nature
punish the lesser breaches of that law, it will, perhaps,
be demanded, with death? I answer: Each transgression may
be punished to that degree, and with so much severity, as
will suffice to make it an ill bargain to the offender,
give him cause to repent, and terrify others from doing
the like. Every offence that can be committed in the
state of Nature may, in the state of Nature, be also
punished equally, and as far forth, as it may, in a
commonwealth. For though it would be beside my present
purpose to enter here into the particulars of the law of
Nature, or its measures of punishment, yet it is certain
there is such a law, and that too as intelligible and
plain to a rational creature and a studier of that law as
the positive laws of commonwealths, nay, possibly
plainer; as much as reason is easier to be understood
than the fancies and intricate contrivances of men,
following contrary and hidden interests put into words;
for truly so are a great part of the municipal laws of
countries, which are only so far right as they are
founded on the law of Nature, by which they are to be
regulated and interpreted.
13. To this strange doctrine- viz., That in the state of
Nature every one has the executive power of the law of
Nature- I doubt not but it will be objected that it is
unreasonable for men to be judges in their own cases,
that self-love will make men partial to themselves and
their friends; and, on the other side, ill-nature,
passion, and revenge will carry them too far in punishing
others, and hence nothing but confusion and disorder will
follow, and that therefore God hath certainly appointed
government to restrain the partiality and violence of
men. I easily grant that civil government is the proper
remedy for the inconveniences of the state of Nature,
which must certainly be great where men may be judges in
their own case, since it is easy to be imagined that he
who was so unjust as to do his brother an injury will
scarce be so just as to condemn himself for it. But I
shall desire those who make this objection to remember
that absolute monarchs are but men; and if government is
to be the remedy of those evils which necessarily follow
from men being judges in their own cases, and the state
of Nature is therefore not to be endured, I desire to
know what kind of government that is, and how much better
it is than the state of Nature, where one man commanding
a multitude has the liberty to be judge in his own case,
and may do to all his subjects whatever he pleases
without the least question or control of those who
execute his pleasure? and in whatsoever he doth, whether
led by reason, mistake, or passion, must be submitted to?
which men in the state of Nature are not bound to do one
to another. And if he that judges, judges amiss in his
own or any other case, he is answerable for it to the
rest of mankind.
14. It is often asked as a mighty objection, where are,
or ever were, there any men in such a state of Nature? To
which it may suffice as an answer at present, that since
all princes and rulers of "independent" governments all
through the world are in a state of Nature, it is plain
the world never was, nor never will be, without numbers
of men in that state. I have named all governors of
"independent" communities, whether they are, or are not,
in league with others; for it is not every compact that
puts an end to the state of Nature between men, but only
this one of agreeing together mutually to enter into one
community, and make one body politic; other promises and
compacts men may make one with another, and yet still be
in the state of Nature. The promises and bargains for
truck, etc., between the two men in Soldania, in or
between a Swiss and an Indian, in the woods of America,
are binding to them, though they are perfectly in a state
of Nature in reference to one another for truth, and
keeping of faith belongs to men as men, and not as
members of society.
15. To those that say there were never any men in the
state of Nature, I will not oppose the authority of the
judicious Hooker (Eccl. Pol. i. 10), where he says, "the
laws which have been hitherto mentioned"- i.e., the laws
of Nature- "do bind men absolutely, even as they are men,
although they have never any settled fellowship, never
any solemn agreement amongst themselves what to do or not
to do; but for as much as we are not by ourselves
sufficient to furnish ourselves with competent store of
things needful for such a life as our Nature doth desire,
a life fit for the dignity of man, therefore to supply
those defects and imperfections which are in us, as
living single and solely by ourselves, we are naturally
induced to seek communion and fellowship with others;
this was the cause of men uniting themselves as first in
politic societies." But I, moreover, affirm that all men
are naturally in that state, and remain so till, by their
own consents, they make themselves members of some
politic society, and I doubt not, in the sequel of this
discourse, to make it very clear.
Of the State of War
16. The state of war is a state of enmity and
destruction; and therefore declaring by word or action,
not a passionate and hasty, but sedate, settled design
upon another man's life puts him in a state of war with
him against whom he has declared such an intention, and
so has exposed his life to the other's power to be taken
away by him, or any one that joins with him in his
defence, and espouses his quarrel; it being reasonable
and just I should have a right to destroy that which
threatens me with destruction; for by the fundamental law
of Nature, man being to be preserved as much as possible,
when all cannot be preserved, the safety of the innocent
is to be preferred, and one may destroy a man who makes
war upon him, or has discovered an enmity to his being,
for the same reason that he may kill a wolf or a lion,
because they are not under the ties of the common law of
reason, have no other rule but that of force and
violence, and so may be treated as a beast of prey, those
dangerous and noxious creatures that will be sure to
destroy him whenever he falls into their power.
17. And hence it is that he who attempts to get another
man into his absolute power does thereby put himself into
a state of war with him; it being to be understood as a
declaration of a design upon his life. For I have reason
to conclude that he who would get me into his power
without my consent would use me as he pleased when he had
got me there, and destroy me too when he had a fancy to
it; for nobody can desire to have me in his absolute
power unless it be to compel me by force to that which is
against the right of my freedom- i.e. make me a slave. To
be free from such force is the only security of my
preservation, and reason bids me look on him as an enemy
to my preservation who would take away that freedom which
is the fence to it; so that he who makes an attempt to
enslave me thereby puts himself into a state of war with
me. He that in the state of Nature would take away the
freedom that belongs to any one in that state must
necessarily be supposed to have a design to take away
everything else, that freedom being the foundation of all
the rest; as he that in the state of society would take
away the freedom belonging to those of that society or
commonwealth must be supposed to design to take away from
them everything else, and so be looked on as in a state
of war.
18. This makes it lawful for a man to kill a thief who
has not in the least hurt him, nor declared any design
upon his life, any farther than by the use of force, so
to get him in his power as to take away his money, or
what he pleases, from him; because using force, where he
has no right to get me into his power, let his pretence
be what it will, I have no reason to suppose that he who
would take away my liberty would not, when he had me in
his power, take away everything else. And, therefore, it
is lawful for me to treat him as one who has put himself
into a state of war with me- i.e., kill him if I can; for
to that hazard does he justly expose himself whoever
introduces a state of war, and is aggressor in it.
19. And here we have the plain difference between the
state of Nature and the state of war, which however some
men have confounded, are as far distant as a state of
peace, goodwill, mutual assistance, and preservation; and
a state of enmity, malice, violence and mutual
destruction are one from another. Men living together
according to reason without a common superior on earth,
with authority to judge between them, is properly the
state of Nature. But force, or a declared design of force
upon the person of another, where there is no common
superior on earth to appeal to for relief, is the state
of war; and it is the want of such an appeal gives a man
the right of war even against an aggressor, though he be
in society and a fellow-subject. Thus, a thief whom I
cannot harm, but by appeal to the law, for having stolen
all that I am worth, I may kill when he sets on me to rob
me but of my horse or coat, because the law, which was
made for my preservation, where it cannot interpose to
secure my life from present force, which if lost is
capable of no reparation, permits me my own defence and
the right of war, a liberty to kill the aggressor,
because the aggressor allows not time to appeal to our
common judge, nor the decision of the law, for remedy in
a case where the mischief may be irreparable. Want of a
common judge with authority puts all men in a state of
Nature; force without right upon a man's person makes a
state of war both where there is, and is not, a common
judge.
20. But when the actual force is over, the state of war
ceases between those that are in society and are equally
on both sides subject to the judge; and, therefore, in
such controversies, where the question is put, "Who shall
be judge?" it cannot be meant who shall decide the
controversy; every one knows what Jephtha here tells us,
that "the Lord the Judge" shall judge. Where there is no
judge on earth the appeal lies to God in Heaven. That
question then cannot mean who shall judge, whether
another hath put himself in a state of war with me, and
whether I may, as Jephtha did, appeal to Heaven in it? Of
that I myself can only judge in my own conscience, as I
will answer it at the great day to the Supreme Judge of
all men.
Of Slavery
21. The natural liberty of man is to be free from any
superior power on earth, and not to be under the will or
legislative authority of man, but to have only the law of
Nature for his rule. The liberty of man in society is to
be under no other legislative power but that established
by consent in the commonwealth, nor under the dominion of
any will, or restraint of any law, but what that
legislative shall enact according to the trust put in it.
Freedom, then, is not what Sir Robert Filmer tells us: "A
liberty for every one to do what he lists, to live as he
pleases, and not to be tied by any laws"; but freedom of
men under government is to have a standing rule to live
by, common to every one of that society, and made by the
legislative power erected in it. A liberty to follow my
own will in all things where that rule prescribes not,
not to be subject to the inconstant, uncertain, unknown,
arbitrary will of another man, as freedom of nature is to
be under no other restraint but the law of Nature.
22. This freedom from absolute, arbitrary power is so
necessary to, and closely joined with, a man's
preservation, that he cannot part with it but by what
forfeits his preservation and life together. For a man,
not having the power of his own life, cannot by compact
or his own consent enslave himself to any one, nor put
himself under the absolute, arbitrary power of another to
take away his life when he pleases. Nobody can give more
power than he has himself, and he that cannot take away
his own life cannot give another power over it. Indeed,
having by his fault forfeited his own life by some act
that deserves death, he to whom he has forfeited it may,
when he has him in his power, delay to take it, and make
use of him to his own service; and he does him no injury
by it. For, whenever he finds the hardship of his slavery
outweigh the value of his life, it is in his power, by
resisting the will of his master, to draw on himself the
death he desires.
23. This is the perfect condition of slavery, which is
nothing else but the state of war continued between a
lawful conqueror and a captive, for if once compact enter
between them, and make an agreement for a limited power
on the one side, and obedience on the other, the state of
war and slavery ceases as long as the compact endures;
for, as has been said, no man can by agreement pass over
to another that which he hath not in himself- a power
over his own life.
I confess, we find among the Jews, as well as other
nations, that men did sell themselves; but it is plain
this was only to drudgery, not to slavery; for it is
evident the person sold was not under an absolute,
arbitrary, despotical power, for the master could not
have power to kill him at any time, whom at a certain
time he was obliged to let go free out of his service;
and the master of such a servant was so far from having
an arbitrary power over his life that he could not at
pleasure so much as maim him, but the loss of an eye or
tooth set him free (Exod. 21.).
Of Property
24. Whether we consider natural reason, which tells us
that men, being once born, have a right to their
preservation, and consequently to meat and drink and such
other things as Nature affords for their subsistence, or
"revelation," which gives us an account of those grants
God made of the world to Adam, and to Noah and his sons,
it is very clear that God, as King David says (Psalm 115.
16), "has given the earth to the children of men," given
it to mankind in common. But, this being supposed, it
seems to some a very great difficulty how any one should
ever come to have a property in anything, I will not
content myself to answer, that, if it be difficult to
make out "property" upon a supposition that God gave the
world to Adam and his posterity in common, it is
impossible that any man but one universal monarch should
have any "property" upon a supposition that God gave the
world to Adam and his heirs in succession, exclusive of
all the rest of his posterity; but I shall endeavour to
show how men might come to have a property in several
parts of that which God gave to mankind in common, and
that without any express compact of all the commoners.
25. God, who hath given the world to men in common, hath
also given them reason to make use of it to the best
advantage of life and convenience. The earth and all that
is therein is given to men for the support and comfort of
their being. And though all the fruits it naturally
produces, and beasts it feeds, belong to mankind in
common, as they are produced by the spontaneous hand of
Nature, and nobody has originally a private dominion
exclusive of the rest of mankind in any of them, as they
are thus in their natural state, yet being given for the
use of men, there must of necessity be a means to
appropriate them some way or other before they can be of
any use, or at all beneficial, to any particular men. The
fruit or venison which nourishes the wild Indian, who
knows no enclosure, and is still a tenant in common, must
be his, and so his- i.e., a part of him, that another can
no longer have any right to it before it can do him any
good for the support of his life.
26. Though the earth and all inferior creatures be common
to all men, yet every man has a "property" in his own
"person." This nobody has any right to but himself. The
"labour" of his body and the "work" of his hands, we may
say, are properly his. Whatsoever, then, he removes out
of the state that Nature hath provided and left it in, he
hath mixed his labour with it, and joined to it something
that is his own, and thereby makes it his property. It
being by him removed from the common state Nature placed
it in, it hath by this labour something annexed to it
that excludes the common right of other men. For this
"labour" being the unquestionable property of the
labourer, no man but he can have a right to what that is
once joined to, at least where there is enough, and as
good left in common for others.
27. He that is nourished by the acorns he picked up under
an oak, or the apples he gathered from the trees in the
wood, has certainly appropriated them to himself. Nobody
can deny but the nourishment is his. I ask, then, when
did they begin to be his? when he digested? or when he
ate? or when he boiled? or when he brought them home? or
when he picked them up? And it is plain, if the first
gathering made them not his, nothing else could. That
labour put a distinction between them and common. That
added something to them more than Nature, the common
mother of all, had done, and so they became his private
right. And will any one say he had no right to those
acorns or apples he thus appropriated because he had not
the consent of all mankind to make them his? Was it a
robbery thus to assume to himself what belonged to all in
common? If such a consent as that was necessary, man had
starved, notwithstanding the plenty God had given him. We
see in commons, which remain so by compact, that it is
the taking any part of what is common, and removing it
out of the state Nature leaves it in, which begins the
property, without which the common is of no use. And the
taking of this or that part does not depend on the
express consent of all the commoners. Thus, the grass my
horse has bit, the turfs my servant has cut, and the ore
I have digged in any place, where I have a right to them
in common with others, become my property without the
assignation or consent of anybody. The labour that was
mine, removing them out of that common state they were
in, hath fixed my property in them.
28. By making an explicit consent of every commoner
necessary to any one's appropriating to himself any part
of what is given in common. Children or servants could
not cut the meat which their father or master had
provided for them in common without assigning to every
one his peculiar part. Though the water running in the
fountain be every one's, yet who can doubt but that in
the pitcher is his only who drew it out? His labour hath
taken it out of the hands of Nature where it was common,
and belonged equally to all her children, and hath
thereby appropriated it to himself.
29. Thus this law of reason makes the deer that Indian's
who hath killed it; it is allowed to be his goods who
hath bestowed his labour upon it, though, before, it was
the common right of every one. And amongst those who are
counted the civilised part of mankind, who have made and
multiplied positive laws to determine property, this
original law of Nature for the beginning of property, in
what was before common, still takes place, and by virtue
thereof, what fish any one catches in the ocean, that
great and still remaining common of mankind; or what
amber-gris any one takes up here is by the labour that
removes it out of that common state Nature left it in,
made his property who takes that pains about it. And even
amongst us, the hare that any one is hunting is thought
his who pursues her during the chase. For being a beast
that is still looked upon as common, and no man's private
possession, whoever has employed so much labour about any
of that kind as to find and pursue her has thereby
removed her from the state of Nature wherein she was
common, and hath begun a property.
30. It will, perhaps, be objected to this, that if
gathering the acorns or other fruits of the earth, etc.,
makes a right to them, then any one may engross as much
as he will. To which I answer, Not so. The same law of
Nature that does by this means give us property, does
also bound that property too. "God has given us all
things richly." Is the voice of reason confirmed by
inspiration? But how far has He given it us- "to enjoy"?
As much as any one can make use of to any advantage of
life before it spoils, so much he may by his labour fix a
property in. Whatever is beyond this is more than his
share, and belongs to others. Nothing was made by God for
man to spoil or destroy. And thus considering the plenty
of natural provisions there was a long time in the world,
and the few spenders, and to how small a part of that
provision the industry of one man could extend itself and
engross it to the prejudice of others, especially keeping
within the bounds set by reason of what might serve for
his use, there could be then little room for quarrels or
contentions about property so established.
31. But the chief matter of property being now not the
fruits of the earth and the beasts that subsist on it,
but the earth itself, as that which takes in and carries
with it all the rest, I think it is plain that property
in that too is acquired as the former. As much land as a
man tills, plants, improves, cultivates, and can use the
product of, so much is his property. He by his labour
does, as it were, enclose it from the common. Nor will it
invalidate his right to say everybody else has an equal
title to it, and therefore he cannot appropriate, he
cannot enclose, without the consent of all his fellow-
commoners, all mankind. God, when He gave the world in
common to all mankind, commanded man also to labour, and
the penury of his condition required it of him. God and
his reason commanded him to subdue the earth- i.e.,
improve it for the benefit of life and therein lay out
something upon it that was his own, his labour. He that,
in obedience to this command of God, subdued, tilled, and
sowed any part of it, thereby annexed to it something
that was his property, which another had no title to, nor
could without injury take from him.
32. Nor was this appropriation of any parcel of land, by
improving it, any prejudice to any other man, since there
was still enough and as good left, and more than the yet
unprovided could use. So that, in effect, there was never
the less left for others because of his enclosure for
himself. For he that leaves as much as another can make
use of does as good as take nothing at all. Nobody could
think himself injured by the drinking of another man,
though he took a good draught, who had a whole river of
the same water left him to quench his thirst. And the
case of land and water, where there is enough of both, is
perfectly the same.
33. God gave the world to men in common, but since He
gave it them for their benefit and the greatest
conveniencies of life they were capable to draw from it,
it cannot be supposed He meant it should always remain
common and uncultivated. He gave it to the use of the
industrious and rational (and labour was to be his title
to it); not to the fancy or covetousness of the
quarrelsome and contentious. He that had as good left for
his improvement as was already taken up needed not
complain, ought not to meddle with what was already
improved by another's labour; if he did it is plain he
desired the benefit of another's pains, which he had no
right to, and not the ground which God had given him, in
common with others, to labour on, and whereof there was
as good left as that already possessed, and more than he
knew what to do with, or his industry could reach to.
34. It is true, in land that is common in England or any
other country, where there are plenty of people under
government who have money and commerce, no one can
enclose or appropriate any part without the consent of
all his fellow-commoners; because this is left common by
compact- i.e., by the law of the land, which is not to be
violated. And, though it be common in respect of some
men, it is not so to all mankind, but is the joint
propriety of this country, or this parish. Besides, the
remainder, after such enclosure, would not be as good to
the rest of the commoners as the whole was, when they
could all make use of the whole; whereas in the beginning
and first peopling of the great common of the world it
was quite otherwise. The law man was under was rather for
appropriating. God commanded, and his wants forced him to
labour. That was his property, which could not be taken
from him wherever he had fixed it. And hence subduing or
cultivating the earth and having dominion, we see, are
joined together. The one gave title to the other. So that
God, by commanding to subdue, gave authority so far to
appropriate. And the condition of human life, which
requires labour and materials to work on, necessarily
introduce private possessions.
35. The measure of property Nature well set, by the
extent of men's labour and the conveniency of life. No
man's labour could subdue or appropriate all, nor could
his enjoyment consume more than a small part; so that it
was impossible for any man, this way, to entrench upon
the right of another or acquire to himself a property to
the prejudice of his neighbour, who would still have room
for as good and as large a possession (after the other
had taken out his) as before it was appropriated. Which
measure did confine every man's possession to a very
moderate proportion, and such as he might appropriate to
himself without injury to anybody in the first ages of
the world, when men were more in danger to be lost, by
wandering from their company, in the then vast wilderness
of the earth than to be straitened for want of room to
plant in.
36. The same measure may be allowed still, without
prejudice to anybody, full as the world seems. For,
supposing a man or family, in the state they were at
first, peopling of the world by the children of Adam or
Noah, let him plant in some inland vacant places of
America. We shall find that the possessions he could make
himself, upon the measures we have given, would not be
very large, nor, even to this day, prejudice the rest of
mankind or give them reason to complain or think
themselves injured by this man's encroachment, though the
race of men have now spread themselves to all the corners
of the world, and do infinitely exceed the small number
was at the beginning. Nay, the extent of ground is of so
little value without labour that I have heard it affirmed
that in Spain itself a man may be permitted to plough,
sow, and reap, without being disturbed, upon land he has
no other title to, but only his making use of it. But, on
the contrary, the inhabitants think themselves beholden
to him who, by his industry on neglected, and
consequently waste land, has increased the stock of corn,
which they wanted. But be this as it will, which I lay no
stress on, this I dare boldly affirm, that the same rule
of propriety- viz., that every man should have as much as
he could make use of, would hold still in the world,
without straitening anybody, since there is land enough
in the world to suffice double the inhabitants, had not
the invention of money, and the tacit agreement of men to
put a value on it, introduced (by consent) larger
possessions and a right to them; which, how it has done,
I shall by and by show more at large.
37. This is certain, that in the beginning, before the
desire of having more than men needed had altered the
intrinsic value of things, which depends only on their
usefulness to the life of man, or had agreed that a
little piece of yellow metal, which would keep without
wasting or decay, should be worth a great piece of flesh
or a whole heap of corn, though men had a right to
appropriate by their labour, each one to himself, as much
of the things of Nature as he could use, yet this could
not be much, nor to the prejudice of others, where the
same plenty was still left, to those who would use the
same industry.
Before the appropriation of land, he who gathered as much
of the wild fruit, killed, caught, or tamed as many of
the beasts as he could- he that so employed his pains
about any of the spontaneous products of Nature as any
way to alter them from the state Nature put them in, by
placing any of his labour on them, did thereby acquire a
propriety in them; but if they perished in his possession
without their due use- if the fruits rotted or the
venison putrefied before he could spend it, he offended
against the common law of Nature, and was liable to be
punished: he invaded his neighbour's share, for he had no
right farther than his use called for any of them, and
they might serve to afford him conveniencies of life.
38. The same measures governed the possession of land,
too. Whatsoever he tilled and reaped, laid up and made
use of before it spoiled, that was his peculiar right;
whatsoever he enclosed, and could feed and make use of,
the cattle and product was also his. But if either the
grass of his enclosure rotted on the ground, or the fruit
of his planting perished without gathering and laying up,
this part of the earth, notwithstanding his enclosure,
was still to be looked on as waste, and might be the
possession of any other. Thus, at the beginning, Cain
might take as much ground as he could till and make it
his own land, and yet leave enough to Abel's sheep to
feed on: a few acres would serve for both their
possessions. But as families increased and industry
enlarged their stocks, their possessions enlarged with
the need of them; but yet it was commonly without any
fixed property in the ground they made use of till they
incorporated, settled themselves together, and built
cities, and then, by consent, they came in time to set
out the bounds of their distinct territories and agree on
limits between them and their neighbours, and by laws
within themselves settled the properties of those of the
same society. For we see that in that part of the world
which was first inhabited, and therefore like to be best
peopled, even as low down as Abraham's time, they
wandered with their flocks and their herds, which was
their substance, freely up and down- and this Abraham did
in a country where he was a stranger; whence it is plain
that, at least, a great part of the land lay in common,
that the inhabitants valued it not, nor claimed property
in any more than they made use of; but when there was not
room enough in the same place for their herds to feed
together, they, by consent, as Abraham and Lot did (Gen.
xiii. 5), separated and enlarged their pasture where it
best liked them. And for the same reason, Esau went from
his father and his brother, and planted in Mount Seir
(Gen. 36. 6).
39. And thus, without supposing any private dominion and
property in Adam over all the world, exclusive of all
other men, which can no way be proved, nor any one's
property be made out from it, but supposing the world,
given as it was to the children of men in common, we see
how labour could make men distinct titles to several
parcels of it for their private uses, wherein there could
be no doubt of right, no room for quarrel.
40. Nor is it so strange as, perhaps, before
consideration, it may appear, that the property of labour
should be able to overbalance the community of land, for
it is labour indeed that puts the difference of value on
everything; and let any one consider what the difference
is between an acre of land planted with tobacco or sugar,
sown with wheat or barley, and an acre of the same land
lying in common without any husbandry upon it, and he
will find that the improvement of labour makes the far
greater part of the value. I think it will be but a very
modest computation to say, that of the products of the
earth useful to the life of man, nine-tenths are the
effects of labour. Nay, if we will rightly estimate
things as they come to our use, and cast up the several
expenses about them- what in them is purely owing to
Nature and what to labour- we shall find that in most of
them ninety-nine hundredths are wholly to be put on the
account of labour.
41. There cannot be a clearer demonstration of anything
than several nations of the Americans are of this, who
are rich in land and poor in all the comforts of life;
whom Nature, having furnished as liberally as any other
people with the materials of plenty- i.e., a fruitful
soil, apt to produce in abundance what might serve for
food, raiment, and delight; yet, for want of improving it
by labour, have not one hundredth part of the
conveniencies we enjoy, and a king of a large and
fruitful territory there feeds, lodges, and is clad worse
than a day labourer in England.
42. To make this a little clearer, let us but trace some
of the ordinary provisions of life, through their several
progresses, before they come to our use, and see how much
they receive of their value from human industry. Bread,
wine, and cloth are things of daily use and great plenty;
yet notwithstanding acorns, water, and leaves, or skins
must be our bread, drink and clothing, did not labour
furnish us with these more useful commodities. For
whatever bread is more worth than acorns, wine than
water, and cloth or silk than leaves, skins or moss, that
is wholly owing to labour and industry. The one of these
being the food and raiment which unassisted Nature
furnishes us with; the other provisions which our
industry and pains prepare for us, which how much they
exceed the other in value, when any one hath computed, he
will then see how much labour makes the far greatest part
of the value of things we enjoy in this world; and the
ground which produces the materials is scarce to be
reckoned in as any, or at most, but a very small part of
it; so little, that even amongst us, land that is left
wholly to nature, that hath no improvement of pasturage,
tillage, or planting, is called, as indeed it is, waste;
and we shall find the benefit of it amount to little more
than nothing.
43. An acre of land that bears here twenty bushels of
wheat, and another in America, which, with the same
husbandry, would do the like, are, without doubt, of the
same natural, intrinsic value. But yet the benefit
mankind receives from one in a year is worth five pounds,
and the other possibly not worth a penny; if all the
profit an Indian received from it were to be valued and
sold here, at least I may truly say, not one thousandth.
It is labour, then, which puts the greatest part of value
upon land, without which it would scarcely be worth
anything; it is to that we owe the greatest part of all
its useful products; for all that the straw, bran, bread,
of that acre of wheat, is more worth than the product of
an acre of as good land which lies waste is all the
effect of labour. For it is not barely the ploughman's
pains, the reaper's and thresher's toil, and the baker's
sweat, is to be counted into the bread we eat; the labour
of those who broke the oxen, who digged and wrought the
iron and stones, who felled and framed the timber
employed about the plough, mill, oven, or any other
utensils, which are a vast number, requisite to this
corn, from its sowing to its being made bread, must all
be charged on the account of labour, and received as an
effect of that; Nature and the earth furnished only the
almost worthless materials as in themselves. It would be
a strange catalogue of things that industry provided and
made use of about every loaf of bread before it came to
our use if we could trace them; iron, wood, leather,
bark, timber, stone, bricks, coals, lime, cloth, dyeing-
drugs, pitch, tar, masts, ropes, and all the materials
made use of in the ship that brought any of the
commodities made use of by any of the workmen, to any
part of the work, all which it would be almost
impossible, at least too long, to reckon up.
44. From all which it is evident, that though the things
of Nature are given in common, man (by being master of
himself, and proprietor of his own person, and the
actions or labour of it) had still in himself the great
foundation of property; and that which made up the great
part of what he applied to the support or comfort of his
being, when invention and arts had improved the
conveniences of life, was perfectly his own, and did not
belong in common to others.
45. Thus labour, in the beginning, gave a right of
property, wherever any one was pleased to employ it, upon
what was common, which remained a long while, the far
greater part, and is yet more than mankind makes use of
Men at first, for the most part, contented themselves
with what unassisted Nature offered to their necessities;
and though afterwards, in some parts of the world, where
the increase of people and stock, with the use of money,
had made land scarce, and so of some value, the several
communities settled the bounds of their distinct
territories, and, by laws, within themselves, regulated
the properties of the private men of their society, and
so, by compact and agreement, settled the property which
labour and industry began. And the leagues that have been
made between several states and kingdoms, either
expressly or tacitly disowning all claim and right to the
land in the other's possession, have, by common consent,
given up their pretences to their natural common right,
which originally they had to those countries; and so
have, by positive agreement, settled a property amongst
themselves, in distinct parts of the world; yet there are
still great tracts of ground to be found, which the
inhabitants thereof, not having joined with the rest of
mankind in the consent of the use of their common money,
lie waste, and are more than the people who dwell on it,
do, or can make use of, and so still lie in common;
though this can scarce happen amongst that part of
mankind that have consented to the use of money.
46. The greatest part of things really useful to the life
of man, and such as the necessity of subsisting made the
first commoners of the world look after- as it doth the
Americans now- are generally things of short duration,
such as- if they are not consumed by use- will decay and
perish of themselves. Gold, silver, and diamonds are
things that fancy or agreement hath put the value on,
more than real use and the necessary support of life. Now
of those good things which Nature hath provided in
common, every one hath a right (as hath been said) to as
much as he could use; and had a property in all he could
effect with his labour; all that his industry could
extend to, to alter from the state Nature had put it in,
was his. He that gathered a hundred bushels of acorns or
apples had thereby a property in them; they were his
goods as soon as gathered. He was only to look that he
used them before they spoiled, else he took more than his
share, and robbed others. And, indeed, it was a foolish
thing, as well as dishonest, to hoard up more than he
could make use of If he gave away a part to anybody else,
so that it perished not uselessly in his possession,
these he also made use of And if he also bartered away
plums that would have rotted in a week, for nuts that
would last good for his eating a whole year, he did no
injury; he wasted not the common stock; destroyed no part
of the portion of goods that belonged to others, so long
as nothing perished uselessly in his hands. Again, if he
would give his nuts for a piece of metal, pleased with
its colour, or exchange his sheep for shells, or wool for
a sparkling pebble or a diamond, and keep those by him
all his life, he invaded not the right of others; he
might heap up as much of these durable things as he
pleased; the exceeding of the bounds of his just property
not lying in the largeness of his possession, but the
perishing of anything uselessly in it.
47. And thus came in the use of money; some lasting thing
that men might keep without spoiling, and that, by mutual
consent, men would take in exchange for the truly useful
but perishable supports of life.
48. And as different degrees of industry were apt to give
men possessions in different proportions, so this
invention of money gave them the opportunity to continue
and enlarge them. For supposing an island, separate from
all possible commerce with the rest of the world, wherein
there were but a hundred families, but there were sheep,
horses, and cows, with other useful animals, wholesome
fruits, and land enough for corn for a hundred thousand
times as many, but nothing in the island, either because
of its commonness or perishableness, fit to supply the
place of money. What reason could any one have there to
enlarge his possessions beyond the use of his family, and
a plentiful supply to its consumption, either in what
their own industry produced, or they could barter for
like perishable, useful commodities with others? Where
there is not something both lasting and scarce, and so
valuable to be hoarded up, there men will not be apt to
enlarge their possessions of land, were it never so rich,
never so free for them to take. For I ask, what would a
man value ten thousand or an hundred thousand acres of
excellent land, ready cultivated and well stocked, too,
with cattle, in the middle of the inland parts of
America, where he had no hopes of commerce with other
parts of the world, to draw money to him by the sale of
the product? It would not be worth the enclosing, and we
should see him give up again to the wild common of Nature
whatever was more than would supply the conveniences of
life, to be had there for him and his family.
49. Thus, in the beginning, all the world was America,
and more so than that is now; for no such thing as money
was anywhere known. Find out something that hath the use
and value of money amongst his neighbours, you shall see
the same man will begin presently to enlarge his
possessions.
50. But, since gold and silver, being little useful to
the life of man, in proportion to food, raiment, and
carriage, has its value only from the consent of men-
whereof labour yet makes in great part the measure- it is
plain that the consent of men have agreed to a
disproportionate and unequal possession of the earth- I
mean out of the bounds of society and compact; for in
governments the laws regulate it; they having, by
consent, found out and agreed in a way how a man may,
rightfully and without injury, possess more than he
himself can make use of by receiving gold and silver,
which may continue long in a man's possession without
decaying for the overplus, and agreeing those metals
should have a value.
51. And thus, I think, it is very easy to conceive,
without any difficulty, how labour could at first begin a
title of property in the common things of Nature, and how
the spending it upon our uses bounded it; so that there
could then be no reason of quarrelling about title, nor
any doubt about the largeness of possession it gave.
Right and conveniency went together. For as a man had a
right to all he could employ his labour upon, so he had
no temptation to labour for more than he could make use
of. This left no room for controversy about the title,
nor for encroachment on the right of others. What portion
a man carved to himself was easily seen; and it was
useless, as well as dishonest, to carve himself too much,
or take more than he needed.
Of Paternal Power
52. IT may perhaps be censured an impertinent criticism
in a discourse of this nature to find fault with words
and names that have obtained in the world. And yet
possibly it may not be amiss to offer new ones when the
old are apt to lead men into mistakes, as this of
paternal power probably has done, which seems so to place
the power of parents over their children wholly in the
father, as if the mother had no share in it; whereas if
we consult reason or revelation, we shall find she has an
equal title, which may give one reason to ask whether
this might not be more properly called parental power?
For whatever obligation Nature and the right of
generation lays on children, it must certainly bind them
equal to both the concurrent causes of it. And
accordingly we see the positive law of God everywhere
joins them together without distinction, when it commands
the obedience of children: "Honour thy father and thy
mother" (Exod. 20. 12); "Whosoever curseth his father or
his mother" (Lev. 20. 9); "Ye shall fear every man his
mother and his father" (Lev. 19. 3); "Children, obey your
parents" (Eph. 6. 1), etc., is the style of the Old and
New Testament.
53. Had but this one thing been well considered without
looking any deeper into the matter, it might perhaps have
kept men from running into those gross mistakes they have
made about this power of parents, which however it might
without any great harshness bear the name of absolute
dominion and regal authority, when under the title of
"paternal" power, it seemed appropriated to the father;
would yet have sounded but oddly, and in the very name
shown the absurdity, if this supposed absolute power over
children had been called parental, and thereby discovered
that it belonged to the mother too. For it will but very
ill serve the turn of those men who contend so much for
the absolute power and authority of the fatherhood, as
they call it, that the mother should have any share in
it. And it would have but ill supported the monarchy they
contend for, when by the very name it appeared that that
fundamental authority from whence they would derive their
government of a single person only was not placed in one,
but two persons jointly. But to let this of names pass.
54. Though I have said above (2) "That all men by nature
are equal," I cannot be supposed to understand all sorts
of "equality." Age or virtue may give men a just
precedency. Excellency of parts and merit may place
others above the common level. Birth may subject some,
and alliance or benefits others, to pay an observance to
those to whom Nature, gratitude, or other respects, may
have made it due; and yet all this consists with the
equality which all men are in respect of jurisdiction or
dominion one over another, which was the equality I there
spoke of as proper to the business in hand, being that
equal right that every man hath to his natural freedom,
without being subjected to the will or authority of any
other man.
55. Children, I confess, are not born in this full state
of equality, though they are born to it. Their parents
have a sort of rule and jurisdiction over them when they
come into the world, and for some time after, but it is
but a temporary one. The bonds of this subjection are
like the swaddling clothes they are wrapt up in and
supported by in the weakness of their infancy. Age and
reason as they grow up loosen them, till at length they
drop quite off, and leave a man at his own free disposal.
56. Adam was created a perfect man, his body and mind in
full possession of their strength and reason, and so was
capable from the first instance of his being to provide
for his own support and preservation, and govern his
actions according to the dictates of the law of reason
God had implanted in him. From him the world is peopled
with his descendants, who are all born infants, weak and
helpless, without knowledge or understanding. But to
supply the defects of this imperfect state till the
improvement of growth and age had removed them, Adam and
Eve, and after them all parents were, by the law of
Nature, under an obligation to preserve, nourish and
educate the children they had begotten, not as their own
workmanship, but the workmanship of their own Maker, the
Almighty, to whom they were to be accountable for them.
57. The law that was to govern Adam was the same that was
to govern all his posterity, the law of reason. But his
offspring having another way of entrance into the world,
different from him, by a natural birth, that produced
them ignorant, and without the use of reason, they were
not presently under that law. For nobody can be under a
law that is not promulgated to him; and this law being
promulgated or made known by reason only, he that is not
come to the use of his reason cannot be said to be under
this law; and Adam's children being not presently as soon
as born under this law of reason, were not presently
free. For law, in its true notion, is not so much the
limitation as the direction of a free and intelligent
agent to his proper interest, and prescribes no farther
than is for the general good of those under that law.
Could they be happier without it, the law, as a useless
thing, would of itself vanish; and that ill deserves the
name of confinement which hedges us in only from bogs and
precipices. So that however it may be mistaken, the end
of law is not to abolish or restrain, but to preserve and
enlarge freedom. For in all the states of created beings,
capable of laws, where there is no law there is no
freedom. For liberty is to be free from restraint and
violence from others, which cannot be where there is no
law; and is not, as we are told, "a liberty for every man
to do what he lists." For who could be free, when every
other man's humour might domineer over him? But a liberty
to dispose and order freely as he lists his person,
actions, possessions, and his whole property within the
allowance of those laws under which he is, and therein
not to be subject to the arbitrary will of another, but
freely follow his own.
58. The power, then, that parents have over their
children arises from that duty which is incumbent on
them, to take care of their offspring during the
imperfect state of childhood. To inform the mind, and
govern the actions of their yet ignorant nonage, till
reason shall take its place and ease them of that
trouble, is what the children want, and the parents are
bound to. For God having given man an understanding to
direct his actions, has allowed him a freedom of will and
liberty of acting, as properly belonging thereunto within
the bounds of that law he is under. But whilst he is in
an estate wherein he has no understanding of his own to
direct his will, he is not to have any will of his own to
follow. He that understands for him must will for him
too; he must prescribe to his will, and regulate his
actions, but when he comes to the estate that made his
father a free man, the son is a free man too.
59. This holds in all the laws a man is under, whether
natural or civil. Is a man under the law of Nature? What
made him free of that law? what gave him a free disposing
of his property, according to his own will, within the
compass of that law? I answer, an estate wherein he might
be supposed capable to know that law, that so he might
keep his actions within the bounds of it. When he has
acquired that state, he is presumed to know how far that
law is to be his guide, and how far he may make use of
his freedom, and so comes to have it; till then, somebody
else must guide him, who is presumed to know how far the
law allows a liberty. If such a state of reason, such an
age of discretion made him free, the same shall make his
son free too. Is a man under the law of England? what
made him free of that law- that is, to have the liberty
to dispose of his actions and possessions, according to
his own will, within the permission of that law? a
capacity of knowing that law. Which is supposed, by that
law, at the age of twenty-one, and in some cases sooner.
If this made the father free, it shall make the son free
too. Till then, we see the law allows the son to have no
will, but he is to be guided by the will of his father or
guardian, who is to understand for him. And if the father
die and fail to substitute a deputy in this trust, if he
hath not provided a tutor to govern his son during his
minority, during his want of understanding, the law takes
care to do it: some other must govern him and be a will
to him till he hath attained to a state of freedom, and
his understanding be fit to take the government of his
will. But after that the father and son are equally free,
as much as tutor and pupil, after nonage, equally
subjects of the same law together, without any dominion
left in the father over the life, liberty, or estate of
his son, whether they be only in the state and under the
law of Nature, or under the positive laws of an
established government.
60. But if through defects that may happen out of the
ordinary course of Nature, any one comes not to such a
degree of reason wherein he might be supposed capable of
knowing the law, and so living within the rules of it, he
is never capable of being a free man, he is never let
loose to the disposure of his own will; because he knows
no bounds to it, has not understanding, its proper guide,
but is continued under the tuition and government of
others all the time his own understanding is incapable of
that charge. And so lunatics and idiots are never set
free from the government of their parents: "Children who
are not as yet come unto those years whereat they may
have, and innocents, which are excluded by a natural
defect from ever having." Thirdly: "Madmen, which, for
the present, cannot possibly have the use of right reason
to guide themselves, have, for their guide, the reason
that guideth other men which are tutors over them, to
seek and procure their good for them," says Hooker (Eccl.
Pol., lib. i., s. 7). All which seems no more than that
duty which God and Nature has laid on man, as well as
other creatures, to preserve their offspring till they
can be able to shift for themselves, and will scarce
amount to an instance or proof of parents' regal
authority.
61. Thus we are born free as we are born rational; not
that we have actually the exercise of either: age that
brings one, brings with it the other too. And thus we see
how natural freedom and subjection to parents may consist
together, and are both founded on the same principle. A
child is free by his father's title, by his father's
understanding, which is to govern him till he hath it of
his own. The freedom of a man at years of discretion, and
the subjection of a child to his parents, whilst yet
short of it, are so consistent and so distinguishable
that the most blinded contenders for monarchy, "by right
of fatherhood," cannot miss of it; the most obstinate
cannot but allow of it. For were their doctrine all true,
were the right heir of Adam now known, and, by that
title, settled a monarch in his throne, invested with all
the absolute unlimited power Sir Robert Filmer talks of,
if he should die as soon as his heir were born, must not
the child, notwithstanding he were never so free, never
so much sovereign, be in subjection to his mother and
nurse, to tutors and governors, till age and education
brought him reason and ability to govern himself and
others? The necessities of his life, the health of his
body, and the information of his mind would require him
to be directed by the will of others and not his own; and
yet will any one think that this restraint and subjection
were inconsistent with, or spoiled him of, that liberty
or sovereignty he had a right to, or gave away his empire
to those who had the government of his nonage? This
government over him only prepared him the better and
sooner for it. If anybody should ask me when my son is of
age to be free, I shall answer, just when his monarch is
of age to govern. "But at what time," says the judicious
Hooker (Eccl. Pol., lib. i., s. 6), "a man may be said to
have attained so far forth the use of reason as sufficeth
to make him capable of those laws whereby he is then
bound to guide his actions; this is a great deal more
easy for sense to discern than for any one, by skill and
learning, to determine."
62. Commonwealths themselves take notice of, and allow
that there is a time when men are to begin to act like
free men, and therefore, till that time, require not
oaths of fealty or allegiance, or other public owning of,
or submission to, the government of their countries.
63. The freedom then of man, and liberty of acting
according to his own will, is grounded on his having
reason, which is able to instruct him in that law he is
to govern himself by, and make him know how far he is
left to the freedom of his own will. To turn him loose to
an unrestrained liberty, before he has reason to guide
him, is not the allowing him the privilege of his nature
to be free, but to thrust him out amongst brutes, and
abandon him to a state as wretched and as much beneath
that of a man as theirs. This is that which puts the
authority into the parents' hands to govern the minority
of their children. God hath made it their business to
employ this care on their offspring, and hath placed in
them suitable inclinations of tenderness and concern to
temper this power, to apply it as His wisdom designed it,
to the children's good as long as they should need to be
under it.
64. But what reason can hence advance this care of the
parents due to their offspring into an absolute,
arbitrary dominion of the father, whose power reaches no
farther than by such a discipline as he finds most
effectual to give such strength and health to their
bodies, such vigour and rectitude to their minds, as may
best fit his children to be most useful to themselves and
others, and, if it be necessary to his condition, to make
them work when they are able for their own subsistence;
but in this power the mother, too, has her share with the
father.
65. Nay, this power so little belongs to the father by
any peculiar right of Nature, but only as he is guardian
of his children, that when he quits his care of them he
loses his power over them, which goes along with their
nourishment and education, to which it is inseparably
annexed, and belongs as much to the foster-father of an
exposed child as to the natural father of another. So
little power does the bare act of begetting give a man
over his issue, if all his care ends there, and this be
all the title he hath to the name and authority of a
father. And what will become of this paternal power in
that part of the world where one woman hath more than one
husband at a time? or in those parts of America where,
when the husband and wife part, which happens frequently,
the children are all left to the mother, follow her, and
are wholly under her care and provision? And if the
father die whilst the children are young, do they not
naturally everywhere owe the same obedience to their
mother, during their minority, as to their father, were
he alive? And will any one say that the mother hath a
legislative power over her children that she can make
standing rules which shall be of perpetual obligation, by
which they ought to regulate all the concerns of their
property, and bound their liberty all the course of their
lives, and enforce the observation of them with capital
punishments? For this is the proper power of the
magistrate, of which the father hath not so much as the
shadow. His command over his children is but temporary,
and reaches not their life or property. It is but a help
to the weakness and imperfection of their nonage, a
discipline necessary to their education. And though a
father may dispose of his own possessions as he pleases
when his children are out of danger of perishing for
want, yet his power extends not to the lives or goods
which either their own industry, or another's bounty, has
made theirs, nor to their liberty neither when they are
once arrived to the enfranchisement of the years of
discretion. The father's empire then ceases, and he can
from thenceforward no more dispose of the liberty of his
son than that of any other man. And it must be far from
an absolute or perpetual jurisdiction from which a man
may withdraw himself, having licence from Divine
authority to "leave father and mother and cleave to his
wife."
66. But though there be a time when a child comes to be
as free from subjection to the will and command of his
father as he himself is free from subjection to the will
of anybody else, and they are both under no other
restraint but that which is common to them both, whether
it be the law of Nature or municipal law of their
country, yet this freedom exempts not a son from that
honour which he ought, by the law of God and Nature, to
pay his parents, God having made the parents instruments
in His great design of continuing the race of mankind and
the occasions of life to their children. As He hath laid
on them an obligation to nourish, preserve, and bring up
their offspring, so He has laid on the children a
perpetual obligation of honouring their parents, which,
containing in it an inward esteem and reverence to be
shown by all outward expressions, ties up the child from
anything that may ever injure or affront, disturb or
endanger the happiness or life of those from whom he
received his, and engages him in all actions of defence,
relief, assistance, and comfort of those by whose means
he entered into being and has been made capable of any
enjoyments of life. From this obligation no state, no
freedom, can absolve children. But this is very far from
giving parents a power of command over their children, or
an authority to make laws and dispose as they please of
their lives or liberties. It is one thing to owe honour,
respect, gratitude, and assistance; another to require an
absolute obedience and submission. The honour due to
parents a monarch on his throne owes his mother, and yet
this lessens not his authority nor subjects him to her
government.
67. The subjection of a minor places in the father a
temporary government which terminates with the minority
of the child; and the honour due from a child places in
the parents a perpetual right to respect, reverence,
support, and compliance, to more or less, as the father's
care, cost, and kindness in his education has been more
or less, and this ends not with minority, but holds in
all parts and conditions of a man's life. The want of
distinguishing these two powers which the father hath, in
the right of tuition, during minority, and the right of
honour all his life, may perhaps have caused a great part
of the mistakes about this matter. For, to speak properly
of them, the first of these is rather the privilege of
children and duty of parents than any prerogative of
paternal power. The nourishment and education of their
children is a charge so incumbent on parents for their
children's good, that nothing can absolve them from
taking care of it. And though the power of commanding and
chastising them go along with it, yet God hath woven into
the principles of human nature such a tenderness for
their offspring, that there is little fear that parents
should use their power with too much rigour; the excess
is seldom on the severe side, the strong bias of nature
drawing the other way. And therefore God Almighty, when
He would express His gentle dealing with the Israelites,
He tells them that though He chastened them, "He
chastened them as a man chastens his son" (Deut. 8. 5)-
i.e., with tenderness and affection, and kept them under
no severer discipline than what was absolutely best for
them, and had been less kindness, to have slackened. This
is that power to which children are commanded obedience,
that the pains and care of their parents may not be
increased or ill-rewarded.
68. On the other side, honour and support all that which
gratitude requires to return; for the benefits received
by and from them is the indispensable duty of the child
and the proper privilege of the parents. This is intended
for the parents' advantage, as the other is for the
child's; though education, the parents' duty, seems to
have most power, because the ignorance and infirmities of
childhood stand in need of restraint and correction,
which is a visible exercise of rule and a kind of
dominion. And that duty which is comprehended in the word
"honour" requires less obedience, though the obligation
be stronger on grown than younger children. For who can
think the command, "Children, obey your parents,"
requires in a man that has children of his own the same
submission to his father as it does in his yet young
children to him, and that by this precept he were bound
to obey all his father's commands, if, out of a conceit
of authority, he should have the indiscretion to treat
him still as a boy?
69. The first part, then, of paternal power, or rather
duty, which is education, belongs so to the father that
it terminates at a certain season. When the business of
education is over it ceases of itself, and is also
alienable before. For a man may put the tuition of his
son in other hands; and he that has made his son an
apprentice to another has discharged him, during that
time, of a great part of his obedience, both to himself
and to his mother. But all the duty of honour, the other
part, remains nevertheless entire to them; nothing can
cancel that. It is so inseparable from them both, that
the father's authority cannot dispossess the mother of
this right, nor can any man discharge his son from
honouring her that bore him. But both these are very far
from a power to make laws, and enforcing them with
penalties that may reach estate, liberty, limbs, and
life. The power of commanding ends with nonage, and
though after that honour and respect, support and
defence, and whatsoever gratitude can oblige a man to,
for the highest benefits he is naturally capable of be
always due from a son to his parents, yet all this puts
no sceptre into the father's hand, no sovereign power of
commanding. He has no dominion over his son's property or
actions, nor any right that his will should prescribe to
his son's in all things; however, it may become his son
in many things, not very inconvenient to him and his
family, to pay a deference to it.
70. A man may owe honour and respect to an ancient or
wise man, defence to his child or friend, relief and
support to the distressed, and gratitude to a benefactor,
to such a degree that all he has, all he can do, cannot
sufficiently pay it. But all these give no authority, no
right of making laws to any one over him from whom they
are owing. And it is plain all this is due, not to the
bare title of father, not only because as has been said,
it is owing to the mother too, but because these
obligations to parents, and the degrees of what is
required of children, may be varied by the different care
and kindness trouble and expense, is often employed upon
one child more than another.
71. This shows the reason how it comes to pass that
parents in societies, where they themselves are subjects,
retain a power over their children and have as much right
to their subjection as those who are in the state of
Nature, which could not possibly be if all political
power were only paternal, and that, in truth, they were
one and the same thing; for then, all paternal power
being in the prince, the subject could naturally have
none of it. But these two powers, political and paternal,
are so perfectly distinct and separate, and built upon so
different foundations, and given to so different ends,
that every subject that is a father has as much a
paternal power over his children as the prince has over
his. And every prince that has parents owes them as much
filial duty and obedience as the meanest of his subjects
do to theirs, and can therefore contain not any part or
degree of that kind of dominion which a prince or
magistrate has over his subject.
72. Though the obligation on the parents to bring up
their children, and the obligation on children to honour
their parents, contain all the power, on the one hand,
and submission on the other, which are proper to this
relation, yet there is another power ordinarily in the
father, whereby he has a tie on the obedience of his
children, which, though it be common to him with other
men, yet the occasions of showing it, almost constantly
happening to fathers in their private families and in
instances of it elsewhere being rare, and less taken
notice of, it passes in the world for a part of "paternal
jurisdiction." And this is the power men generally have
to bestow their estates on those who please them best.
The possession of the father being the expectation and
inheritance of the children ordinarily, in certain
proportions, according to the law and custom of each
country, yet it is commonly in the father's power to
bestow it with a more sparing or liberal hand, according
as the behaviour of this or that child hath comported
with his will and humour.
73. This is no small tie to the obedience of children;
and there being always annexed to the enjoyment of land a
submission to the government of the country of which that
land is a part, it has been commonly supposed that a
father could oblige his posterity to that government of
which he himself was a subject, that his compact held
them; whereas, it being only a necessary condition
annexed to the land which is under that government,
reaches only those who will take it on that condition,
and so is no natural tie or engagement, but a voluntary
submission; for every man's children being, by Nature, as
free as himself or any of his ancestors ever were, may,
whilst they are in that freedom, choose what society they
will join themselves to, what commonwealth they will put
themselves under. But if they will enjoy the inheritance
of their ancestors, they must take it on the same terms
their ancestors had it, and submit to all the conditions
annexed to such a possession. By this power, indeed,
fathers oblige their children to obedience to themselves
even when they are past minority, and most commonly, too,
subject them to this or that political power. But neither
of these by any peculiar right of fatherhood, but by the
reward they have in their hands to enforce and recompense
such a compliance, and is no more power than what a
Frenchman has over an Englishman, who, by the hopes of an
estate he will leave him, will certainly have a strong
tie on his obedience; and if when it is left him, he will
enjoy it, he must certainly take it upon the conditions
annexed to the possession of land in that country where
it lies, whether it be France or England.
74. To conclude, then, though the father's power of
commanding extends no farther than the minority of his
children, and to a degree only fit for the discipline and
government of that age; and though that honour and
respect, and all that which the Latins called piety,
which they indispensably owe to their parents all their
lifetime, and in all estates, with all that support and
defence, is due to them, gives the father no power of
governing- i.e., making laws and exacting penalties on
his children; though by this he has no dominion over the
property or actions of his son, yet it is obvious to
conceive how easy it was, in the first ages of the world,
and in places still where the thinness of people gives
families leave to separate into unpossessed quarters, and
they have room to remove and plant themselves in yet
vacant habitations, for the father of the family to
become the prince of it;* he had been a ruler from the
beginning of the infancy of his children; and when they
were grown up, since without some government it would be
hard for them to live together, it was likeliest it
should, by the express or tacit consent of the children,
be in the father, where it seemed, without any change,
barely to continue. And when, indeed, nothing more was
required to it than the permitting the father to exercise
alone in his family that executive power of the law of
Nature which every free man naturally hath, and by that
permission resigning up to him a monarchical power whilst
they remained in it. But that this was not by any
paternal right, but only by the consent of his children,
is evident from hence, that nobody doubts but if a
stranger, whom chance or business had brought to his
family, had there killed any of his children, or
committed any other act, he might condemn and put him to
death, or otherwise have punished him as well as any of
his children. which was impossible he should do by virtue
of any paternal authority over one who was not his child,
but by virtue of that executive power of the law of
Nature which, as a man, he had a right to; and he alone
could punish him in his family where the respect of his
children had laid by the exercise of such a power, to
give way to the dignity and authority they were willing
should remain in him above the rest of his family.
75. Thus it was easy and almost natural for children, by
a tacit and almost natural consent, to make way for the
father's authority and government. They had been
accustomed in their childhood to follow his direction,
and to refer their little differences to him; and when
they were men, who was fitter to rule them? Their little
properties and less covetousness seldom afforded greater
controversies; and when any should arise, where could
they have a fitter umpire than he, by whose care they had
every one been sustained and brought up. and who had a
tenderness for them all? It is no wonder that they made
no distinction betwixt minority and full age, nor looked
after one-and-twenty, or any other age, that might make
them the free disposers of themselves and fortunes, when
they could have no desire to be out of their pupilage.
The government they had been under during it continued
still to be more their protection than restraint; and
they could nowhere find a greater security to their
peace, liberties, and fortunes than in the rule of a
father.
76. Thus the natural fathers of families, by an
insensible change, became the politic monarchs of them
too; and as they chanced to live long, and leave able and
worthy heirs for several successions or otherwise, so
they laid the foundations of hereditary or elective
kingdoms under several constitutions and manors,
according as chance, contrivance, or occasions happened
to mould them. But if princes have their titles in the
father's right, and it be a sufficient proof of the
natural right of fathers to political authority, because
they commonly were those in whose hands we find, de
facto, the exercise of government, I say, if this
argument be good, it will as strongly prove that all
princes, nay, princes only, ought to be priests, since it
is as certain that in the beginning "the father of the
family was priest, as that he was ruler in his own
household."
Of Political or Civil Society
77. GOD, having made man such a creature that, in His
own judgment, it was not good for him to be alone, put
him under strong obligations of necessity, convenience,
and inclination, to drive him into society, as well as
fitted him with understanding and language to continue
and enjoy it. The first society was between man and wife,
which gave beginning to that between parents and
children, to which, in time, that between master and
servant came to be added. And though all these might, and
commonly did, meet together, and make up but one family,
wherein the master or mistress of it had some sort of
rule proper to a family, each of these, or all together,
came short of "political society," as we shall see if we
consider the different ends, ties, and bounds of each of
these.
78. Conjugal society is made by a voluntary compact
between man and woman, and though it consist chiefly in
such a communion and right in one another's bodies as is
necessary to its chief end, procreation, yet it draws
with it mutual support and assistance, and a communion of
interests too, as necessary not only to unite their care
and affection, but also necessary to their common
offspring, who have a right to be nourished and
maintained by them till they are able to provide for
themselves.
79. For the end of conjunction between male and female
being not barely procreation, but the continuation of the
species, this conjunction betwixt male and female ought
to last, even after procreation, so long as is necessary
to the nourishment and support of the young ones, who are
to be sustained by those that got them till they are able
to shift and provide for themselves. This rule, which the
infinite wise Maker hath set to the works of His hands,
we find the inferior creatures steadily obey. In those
vivaporous animals which feed on grass the conjunction
between male and female lasts no longer than the very act
of copulation, because the teat of the dam being
sufficient to nourish the young till it be able to feed
on grass. the male only begets, but concerns not himself
for the female or young, to whose sustenance he can
contribute nothing. But in beasts of prey the conjunction
lasts longer because the dam, not being able well to
subsist herself and nourish her numerous offspring by her
own prey alone (a more laborious as well as more
dangerous way of living than by feeding on grass), the
assistance of the male is necessary to the maintenance of
their common family, which cannot subsist till they are
able to prey for themselves, but by the joint care of
male and female. The same is observed in all birds
(except some domestic ones, where plenty of food excuses
the cock from feeding and taking care of the young
brood), whose young, needing food in the nest, the cock
and hen continue mates till the young are able to use
their wings and provide for themselves.
80. And herein, I think, lies the chief, if not the only
reason, why the male and female in mankind are tied to a
longer conjunction than other creatures- viz., because
the female is capable of conceiving, and, de facto, is
commonly with child again, and brings forth too a new
birth, long before the former is out of a dependency for
support on his parents' help and able to shift for
himself and has all the assistance due to him from his
parents, whereby the father, who is bound to take care
for those he hath begot, is under an obligation to
continue in conjugal society with the same woman longer
than other creatures, whose young, being able to subsist
of themselves before the time of procreation returns
again, the conjugal bond dissolves of itself, and they
are at liberty till Hymen, at his usual anniversary
season, summons them again to choose new mates. Wherein
one cannot but admire the wisdom of the great Creator,
who, having given to man an ability to lay up for the
future as well as supply the present necessity, hath made
it necessary that society of man and wife should be more
lasting than of male and female amongst other creatures,
that so their industry might be encouraged, and their
interest better united, to make provision and lay up
goods for their common issue, which uncertain mixture, or
easy and frequent solutions of conjugal society, would
mightily disturb.
81. But though these are ties upon mankind which make the
conjugal bonds more firm and lasting in a man than the
other species of animals, yet it would give one reason to
inquire why this compact, where procreation and education
are secured and inheritance taken care for, may not be
made determinable, either by consent, or at a certain
time, or upon certain conditions, as well as any other
voluntary compacts, there being no necessity, in the
nature of the thing, nor to the ends of it, that it
should always be for life- I mean, to such as are under
no restraint of any positive law which ordains all such
contracts to be perpetual.
82. But the husband and wife, though they have but one
common concern, yet having different understandings, will
unavoidably sometimes have different wills too. It
therefore being necessary that the last determination
(i.e., the rule) should be placed somewhere, it naturally
falls to the man's share as the abler and the stronger.
But this, reaching but to the things of their common
interest and property, leaves the wife in the full and
true possession of what by contract is her peculiar
right, and at least gives the husband no more power over
her than she has over his life; the power of the husband
being so far from that of an absolute monarch that the
wife has, in many cases, a liberty to separate from him
where natural right or their contract allows it, whether
that contract be made by themselves in the state of
Nature or by the customs or laws of the country they live
in, and the children, upon such separation, fall to the
father or mother's lot as such contract does determine.
83. For all the ends of marriage being to be obtained
under politic government, as well as in the state of
Nature, the civil magistrate doth not abridge the right
or power of either, naturally necessary to those ends-
viz., procreation and mutual support and assistance
whilst they are together, but only decides any
controversy that may arise between man and wife about
them. If it were otherwise, and that absolute sovereignty
and power of life and death naturally belonged to the
husband, and were necessary to the society between man
and wife, there could be no matrimony in any of these
countries where the husband is allowed no such absolute
authority. But the ends of matrimony requiring no such
power in the husband, it was not at all necessary to it.
The condition of conjugal society put it not in him; but
whatsoever might consist with procreation and support of
the children till they could shift for themselves- mutual
assistance, comfort, and maintenance- might be varied and
regulated by that contract which first united them in
that society, nothing being necessary to any society that
is not necessary to the ends for which it is made.
84. The society betwixt parents and children, and the
distinct rights and powers belonging respectively to
them, I have treated of so largely in the foregoing
chapter that I shall not here need to say anything of it;
and I think it is plain that it is far different from a
politic society.
85. Master and servant are names as old as history, but
given to those of far different condition; for a free man
makes himself a servant to another by selling him for a
certain time the service he undertakes to do in exchange
for wages he is to receive; and though this commonly puts
him into the family of his master, and under the ordinary
discipline thereof, yet it gives the master but a
temporary power over him, and no greater than what is
contained in the contract between them. But there is
another sort of servant which by a peculiar name we call
slaves, who being captives taken in a just war are, by
the right of Nature, subjected to the absolute dominion
and arbitrary power of their masters. These men having,
as I say, forfeited their lives and, with it, their
liberties, and lost their estates, and being in the state
of slavery, not capable of any property, cannot in that
state be considered as any part of civil society, the
chief end whereof is the preservation of property.
86. Let us therefore consider a master of a family with
all these subordinate relations of wife, children,
servants and slaves, united under the domestic rule of a
family, with what resemblance soever it may have in its
order, offices, and number too, with a little
commonwealth, yet is very far from it both in its
constitution, power, and end; or if it must be thought a
monarchy, and the paterfamilias the absolute monarch in
it, absolute monarchy will have but a very shattered and
short power, when it is plain by what has been said
before, that the master of the family has a very distinct
and differently limited power both as to time and extent
over those several persons that are in it; for excepting
the slave (and the family is as much a family, and his
power as paterfamilias as great, whether there be any
slaves in his family or no) he has no legislative power
of life and death over any of them, and none too but what
a mistress of a family may have as well as he. And he
certainly can have no absolute power over the whole
family who has but a very limited one over every
individual in it. But how a family, or any other society
of men, differ from that which is properly political
society, we shall best see by considering wherein
political society itself consists.
87. Man being born, as has been proved, with a title to
perfect freedom and an uncontrolled enjoyment of all the
rights and privileges of the law of Nature, equally with
any other man, or number of men in the world, hath by
nature a power not only to preserve his property- that
is, his life, liberty, and estate, against the injuries
and attempts of other men, but to judge of and punish the
breaches of that law in others, as he is persuaded the
offence deserves, even with death itself, in crimes where
the heinousness of the fact, in his opinion, requires it.
But because no political society can be, nor subsist,
without having in itself the power to preserve the
property, and in order thereunto punish the offences of
all those of that society, there, and there only, is
political society where every one of the members hath
quitted this natural power, resigned it up into the hands
of the community in all cases that exclude him not from
appealing for protection to the law established by it.
And thus all private judgment of every particular member
being excluded, the community comes to be umpire, and by
understanding indifferent rules and men authorised by the
community for their execution, decides all the
differences that may happen between any members of that
society concerning any matter of right, and punishes
those offences which any member hath committed against
the society with such penalties as the law has
established; whereby it is easy to discern who are, and
are not, in political society together. Those who are
united into one body, and have a common established law
and judicature to appeal to, with authority to decide
controversies between them and punish offenders, are in
civil society one with another; but those who have no
such common appeal, I mean on earth, are still in the
state of Nature, each being where there is no other,
judge for himself and executioner; which is, as I have
before showed it, the perfect state of Nature.
88. And thus the commonwealth comes by a power to set
down what punishment shall belong to the several
transgressions they think worthy of it, committed amongst
the members of that society (which is the power of making
laws), as well as it has the power to punish any injury
done unto any of its members by any one that is not of it
(which is the power of war and peace); and all this for
the preservation of the property of all the members of
that society, as far as is possible. But though every man
entered into society has quitted his power to punish
offences against the law of Nature in prosecution of his
own private judgment, yet with the judgment of offences
which he has given up to the legislative, in all cases
where he can appeal to the magistrate, he has given up a
right to the commonwealth to employ his force for the
execution of the judgments of the commonwealth whenever
he shall be called to it, which, indeed, are his own
judgements, they being made by himself or his
representative. And herein we have the original of the
legislative and executive power of civil society, which
is to judge by standing laws how far offences are to be
punished when committed within the commonwealth; and also
by occasional judgments founded on the present
circumstances of the fact, how far injuries from without
are to be vindicated, and in both these to employ all the
force of all the members when there shall be need.
89. Wherever, therefore, any number of men so unite into
one society as to quit every one his executive power of
the law of Nature, and to resign it to the public, there
and there only is a political or civil society. And this
is done wherever any number of men, in the state of
Nature, enter into society to make one people one body
politic under one supreme government: or else when any
one joins himself to, and incorporates with any
government already made. For hereby he authorises the
society, or which is all one, the legislative thereof, to
make laws for him as the public good of the society shall
require, to the execution whereof his own assistance (as
to his own decrees) is due. And this puts men out of a
state of Nature into that of a commonwealth, by setting
up a judge on earth with authority to determine all the
controversies and redress the injuries that may happen to
any member of the commonwealth, which judge is the
legislative or magistrates appointed by it. And wherever
there are any number of men, however associated, that
have no such decisive power to appeal to, there they are
still in the state of Nature.
90. And hence it is evident that absolute monarchy, which
by some men is counted for the only government in the
world, is indeed inconsistent with civil society, and so
can be not form of civil government at all. For the end
of civil society being to avoid and remedy those
inconveniences of the state of Nature which necessarily
follow from every man's being judge in his own case, by
setting up a known authority to which every one of that
society may appeal upon any injury received, or
controversy that may arise, and which every one of the
society ought to obey.* Wherever any persons are who have
not such an authority to appeal to, and decide any
difference between them there, those persons are still in
the state of Nature. And so is every absolute prince in
respect of those who are under his dominion.
91. For he being supposed to have all, both legislative
and executive, power in himself alone, there is no judge
to be found, no appeal lies open to any one, who may
fairly and indifferently, and with authority decide, and
from whence relief and redress may be expected of any
injury or inconveniency that may be suffered from him, or
by his order. So that such a man, however entitled, Czar,
or Grand Signior, or how you please, is as much in the
state of Nature, with all under his dominion, as he is
with the rest of mankind. For wherever any two men are,
who have no standing rule and common judge to appeal to
on earth, for the determination of controversies of right
betwixt them, there they are still in the state of
Nature, and under all the inconveniencies of it, with
only this woeful difference to the subject, or rather
slave of an absolute prince.* That whereas, in the
ordinary state of Nature, he has a liberty to judge of
his right, according to the best of his power to maintain
it; but whenever his property is invaded by the will and
order of his monarch, he has not only no appeal, as those
in society ought to have, but, as if he were degraded
from the common state of rational creatures, is denied a
liberty to judge of, or defend his right, and so is
exposed to all the misery and inconveniencies that a man
can fear from one, who being in the unrestrained state of
Nature, is yet corrupted with flattery and armed with
power.
92. For he that thinks absolute power purifies men's
blood, and corrects the baseness of human nature, need
read but the history of this, or any other age, to be
convinced to the contrary. He that would have been
insolent and injurious in the woods of America would not
probably be much better on a throne, where perhaps
learning and religion shall be found out to justify all
that he shall do to his subjects, and the sword presently
silence all those that dare question it. For what the
protection of absolute monarchy is, what kind of fathers
of their countries it makes princes to be, and to what a
degree of happiness and security it carries civil
society, where this sort of government is grown to
perfection, he that will look into the late relation of
Ceylon may easily see.
93. In absolute monarchies, indeed, as well as other
governments of the world, the subjects have an appeal to
the law, and judges to decide any controversies, and
restrain any violence that may happen betwixt the
subjects themselves, one amongst another. This every one
thinks necessary, and believes; he deserves to be thought
a declared enemy to society and mankind who should go
about to take it away. But whether this be from a true
love of mankind and society, and such a charity as we owe
all one to another, there is reason to doubt. For this is
no more than what every man, who loves his own power,
profit, or greatness, may, and naturally must do, keep
those animals from hurting or destroying one another who
labour and drudge only for his pleasure and advantage;
and so are taken care of, not out of any love the master
has for them, but love of himself, and the profit they
bring him. For if it be asked what security, what fence
is there in such a state against the violence and
oppression of this absolute ruler, the very question can
scarce be borne. They are ready to tell you that it
deserves death only to ask after safety. Betwixt subject
and subject, they will grant, there must be measures,
laws, and judges for their mutual peace and security. But
as for the ruler, he ought to be absolute, and is above
all such circumstances; because he has a power to do more
hurt and wrong, it is right when he does it. To ask how
you may be guarded from or injury on that side, where the
strongest hand is to do it, is presently the voice of
faction and rebellion. As if when men, quitting the state
of Nature, entered into society, they agreed that all of
them but one should be under the restraint of laws; but
that he should still retain all the liberty of the state
of Nature, increased with power, and made licentious by
impunity. This is to think that men are so foolish that
they take care to avoid what mischiefs may be done them
by polecats or foxes, but are content, nay, think it
safety, to be devoured by lions.
94. But, whatever flatterers may talk to amuse people's
understandings, it never hinders men from feeling; and
when they perceive that any man, in what station soever,
is out of the bounds of the civil society they are of,
and that they have no appeal, on earth, against any harm
they may receive from him, they are apt to think
themselves in the state of Nature, in respect of him whom
they find to be so; and to take care, as soon as they
can, to have that safety and security, in civil society,
for which it was first instituted, and for which only
they entered into it. And therefore, though perhaps at
first, as shall be showed more at large hereafter, in the
following part of this discourse, some one good and
excellent man having got a pre-eminency amongst the rest,
had this deference paid to his goodness and virtue, as to
a kind of natural authority, that the chief rule, with
arbitration of their differences, by a tacit consent
devolved into his hands, without any other caution but
the assurance they had of his uprightness and wisdom; yet
when time giving authority, and, as some men would
persuade us, sacredness to customs, which the negligent
and unforeseeing innocence of the first ages began, had
brought in successors of another stamp, the people
finding their properties not secure under the government
as then it was* (whereas government has no other end but
the preservation of property), could never be safe, nor
at rest, nor think themselves in civil society, till the
legislative was so placed in collective bodies of men,
call them senate, parliament, or what you please, by
which means every single person became subject equally
with other the meanest men, to those laws, which he
himself, as part of the legislative, had established; nor
could any one, by his own authority, avoid the force of
the law, when once made, nor by any pretence of
superiority plead exemption, thereby to license his own,
or the miscarriages of any of his dependants. No man in
civil society can be exempted from the laws of it. For if
any man may do what he thinks fit and there be no appeal
on earth for redress or security against any harm he
shall do, I ask whether he be not perfectly still in the
state of Nature, and so can be no part or member of that
civil society, unless any one will say the state of
Nature and civil society are one and the same thing,
which I have never yet found any one so great a patron of
anarchy as to affirm.*
Of the Beginning of Political Societies
95. MEN being, as has been said, by nature all free,
equal, and independent, no one can be put out of this
estate and subjected to the political power of another
without his own consent, which is done by agreeing with
other men, to join and unite into a community for their
comfortable, safe, and peaceable living, one amongst
another, in a secure enjoyment of their properties, and a
greater security against any that are not of it. This any
number of men may do, because it injures not the freedom
of the rest; they are left, as they were, in the liberty
of the state of Nature. When any number of men have so
consented to make one community or government, they are
thereby presently incorporated, and make one body
politic, wherein the majority have a right to act and
conclude the rest.
96. For, when any number of men have, by the consent of
every individual, made a community, they have thereby
made that community one body, with a power to act as one
body, which is only by the will and determination of the
majority. For that which acts any community, being only
the consent of the individuals of it, and it being one
body, must move one way, it is necessary the body should
move that way whither the greater force carries it, which
is the consent of the majority, or else it is impossible
it should act or continue one body, one community, which
the consent of every individual that united into it
agreed that it should; and so every one is bound by that
consent to be concluded by the majority. And therefore we
see that in assemblies empowered to act by positive laws
where no number is set by that positive law which
empowers them, the act of the majority passes for the act
of the whole, and of course determines as having, by the
law of Nature and reason, the power of the whole.
97. And thus every man, by consenting with others to make
one body politic under one government, puts himself under
an obligation to every one of that society to submit to
the determination of the majority, and to be concluded by
it; or else this original compact, whereby he with others
incorporates into one society, would signify nothing, and
be no compact if he be left free and under no other ties
than he was in before in the state of Nature. For what
appearance would there be of any compact? What new
engagement if he were no farther tied by any decrees of
the society than he himself thought fit and did actually
consent to? This would be still as great a liberty as he
himself had before his compact, or any one else in the
state of Nature, who may submit himself and consent to
any acts of it if he thinks fit.
98. For if the consent of the majority shall not in
reason be received as the act of the whole, and conclude
every individual, nothing but the consent of every
individual can make anything to be the act of the whole,
which, considering the infirmities of health and
avocations of business, which in a number though much
less than that of a commonwealth, will necessarily keep
many away from the public assembly; and the variety of
opinions and contrariety of interests which unavoidably
happen in all collections of men, it is next impossible
ever to be had. And, therefore, if coming into society be
upon such terms, it will be only like Cato's coming into
the theatre, tantum ut exiret. Such a constitution as
this would make the mighty leviathan of a shorter
duration than the feeblest creatures, and not let it
outlast the day it was born in, which cannot be supposed
till we can think that rational creatures should desire
and constitute societies only to be dissolved. For where
the majority cannot conclude the rest, there they cannot
act as one body, and consequently will be immediately
dissolved again.
99. Whosoever, therefore, out of a state of Nature unite
into a community, must be understood to give up all the
power necessary to the ends for which they unite into
society to the majority of the community, unless they
expressly agreed in any number greater than the majority.
And this is done by barely agreeing to unite into one
political society, which is all the compact that is, or
needs be, between the individuals that enter into or make
up a commonwealth. And thus, that which begins and
actually constitutes any political society is nothing but
the consent of any number of freemen capable of majority,
to unite and incorporate into such a society. And this is
that, and that only, which did or could give beginning to
any lawful government in the world.
100. To this I find two objections made: 1. That there
are no instances to be found in story of a company of
men, independent and equal one amongst another, that met
together, and in this way began and set up a government.
2. It is impossible of right that men should do so,
because all men, being born under government, they are to
submit to that, and are not at liberty to begin a new
one.
101. To the first there is this to answer: That it is not
at all to be wondered that history gives us but a very
little account of men that lived together in the state of
Nature. The inconveniencies of that condition, and the
love and want of society, no sooner brought any number of
them together, but they presently united and in
corporated if they designed to continue together. And if
we may not suppose men ever to have been in the state of
Nature, because we hear not much of them in such a state,
we may as well suppose the armies of Salmanasser or
Xerxes were never children, because we hear little of
them till they were men and embodied in armies.
Government is everywhere antecedent to records, and
letters seldom come in amongst a people till a long
continuation of civil society has, by other more
necessary arts, provided for their safety, ease, and
plenty. And then they begin to look after the history of
their founders, and search into their original when they
have outlived the memory of it. For it is with
commonwealths as with particular persons, they are
commonly ignorant of their own births and infancies; and
if they know anything of it, they are beholding for it to
the accidental records that others have kept of it. And
those that we have of the beginning of any polities in
the world, excepting that of the Jews, where God Himself
immediately interposed, and which favours not at all
paternal dominion, are all either plain instances of such
a beginning as I have mentioned, or at least have
manifest footsteps of it.
102. He must show a strange inclination to deny evident
matter of fact, when it agrees not with his hypothesis,
who will not allow that the beginning of Rome and Venice
were by the uniting together of several men, free and
independent one of another, amongst whom there was no
natural superiority or subjection. And if Josephus
Acosta's word may be taken, he tells us that in many
parts of America there was no government at all. "There
are great and apparent conjectures," says he, "that these
men [speaking of those of Peru] for a long time had
neither kings nor commonwealths, but lived in troops, as
they do this day in Florida- the Cheriquanas, those of
Brazil, and many other nations, which have no certain
kings, but, as occasion is offered in peace or war, they
choose their captains as they please" (lib. i. cap. 25).
If it be said, that every man there was born subject to
his father, or the head of his family. that the
subjection due from a child to a father took away not his
freedom of uniting into what political society he thought
fit, has been already proved; but be that as it will,
these men, it is evident, were actually free; and
whatever superiority some politicians now would place in
any of them, they themselves claimed it not; but, by
consent, were all equal, till, by the same consent, they
set rulers over themselves. So that their politic
societies all began from a voluntary union, and the
mutual agreement of men freely acting in the choice of
their governors and forms of government.
103. And I hope those who went away from Sparta, with
Palantus, mentioned by Justin, will be allowed to have
been freemen independent one of another, and to have set
up a government over themselves by their own consent.
Thus I have given several examples out of history of
people, free and in the state of Nature, that, being met
together, incorporated and began a commonwealth. And if
the want of such instances be an argument to prove that
government were not nor could not be so begun, I suppose
the contenders for paternal empire were better let it
alone than urge it against natural liberty; for if they
can give so many instances out of history of governments
begun upon paternal right, I think (though at least an
argument from what has been to what should of right be of
no great force) one might, without any great danger,
yield them the cause. But if I might advise them in the
case, they would do well not to search too much into the
original of governments as they have begun de facto, lest
they should find at the foundation of most of them
something very little favourable to the design they
promote, and such a power as they contend for.
104. But, to conclude: reason being plain on our side
that men are naturally free; and the examples of history
showing that the governments of the world, that were
begun in peace, had their beginning laid on that
foundation, and were made by the consent of the people;
there can be little room for doubt, either where the
right is, or what has been the opinion or practice of
mankind about the first erecting of governments.
105. I will not deny that if we look back, as far as
history will direct us, towards the original of
commonwealths, we shall generally find them under the
government and administration of one man. And I am also
apt to believe that where a family was numerous enough to
subsist by itself, and continued entire together, without
mixing with others, as it often happens, where there is
much land and few people, the government commonly began
in the father. For the father having, by the law of
Nature, the same power, with every man else, to punish,
as he thought fit, any offences against that law, might
thereby punish his transgressing children, even when they
were men, and out of their pupilage; and they were very
likely to submit to his punishment, and all join with him
against the offender in their turns, giving him thereby
power to execute his sentence against any transgression,
and so, in effect, make him the law-maker and governor
over all that remained in conjunction with his family. He
was fittest to be trusted; paternal affection secured
their property and interest under his care, and the
custom of obeying him in their childhood made it easier
to submit to him rather than any other. If, therefore,
they must have one to rule them, as government is hardly
to be avoided amongst men that live together, who so
likely to be the man as he that was their common father,
unless negligence, cruelty, or any other defect of mind
or body, made him unfit for it? But when either the
father died. and left his next heir- for want of age,
wisdom, courage, or any other qualities- less fit for
rule, or where several families met and consented to
continue together, there, it is not to be doubted, but
they used their natural freedom to set up him whom they
judged the ablest and most likely to rule well over them.
Conformable hereunto we find the people of America, who-
living out of the reach of the conquering swords and
spreading domination of the two great empires of Peru and
Mexico- enjoyed their own natural freedom, though,
caeteris paribus, they commonly prefer the heir of their
deceased king; yet, if they find him any way weak or
incapable, they pass him by, and set up the stoutest and
bravest man for their ruler.
106. Thus, though looking back as far as records give us
any account of peopling the world, and the history of
nations, we commonly find the government to be in one
hand, yet it destroys not that which I affirm- viz., that
the beginning of politic society depends upon the consent
of the individuals to join into and make one society,
who, when they are thus incorporated, might set up what
form of government they thought fit. But this having
given occasion to men to mistake and think that, by
Nature, government was monarchical, and belonged to the
father, it may not be amiss here to consider why people,
in the beginning, generally pitched upon this form,
which, though perhaps the father's pre-eminency might, in
the first institution of some commonwealths, give a rise
to and place in the beginning the power in one hand, yet
it is plain that the reason that continued the form of
government in a single person was not any regard or
respect to paternal authority, since all petty
monarchies- that is, almost all monarchies, near their
original, have been commonly, at least upon occasion,
elective.
107. First, then, in the beginning of things, the
father's government of the childhood of those sprung from
him having accustomed them to the rule of one man, and
taught them that where it was exercised with care and
skill, with affection and love to those under it, it was
sufficient to procure and preserve men (all the political
happiness they sought for in society), it was no wonder
that they should pitch upon and naturally run into that
form of government which, from their infancy, they had
been all accustomed to, and which, by experience, they
had found both easy and safe. To which if we add, that
monarchy being simple and most obvious to men, whom
neither experience had instructed in forms of government,
nor the ambition or insolence of empire had taught to
beware of the encroachments of prerogative or the
inconveniencies of absolute power, which monarchy, in
succession, was apt to lay claim to and bring upon them;
it was not at all strange that they should not much
trouble themselves to think of methods of restraining any
exorbitances of those to whom they had given the
authority over them, and of balancing the power of
government by placing several parts of it in different
hands. They had neither felt the oppression of tyrannical
dominion, nor did the fashion of the age, nor their
possessions or way of living, which afforded little
matter for covetousness or ambition, give them any reason
to apprehend or provide against it; and, therefore, it is
no wonder they put themselves into such a frame of
government as was not only, as I said, most obvious and
simple, but also best suited to their present state and
condition, which stood more in need of defence against
foreign invasions and injuries than of multiplicity of
laws where there was but very little property, and wanted
not variety of rulers and abundance of officers to direct
and look after their execution where there were but few
trespassers and few offenders. Since, then, those who
liked one another so well as to join into society cannot
but be supposed to have some acquaintance and friendship
together, and some trust one in another, they could not
but have greater apprehensions of others than of one
another; and, therefore, their first care and thought
cannot but be supposed to be, how to secure themselves
against foreign force. It was natural for them to put
themselves under a frame of government which might best
serve to that end, and choose the wisest and bravest man
to conduct them in their wars and lead them out against
their enemies, and in this chiefly be their ruler.
108. Thus we see that the kings of the Indians, in
America, which is still a pattern of the first ages in
Asia and Europe, whilst the inhabitants were too few for
the country, and want of people and money gave men no
temptation to enlarge their possessions of land or
contest for wider extent of ground, are little more than
generals of their armies; and though they command
absolutely in war, yet at home, and in time of peace,
they exercise very little dominion, and have but a very
moderate sovereignty, the resolutions of peace and war
being ordinarily either in the people or in a council,
though the war itself, which admits not of pluralities of
governors, naturally evolves the command into the king's
sole authority.
109. And thus, in Israel itself, the chief business of
their judges and first kings seems to have been to be
captains in war and leaders of their armies, which
(besides what is signified by "going out and in before
the people," which was, to march forth to war and home
again at the heads of their forces) appears plainly in
the story of Jephtha. The Ammonites making war upon
Israel, the Gileadites, in fear, send to Jephtha, a
bastard of their family, whom they had cast off, and
article with him, if he will assist them against the
Ammonites, to make him their ruler, which they do in
these words: "And the people made him head and captain
over them" (Judges 11. 11), which was, as it seems, all
one as to be judge. "And he judged Israel" (Judges 12.
7)- that is, was their captain-general- "six years." So
when Jotham upbraids the Shechemites with the obligation
they had to Gideon, who had been their judge and ruler,
he tells them: "He fought for you, and adventured his
life for, and delivered you out of the hands of Midian"
(Judges 9. 17). Nothing mentioned of him but what he did
as a general, and, indeed, that is all is found in his
history, or in any of the rest of the judges. And
Abimelech particularly is called king, though at most he
was but their general. And when, being weary of the ill-
conduct of Samuel's sons, the children of Israel desired
a king, "like all the nations, to judge them, and to go
out before them, and to fight their battles" (1 Sam. 8.
20), God, granting their desire, says to Samuel, "I will
send thee a man, and thou shalt anoint him to be captain
over my people Israel, that he may save my people out of
the hands of the Philistines" (ch. 9. 16). As if the only
business of a king had been to lead out their armies and
fight in their defence; and, accordingly, at his
inauguration, pouring a vial of oil upon him, declares to
Saul that "the Lord had anointed him to be captain over
his inheritance" (ch. 10. 1). And therefore those who,
after Saul being solemnly chosen and saluted king by the
tribes at Mispah, were unwilling to have him their king,
make no other objection but this, "How shall this man
save us?" (ch. 10. 27), as if they should have said:
"This man is unfit to be our king, not having skill and
conduct enough in war to be able to defend us." And when
God resolved to transfer the government to David, it is
in these words: "But now thy kingdom shall not continue:
the Lord hath sought Him a man after His own heart, and
the Lord hath commanded him to be captain over His
people" (ch. 13. 14.). As if the whole kingly authority
were nothing else but to be their general; and therefore
the tribes who had stuck to Saul's family, and opposed
David's reign, when they came to Hebron with terms of
submission to him, they tell him, amongst other
arguments, they had to submit to him as to their king,
that he was, in effect, their king in Saul's time, and
therefore they had no reason but to receive him as their
king now. "Also," say they, "in time past, when Saul was
king over us, thou wast he that leddest out and
broughtest in Israel, and the Lord said unto thee, Thou
shalt feed my people Israel, and thou shalt be a captain
over Israel."
110. Thus, whether a family, by degrees, grew up into a
commonwealth, and the fatherly authority being continued
on to the elder son, every one in his turn growing up
under it tacitly submitted to it, and the easiness and
equality of it not offending any one, every one
acquiesced till time seemed to have confirmed it and
settled a right of succession by prescription; or whether
several families, or the descendants of several families,
whom chance, neighbourhood, or business brought together,
united into society; the need of a general whose conduct
might defend them against their enemies in war, and the
great confidence the innocence and sincerity of that poor
but virtuous age, such as are almost all those which
begin governments that ever come to last in the world,
gave men one of another, made the first beginners of
commonwealths generally put the rule into one man's hand,
without any other express limitation or restraint but
what the nature of the thing and the end of government
required. It was given them for the public good and
safety, and to those ends, in the infancies of
commonwealths, they commonly used it; and unless they had
done so, young societies could not have subsisted.
Without such nursing fathers, without this care of the
governors, all governments would have sunk under the
weakness and infirmities of their infancy, the prince and
the people had soon perished together.
111. But the golden age (though before vain ambition, and
amor sceleratus habendi, evil concupiscence had corrupted
men's minds into a mistake of true power and honour) had
more virtue, and consequently better governors, as well
as less vicious subjects; and there was then no
stretching prerogative on the one side to oppress the
people, nor, consequently, on the other, any dispute
about privilege, to lessen or restrain the power of the
magistrate; and so no contest betwixt rulers and people
about governors or government.* Yet, when ambition and
luxury, in future ages, would retain and increase the
power, without doing the business for which it was given,
and aided by flattery, taught princes to have distinct
and separate interests from their people, men found it
necessary to examine more carefully the original and
rights of government, and to find out ways to restrain
the exorbitances and prevent the abuses of that power,
which they having entrusted in another's hands, only for
their own good, they found was made use of to hurt them.
112. Thus we may see how probable it is that people that
were naturally free, and, by their own consent, either
submitted to the government of their father, or united
together, out of different families, to make a
government, should generally put the rule into one man's
hands, and choose to be under the conduct of a single
person, without so much, as by express conditions,
limiting or regulating his power, which they thought safe
enough in his honesty and prudence; though they never
dreamed of monarchy being jure Divino, which we never
heard of among mankind till it was revealed to us by the
divinity of this last age, nor ever allowed paternal
power to have a right to dominion or to be the foundation
of all government. And thus much may suffice to show
that, as far as we have any light from history, we have
reason to conclude that all peaceful beginnings of
government have been laid in the consent of the people. I
say "peaceful," because I shall have occasion, in another
place, to speak of conquest, which some esteem a way of
beginning of governments.
The other objection, I find, urged against the beginning
of polities, in the way I have mentioned, is this, viz.:
113. "That all men being born under government, some or
other, it is impossible any of them should ever be free
and at liberty to unite together and begin a new one, or
ever be able to erect a lawful government." If this
argument be good, I ask, How came so many lawful
monarchies into the world? For if anybody, upon this
supposition, can show me any one man, in any age of the
world, free to begin a lawful monarchy, I will be bound
to show him ten other free men at liberty, at the same
time, to unite and begin a new government under a regal
or any other form. It being demonstration that if any one
born under the dominion of another may be so free as to
have a right to command others in a new and distinct
empire, every one that is born under the dominion of
another may be so free too, and may become a ruler or
subject of a distinct separate government. And so, by
this their own principle, either all men, however born,
are free, or else there is but one lawful prince, one
lawful government in the world; and then they have
nothing to do but barely to show us which that is, which,
when they have done, I doubt not but all mankind will
easily agree to pay obedience to him.
114. Though it be a sufficient answer to their objection
to show that it involves them in the same difficulties
that it doth those they use it against, yet I shall
endeavour to discover the weakness of this argument a
little farther.
"All men," say they, "are born under government, and
therefore they cannot be at liberty to begin a new one.
Every one is born a subject to his father or his prince,
and is therefore under the perpetual tie of subjection
and allegiance." It is plain mankind never owned nor
considered any such natural subjection that they were
born in, to one or to the other, that tied them, without
their own consents, to a subjection to them and their
heirs.
115. For there are no examples so frequent in history,
both sacred and profane, as those of men withdrawing
themselves and their obedience from the jurisdiction they
were born under, and the family or community they were
bred up in, and setting up new governments in other
places, from whence sprang all that number of petty
commonwealths in the beginning of ages, and which always
multiplied as long as there was room enough, till the
stronger or more fortunate swallowed the weaker; and
those great ones, again breaking to pieces, dissolved
into lesser dominions; all which are so many testimonies
against paternal sovereignty, and plainly prove that it
was not the natural right of the father descending to his
heirs that made governments in the beginning; since it
was impossible, upon that ground, there should have been
so many little kingdoms but only one universal monarchy
if men had not been at liberty to separate themselves
from their families and their government, be it what it
will that was set up in it, and go and make distinct
commonwealths and other governments as they thought fit.
116. This has been the practice of the world from its
first beginning to this day; nor is it now any more
hindrance to the freedom of mankind, that they are born
under constituted and ancient polities that have
established laws and set forms of government, than if
they were born in the woods amongst the unconfined
inhabitants that run loose in them. For those who would
persuade us that by being born under any government we
are naturally subjects to it, and have no more any title
or pretence to the freedom of the state of Nature, have
no other reason (bating that of paternal power, which we
have already answered) to produce for it, but only
because our fathers or progenitors passed away their
natural liberty, and thereby bound up themselves and
their posterity to a perpetual subjection to the
government which they themselves submitted to. It is true
that whatever engagements or promises any one made for
himself, he is under the obligation of them, but cannot
by any compact whatsoever bind his children or posterity.
For his son, when a man, being altogether as free as the
father, any act of the father can no more give away the
liberty of the son than it can of anybody else. He may,
indeed, annex such conditions to the land he enjoyed, as
a subject of any commonwealth, as may oblige his son to
be of that community, if he will enjoy those possessions
which were his father's, because that estate being his
father's property, he may dispose or settle it as he
pleases.
117. And this has generally given the occasion to the
mistake in this matter; because commonwealths not
permitting any part of their dominions to be dismembered,
nor to be enjoyed by any but those of their community,
the son cannot ordinarily enjoy the possessions of his
father but under the same terms his father did, by
becoming a member of the society, whereby he puts himself
presently under the government he finds there
established, as much as any other subject of that
commonweal. And thus the consent of free men, born under
government, which only makes them members of it, being
given separately in their turns, as each comes to be of
age, and not in a multitude together, people take no
notice of it, and thinking it not done at all, or not
necessary, conclude they are naturally subjects as they
are men.
118. But it is plain governments themselves understand it
otherwise; they claim no power over the son because of
that they had over the father; nor look on children as
being their subjects, by their fathers being so. If a
subject of England have a child by an Englishwoman in
France, whose subject is he? Not the King of England's;
for he must have leave to be admitted to the privileges
of it. Nor the King of France's, for how then has his
father a liberty to bring him away, and breed him as he
pleases; and whoever was judged as a traitor or deserter,
if he left, or warred against a country, for being barely
born in it of parents that were aliens there? It is
plain, then, by the practice of governments themselves,
as well as by the law of right reason, that a child is
born a subject of no country nor government. He is under
his father's tuition and authority till he come to age of
discretion, and then he is a free man, at liberty what
government he will put himself under, what body politic
he will unite himself to. For if an Englishman's son born
in France be at liberty, and may do so, it is evident
there is no tie upon him by his father being a subject of
that kingdom, nor is he bound up by any compact of his
ancestors; and why then hath not his son, by the same
reason, the same liberty, though he be born anywhere
else? Since the power that a father hath naturally over
his children is the same wherever they be born, and the
ties of natural obligations are not bounded by the
positive limits of kingdoms and commonwealths.
119. Every man being, as has been showed, naturally free,
and nothing being able to put him into subjection to any
earthly power, but only his own consent, it is to be
considered what shall be understood to be a sufficient
declaration of a man's consent to make him subject to the
laws of any government. There is a common distinction of
an express and a tacit consent, which will concern our
present case. Nobody doubts but an express consent of any
man, entering into any society, makes him a perfect
member of that society, a subject of that government. The
difficulty is, what ought to be looked upon as a tacit
consent, and how far it binds- i.e., how far any one
shall be looked on to have consented, and thereby
submitted to any government, where he has made no
expressions of it at all. And to this I say, that every
man that hath any possession or enjoyment of any part of
the dominions of any government doth hereby give his
tacit consent, and is as far forth obliged to obedience
to the laws of that government, during such enjoyment, as
any one under it, whether this his possession be of land
to him and his heirs for ever, or a lodging only for a
week; or whether it be barely travelling freely on the
highway; and, in effect, it reaches as far as the very
being of any one within the territories of that
government.
120. To understand this the better, it is fit to consider
that every man when he at first incorporates himself into
any commonwealth, he, by his uniting himself thereunto,
annexes also, and submits to the community those
possessions which he has, or shall acquire, that do not
already belong to any other government. For it would be a
direct contradiction for any one to enter into society
with others for the securing and regulating of property,
and yet to suppose his land, whose property is to be
regulated by the laws of the society, should be exempt
from the jurisdiction of that government to which he
himself, and the property of the land, is a subject. By
the same act, therefore, whereby any one unites his
person, which was before free, to any commonwealth, by
the same he unites his possessions, which were before
free, to it also; and they become, both of them, person
and possession, subject to the government and dominion of
that commonwealth as long as it hath a being. Whoever
therefore, from thenceforth, by inheritance, purchases
permission, or otherwise enjoys any part of the land so
annexed to, and under the government of that commonweal,
must take it with the condition it is under- that is, of
submitting to the government of the commonwealth, under
whose jurisdiction it is, as far forth as any subject of
it.
121. But since the government has a direct jurisdiction
only over the land and reaches the possessor of it
(before he has actually incorporated himself in the
society) only as he dwells upon and enjoys that, the
obligation any one is under by virtue of such enjoyment
to submit to the government begins and ends with the
enjoyment; so that whenever the owner, who has given
nothing but such a tacit consent to the government will,
by donation, sale or otherwise, quit the said possession,
he is at liberty to go and incorporate himself into any
other commonwealth, or agree with others to begin a new
one in vacuis locis, in any part of the world they can
find free and unpossessed; whereas he that has once, by
actual agreement and any express declaration, given his
consent to be of any commonweal, is perpetually and
indispensably obliged to be, and remain unalterably a
subject to it, and can never be again in the liberty of
the state of Nature, unless by any calamity the
government he was under comes to be dissolved.
122. But submitting to the laws of any country, living
quietly and enjoying privileges and protection under
them, makes not a man a member of that society; it is
only a local protection and homage due to and from all
those who, not being in a state of war, come within the
territories belonging to any government, to all parts
whereof the force of its law extends. But this no more
makes a man a member of that society, a perpetual subject
of that commonwealth, than it would make a man a subject
to another in whose family he found it convenient to
abide for some time, though, whilst he continued in it,
he were obliged to comply with the laws and submit to the
government he found there. And thus we see that
foreigners, by living all their lives under another
government, and enjoying the privileges and protection of
it, though they are bound, even in conscience, to submit
to its administration as far forth as any denizen, yet do
not thereby come to be subjects or members of that
commonwealth. Nothing can make any man so but his
actually entering into it by positive engagement and
express promise and compact. This is that which, I think,
concerning the beginning of political societies, and that
consent which makes any one a member of any commonwealth.
Of the Ends of Political Society and Government
123. IF man in the state of Nature be so free as has
been said, if he be absolute lord of his own person and
possessions, equal to the greatest and subject to nobody,
why will he part with his freedom, this empire, and
subject himself to the dominion and control of any other
power? To which it is obvious to answer, that though in
the state of Nature he hath such a right, yet the
enjoyment of it is very uncertain and constantly exposed
to the invasion of others; for all being kings as much as
he, every man his equal, and the greater part no strict
observers of equity and justice, the enjoyment of the
property he has in this state is very unsafe, very
insecure. This makes him willing to quit this condition
which, however free, is full of fears and continual
dangers; and it is not without reason that he seeks out
and is willing to join in society with others who are
already united, or have a mind to unite for the mutual
preservation of their lives, liberties and estates, which
I call by the general name- property.
124. The great and chief end, therefore, of men uniting
into commonwealths, and putting themselves under
government, is the preservation of their property; to
which in the state of Nature there are many things
wanting.
Firstly, there wants an established, settled, known law,
received and allowed by common consent to be the standard
of right and wrong, and the common measure to decide all
controversies between them. For though the law of Nature
be plain and intelligible to all rational creatures, yet
men, being biased by their interest, as well as ignorant
for want of study of it, are not apt to allow of it as a
law binding to them in the application of it to their
particular cases.
125. Secondly, in the state of Nature there wants a known
and indifferent judge, with authority to determine all
differences according to the established law. For every
one in that state being both judge and executioner of the
law of Nature, men being partial to themselves, passion
and revenge is very apt to carry them too far, and with
too much heat in their own cases, as well as negligence
and unconcernedness, make them too remiss in other men's.
126. Thirdly, in the state of Nature there often wants
power to back and support the sentence when right, and to
give it due execution. They who by any injustice offended
will seldom fail where they are able by force to make
good their injustice. Such resistance many times makes
the punishment dangerous, and frequently destructive to
those who attempt it.
127. Thus mankind, notwithstanding all the privileges of
the state of Nature, being but in an ill condition while
they remain in it are quickly driven into society. Hence
it comes to pass, that we seldom find any number of men
live any time together in this state. The inconveniencies
that they are therein exposed to by the irregular and
uncertain exercise of the power every man has of
punishing the transgressions of others, make them take
sanctuary under the established laws of government, and
therein seek the preservation of their property. It is
this that makes them so willingly give up every one his
single power of punishing to be exercised by such alone
as shall be appointed to it amongst them, and by such
rules as the community, or those authorised by them to
that purpose, shall agree on. And in this we have the
original right and rise of both the legislative and
executive power as well as of the governments and
societies themselves.
128. For in the state of Nature to omit the liberty he
has of innocent delights, a man has two powers. The first
is to do whatsoever he thinks fit for the preservation of
himself and others within the permission of the law of
Nature; by which law, common to them all, he and all the
rest of mankind are one community, make up one society
distinct from all other creatures, and were it not for
the corruption and viciousness of degenerate men, there
would be no need of any other, no necessity that men
should separate from this great and natural community,
and associate into lesser combinations. The other power a
man has in the state of Nature is the power to punish the
crimes committed against that law. Both these he gives up
when he joins in a private, if I may so call it, or
particular political society, and incorporates into any
commonwealth separate from the rest of mankind.
129. The first power- viz., of doing whatsoever he
thought fit for the preservation of himself and the rest
of mankind, he gives up to be regulated by laws made by
the society, so far forth as the preservation of himself
and the rest of that society shall require; which laws of
the society in many things confine the liberty he had by
the law of Nature.
130. Secondly, the power of punishing he wholly gives up,
and engages his natural force, which he might before
employ in the execution of the law of Nature, by his own
single authority, as he thought fit, to assist the
executive power of the society as the law thereof shall
require. For being now in a new state, wherein he is to
enjoy many conveniencies from the labour, assistance, and
society of others in the same community, as well as
protection from its whole strength, he is to part also
with as much of his natural liberty, in providing for
himself, as the good, prosperity, and safety of the
society shall require, which is not only necessary but
just, since the other members of the society do the like.
131. But though men when they enter into society give up
the equality, liberty, and executive power they had in
the state of Nature into the hands of the society, to be
so far disposed of by the legislative as the good of the
society shall require, yet it being only with an
intention in every one the better to preserve himself,
his liberty and property (for no rational creature can be
supposed to change his condition with an intention to be
worse), the power of the society or legislative
constituted by them can never be supposed to extend
farther than the common good, but is obliged to secure
every one's property by providing against those three
defects above mentioned that made the state of Nature so
unsafe and uneasy. And so, whoever has the legislative or
supreme power of any commonwealth, is bound to govern by
established standing laws, promulgated and known to the
people, and not by extemporary decrees, by indifferent
and upright judges, who are to decide controversies by
those laws; and to employ the force of the community at
home only in the execution of such laws, or abroad to
prevent or redress foreign injuries and secure the
community from inroads and invasion. And all this to be
directed to no other end but the peace, safety, and
public good of the people.
Of the Forms of a Commonwealth
132. THE majority having, as has been showed, upon men's
first uniting into society, the whole power of the
community naturally in them, may employ all that power in
making laws for the community from time to time, and
executing those laws by officers of their own appointing,
and then the form of the government is a perfect
democracy; or else may put the power of making laws into
the hands of a few select men, and their heirs or
successors, and then it is an oligarchy; or else into the
hands of one man, and then it is a monarchy; if to him
and his heirs, it is a hereditary monarchy; if to him
only for life, but upon his death the power only of
nominating a successor, to return to them, an elective
monarchy. And so accordingly of these make compounded and
mixed forms of government, as they think good. And if the
legislative power be at first given by the majority to
one or more persons only for their lives, or any limited
time, and then the supreme power to revert to them again,
when it is so reverted the community may dispose of it
again anew into what hands they please, and so constitute
a new form of government; for the form of government
depending upon the placing the supreme power, which is
the legislative, it being impossible to conceive that an
inferior power should prescribe to a superior, or any but
the supreme make laws, according as the power of making
laws is placed, such is the form of the commonwealth.
133. By "commonwealth" I must be understood all along to
mean not a democracy, or any form of government, but any
independent community which the Latins signified by the
word civitas, to which the word which best answers in our
language is "commonwealth," and most properly expresses
such a society of men which "community" does not (for
there may be subordinate communities in a government),
and "city" much less. And therefore, to avoid ambiguity,
I crave leave to use the word "commonwealth" in that
sense, in which sense I find the word used by King James
himself, which I think to be its genuine signification,
which, if anybody dislike, I consent with him to change
it for a better.
Of the Extent of the Legislative Power
134. THE great end of men's entering into society being
the enjoyment of their properties in peace and safety,
and the great instrument and means of that being the laws
established in that society, the first and fundamental
positive law of all commonwealths is the establishing of
the legislative power, as the first and fundamental
natural law which is to govern even the legislative.
Itself is the preservation of the society and (as far as
will consist with the public good) of every person in it.
This legislative is not only the supreme power of the
commonwealth, but sacred and unalterable in the hands
where the community have once placed it. Nor can any
edict of anybody else, in what form soever conceived, or
by what power soever backed, have the force and
obligation of a law which has not its sanction from that
legislative which the public has chosen and appointed;
for without this the law could not have that which is
absolutely necessary to its being a law, the consent of
the society, over whom nobody can have a power to make
laws* but by their own consent and by authority received
from them; and therefore all the obedience, which by the
most solemn ties any one can be obliged to pay,
ultimately terminates in this supreme power, and is
directed by those laws which it enacts. Nor can any oaths
to any foreign power whatsoever, or any domestic
subordinate power, discharge any member of the society
from his obedience to the legislative, acting pursuant to
their trust, nor oblige him to any obedience contrary to
the laws so enacted or farther than they do allow, it
being ridiculous to imagine one can be tied ultimately to
obey any power in the society which is not the supreme.
135. Though the legislative, whether placed in one or
more, whether it be always in being or only by intervals,
though it be the supreme power in every commonwealth,
yet, first, it is not, nor can possibly be, absolutely
arbitrary over the lives and fortunes of the people. For
it being but the joint power of every member of the
society given up to that person or assembly which is
legislator, it can be no more than those persons had in a
state of Nature before they entered into society, and
gave it up to the community. For nobody can transfer to
another more power than he has in himself, and nobody has
an absolute arbitrary power over himself, or over any
other, to destroy his own life, or take away the life or
property of another. A man, as has been proved, cannot
subject himself to the arbitrary power of another; and
having, in the state of Nature, no arbitrary power over
the life, liberty, or possession of another, but only so
much as the law of Nature gave him for the preservation
of himself and the rest of mankind, this is all he doth,
or can give up to the commonwealth, and by it to the
legislative power, so that the legislative can have no
more than this. Their power in the utmost bounds of it is
limited to the public good of the society.* It is a power
that hath no other end but preservation, and therefore
can never have a right to destroy, enslave, or designedly
to impoverish the subjects; the obligations of the law of
Nature cease not in society, but only in many cases are
drawn closer, and have, by human laws, known penalties
annexed to them to enforce their observation. Thus the
law of Nature stands as an eternal rule to all men,
legislators as well as others. The rules that they make
for, other men's actions must, as well as their own and
other men's actions, be conformable to the law of Nature-
i.e., to the will of God, of which that is a declaration,
and the fundamental law of Nature being the preservation
of mankind, no human sanction can be good or valid
against it.
136. Secondly, the legislative or supreme authority
cannot assume to itself a power to rule by extemporary
arbitrary decrees, but is bound to dispense justice and
decide the rights of the subject by promulgated standing
laws,* and known authorised judges. For the law of Nature
being unwritten, and so nowhere to be found but in the
minds of men, they who, through passion or interest,
shall miscite or misapply it, cannot so easily be
convinced of their mistake where there is no established
judge; and so it serves not as it aught, to determine the
rights and fence the properties of those that live under
it, especially where every one is judge, interpreter, and
executioner of it too, and that in his own case; and he
that has right on his side, having ordinarily but his own
single strength, hath not force enough to defend himself
from injuries or punish delinquents. To avoid these
inconveniencies which disorder men's properties in the
state of Nature, men unite into societies that they may
have the united strength of the whole society to secure
and defend their properties, and may have standing rules
to bound it by which every one may know what is his. To
this end it is that men give up all their natural power
to the society they enter into, and the community put the
legislative power into such hands as they think fit, with
this trust, that they shall be governed by declared laws,
or else their peace, quiet, and property will still be at
the same uncertainty as it was in the state of Nature.
137. Absolute arbitrary power, or governing without
settled standing laws, can neither of them consist with
the ends of society and government, which men would not
quit the freedom of the state of Nature for, and tie
themselves up under, were it not to preserve their lives,
liberties, and fortunes, and by stated rules of right and
property to secure their peace and quiet. It cannot be
supposed that they should intend, had they a power so to
do, to give any one or more an absolute arbitrary power
over their persons and estates, and put a force into the
magistrate's hand to execute his unlimited will
arbitrarily upon them; this were to put themselves into a
worse condition than the state of Nature, wherein they
had a liberty to defend their right against the injuries
of others, and were upon equal terms of force to maintain
it, whether invaded by a single man or many in
combination. Whereas by supposing they have given up
themselves to the absolute arbitrary power and will of a
legislator, they have disarmed themselves, and armed him
to make a prey of them when he pleases; he being in a
much worse condition that is exposed to the arbitrary
power of one man who has the command of a hundred
thousand than he that is exposed to the arbitrary power
of a hundred thousand single men, nobody being secure,
that his will who has such a command is better than that
of other men, though his force be a hundred thousand
times stronger. And, therefore, whatever form the
commonwealth is under, the ruling power ought to govern
by declared and received laws, and not by extemporary
dictates and undetermined resolutions, for then mankind
will be in a far worse condition than in the state of
Nature if they shall have armed one or a few men with the
joint power of a multitude, to force them to obey at
pleasure the exorbitant and unlimited decrees of their
sudden thoughts, or unrestrained, and till that moment,
unknown wills, without having any measures set down which
may guide and justify their actions. For all the power
the government has, being only for the good of the
society, as it ought not to be arbitrary and at pleasure,
so it ought to be exercised by established and
promulgated laws, that both the people may know their
duty, and be safe and secure within the limits of the
law, and the rulers, too, kept within their due bounds,
and not be tempted by the power they have in their hands
to employ it to purposes, and by such measures as they
would not have known, and own not willingly.
138. Thirdly, the supreme power cannot take from any man
any part of his property without his own consent. For the
preservation of property being the end of government, and
that for which men enter into society, it necessarily
supposes and requires that the people should have
property, without which they must be supposed to lose
that by entering into society which was the end for which
they entered into it; too gross an absurdity for any man
to own. Men, therefore, in society having property, they
have such a right to the goods, which by the law of the
community are theirs, that nobody hath a right to take
them, or any part of them, from them without their own
consent; without this they have no property at all. For I
have truly no property in that which another can by right
take from me when he pleases against my consent. Hence it
is a mistake to think that the supreme or legislative
power of any commonwealth can do what it will, and
dispose of the estates of the subject arbitrarily, or
take any part of them at pleasure. This is not much to be
feared in governments where the legislative consists
wholly or in part in assemblies which are variable, whose
members upon the dissolution of the assembly are subjects
under the common laws of their country, equally with the
rest. But in governments where the legislative is in one
lasting assembly, always in being, or in one man as in
absolute monarchies, there is danger still, that they
will think themselves to have a distinct interest from
the rest of the community, and so will be apt to increase
their own riches and power by taking what they think fit
from the people. For a man's property is not at all
secure, though there be good and equitable laws to set
the bounds of it between him and his fellow-subjects, if
he who commands those subjects have power to take from
any private man what part he pleases of his property, and
use and dispose of it as he thinks good.
139. But government, into whosesoever hands it is put,
being as I have before shown, entrusted with this
condition, and for this end, that men might have and
secure their properties, the prince or senate, however it
may have power to make laws for the regulating of
property between the subjects one amongst another, yet
can never have a power to take to themselves the whole,
or any part of the subjects' property, without their own
consent; for this would be in effect to leave them no
property at all. And to let us see that even absolute
power, where it is necessary, is not arbitrary by being
absolute, but is still limited by that reason and
confined to those ends which required it in some cases to
be absolute, we need look no farther than the common
practice of martial discipline. For the preservation of
the army, and in it of the whole commonwealth, requires
an absolute obedience to the command of every superior
officer, and it is justly death to disobey or dispute the
most dangerous or unreasonable of them; but yet we see
that neither the sergeant that could command a soldier to
march up to the mouth of a cannon, or stand in a breach
where he is almost sure to perish, can command that
soldier to give him one penny of his money; nor the
general that can condemn him to death for deserting his
post, or not obeying the most desperate orders, cannot
yet with all his absolute power of life and death dispose
of one farthing of that soldier's estate, or seize one
jot of his goods; whom yet he can command anything, and
hang for the least disobedience. Because such a blind
obedience is necessary to that end for which the
commander has his power- viz., the preservation of the
rest, but the disposing of his goods has nothing to do
with it.
140. It is true governments cannot be supported without
great charge, and it is fit every one who enjoys his
share of the protection should pay out of his estate his
proportion for the maintenance of it. But still it must
be with his own consent- i.e., the consent of the
majority, giving it either by themselves or their
representatives chosen by them; for if any one shall
claim a power to lay and levy taxes on the people by his
own authority, and without such consent of the people, he
thereby invades the fundamental law of property, and
subverts the end of government. For what property have I
in that which another may by right take when he pleases
to himself?
141. Fourthly. The legislative cannot transfer the power
of making laws to any other hands, for it being but a
delegated power from the people, they who have it cannot
pass it over to others. The people alone can appoint the
form of the commonwealth, which is by constituting the
legislative, and appointing in whose hands that shall be.
And when the people have said, "We will submit, and be
governed by laws made by such men, and in such forms,"
nobody else can say other men shall make laws for them;
nor can they be bound by any laws but such as are enacted
by those whom they have chosen and authorised to make
laws for them.
142. These are the bounds which the trust that is put in
them by the society and the law of God and Nature have
set to the legislative power of every commonwealth, in
all forms of government. First: They are to govern by
promulgated established laws, not to be varied in
particular cases, but to have one rule for rich and poor,
for the favourite at Court, and the countryman at plough.
Secondly: These laws also ought to be designed for no
other end ultimately but the good of the people. Thirdly:
They must not raise taxes on the property of the people
without the consent of the people given by themselves or
their deputies. And this properly concerns only such
governments where the legislative is always in being, or
at least where the people have not reserved any part of
the legislative to deputies, to be from time to time
chosen by themselves. Fourthly: Legislative neither must
nor can transfer the power of making laws to anybody
else, or place it anywhere but where the people have.
The Legislative, Executive, and Federative Power
of the Commonwealth
143. THE legislative power is that which has a right to
direct how the force of the commonwealth shall be
employed for preserving the community and the members of
it. Because those laws which are constantly to be
executed, and whose force is always to continue, may be
made in a little time, therefore there is no need that
the legislative should be always in being, not having
always business to do. And because it may be too great
temptation to human frailty, apt to grasp at power, for
the same persons who have the power of making laws to
have also in their hands the power to execute them,
whereby they may exempt themselves from obedience to the
laws they make, and suit the law, both in its making and
execution, to their own private advantage, and thereby
come to have a distinct interest from the rest of the
community, contrary to the end of society and government.
Therefore in well-ordered commonwealths, where the good
of the whole is so considered as it ought, the
legislative power is put into the hands of divers persons
who, duly assembled, have by themselves, or jointly with
others, a power to make laws, which when they have done,
being separated again, they are themselves subject to the
laws they have made; which is a new and near tie upon
them to take care that they make them for the public
good.
144. But because the laws that are at once, and in a
short time made, have a constant and lasting force, and
need a perpetual execution, or an attendance thereunto,
therefore it is necessary there should be a power always
in being which should see to the execution of the laws
that are made, and remain in force. And thus the
legislative and executive power come often to be
separated.
145. There is another power in every commonwealth which
one may call natural, because it is that which answers to
the power every man naturally had before he entered into
society. For though in a commonwealth the members of it
are distinct persons, still, in reference to one another,
and, as such, are governed by the laws of the society,
yet, in reference to the rest of mankind, they make one
body, which is, as every member of it before was, still
in the state of Nature with the rest of mankind, so that
the controversies that happen between any man of the
society with those that are out of it are managed by the
public, and an injury done to a member of their body
engages the whole in the reparation of it. So that under
this consideration the whole community is one body in the
state of Nature in respect of all other states or persons
out of its community.
146. This, therefore, contains the power of war and
peace, leagues and alliances, and all the transactions
with all persons and communities without the
commonwealth, and may be called federative if any one
pleases. So the thing be understood, I am indifferent as
to the name.
147. These two powers, executive and federative, though
they be really distinct in themselves, yet one
comprehending the execution of the municipal laws of the
society within itself upon all that are parts of it, the
other the management of the security and interest of the
public without with all those that it may receive benefit
or damage from, yet they are always almost united. And
though this federative power in the well or ill
management of it be of great moment to the commonwealth,
yet it is much less capable to be directed by antecedent,
standing, positive laws than the executive, and so must
necessarily be left to the prudence and wisdom of those
whose hands it is in, to be managed for the public good.
For the laws that concern subjects one amongst another,
being to direct their actions, may well enough precede
them. But what is to be done in reference to foreigners
depending much upon their actions, and the variation of
designs and interests, must be left in great part to the
prudence of those who have this power committed to them,
to be managed by the best of their skill for the
advantage of the commonwealth.
148. Though, as I said, the executive and federative
power of every community be really distinct in
themselves, yet they are hardly to be separated and
placed at the same time in the hands of distinct persons.
For both of them requiring the force of the society for
their exercise, it is almost impracticable to place the
force of the commonwealth in distinct and not subordinate
hands, or that the executive and federative power should
be placed in persons that might act separately, whereby
the force of the public would be under different
commands, which would be apt some time or other to cause
disorder and ruin.
Of the Subordination of the Powers of the
Commonwealth
149. THOUGH in a constituted commonwealth standing upon
its own basis and acting according to its own nature-
that is, acting for the preservation of the community,
there can be but one supreme power, which is the
legislative, to which all the rest are and must be
subordinate, yet the legislative being only a fiduciary
power to act for certain ends, there remains still in the
people a supreme power to remove or alter the
legislative, when they find the legislative act contrary
to the trust reposed in them. For all power given with
trust for the attaining an end being limited by that end,
whenever that end is manifestly neglected or opposed, the
trust must necessarily be forfeited, and the power
devolve into the hands of those that gave it, who may
place it anew where they shall think best for their
safety and security. And thus the community perpetually
retains a supreme power of saving themselves from the
attempts and designs of anybody, even of their
legislators, whenever they shall be so foolish or so
wicked as to lay and carry on designs against the
liberties and properties of the subject. For no man or
society of men having a power to deliver up their
preservation, or consequently the means of it, to the
absolute will and arbitrary dominion of another, whenever
any one shall go about to bring them into such a slavish
condition, they will always have a right to preserve what
they have not a power to part with, and to rid themselves
of those who invade this fundamental, sacred, and
unalterable law of self-preservation for which they
entered into society. And thus the community may be said
in this respect to be always the supreme power, but not
as considered under any form of government, because this
power of the people can never take place till the
government be dissolved.
150. In all cases whilst the government subsists, the
legislative is the supreme power. For what can give laws
to another must needs be superior to him, and since the
legislative is no otherwise legislative of the society
but by the right it has to make laws for all the parts,
and every member of the society prescribing rules to
their actions, they are transgressed, the legislative
must needs be the supreme, and all other powers in any
members or parts of the society derived from and
subordinate to it.
151. In some commonwealths where the legislative is not
always in being, and the executive is vested in a single
person who has also a share in the legislative, there
that single person, in a very tolerable sense, may also
be called supreme; not that he has in himself all the
supreme power, which is that of law-making, but because
he has in him the supreme execution from whom all
inferior magistrates derive all their several subordinate
powers, or, at least, the greatest part of them; having
also no legislative superior to him, there being no law
to be made without his consent, which cannot be expected
should ever subject him to the other part of the
legislative, he is properly enough in this sense supreme.
But yet it is to be observed that though oaths of
allegiance and fealty are taken to him, it is not to him
as supreme legislator, but as supreme executor of the law
made by a joint power of him with others, allegiance
being nothing but an obedience according to law, which,
when he violates, he has no right to obedience, nor can
claim it otherwise than as the public person vested with
the power of the law, and so is to be considered as the
image, phantom, or representative of the commonwealth,
acted by the will of the society declared in its laws,
and thus he has no will, no power, but that of the law.
But when he quits this representation, this public will,
and acts by his own private will, he degrades himself,
and is but a single private person without power and
without will; the members owing no obedience but to the
public will of the society.
152. The executive power placed anywhere but in a person
that has also a share in the legislative is visibly
subordinate and accountable to it, and may be at pleasure
changed and displaced; so that it is not the supreme
executive power that is exempt from subordination, but
the supreme executive power vested in one, who having a
share in the legislative, has no distinct superior
legislative to be subordinate and accountable to, farther
than he himself shall join and consent, so that he is no
more subordinate than he himself shall think fit, which
one may certainly conclude will be but very little. Of
other ministerial and subordinate powers in a
commonwealth we need not speak, they being so multiplied
with infinite variety in the different customs and
constitutions of distinct commonwealths, that it is
impossible to give a particular account of them all. Only
thus much which is necessary to our present purpose we
may take notice of concerning them, that they have no
manner of authority, any of them, beyond what is by
positive grant and commission delegated to them, and are
all of them accountable to some other power in the
commonwealth.
153. It is not necessary- no, nor so much as convenient-
that the legislative should be always in being; but
absolutely necessary that the executive power should,
because there is not always need of new laws to be made,
but always need of execution of the laws that are made.
When the legislative hath put the execution of the laws
they make into other hands, they have a power still to
resume it out of those hands when they find cause, and to
punish for any mal-administration against the laws. The
same holds also in regard of the federative power, that
and the executive being both ministerial and subordinate
to the legislative, which, as has been shown, in a
constituted commonwealth is the supreme, the legislative
also in this case being supposed to consist of several
persons; for if it be a single person it cannot but be
always in being, and so will, as supreme, naturally have
the supreme executive power, together with the
legislative, may assemble and exercise their legislative
at the times that either their original constitution or
their own adjournment appoints, or when they please, if
neither of these hath appointed any time, or there be no
other way prescribed to convoke them. For the supreme
power being placed in them by the people, it is always in
them, and they may exercise it when they please, unless
by their original constitution they are limited to
certain seasons, or by an act of their supreme power they
have adjourned to a certain time, and when that time
comes they have a right to assemble and act again.
154. If the legislative, or any part of it, be of
representatives, chosen for that time by the people,
which afterwards return into the ordinary state of
subjects, and have no share in the legislative but upon a
new choice, this power of choosing must also be exercised
by the people, either at certain appointed seasons, or
else when they are summoned to it; and, in this latter
case, the power of convoking the legislative is
ordinarily placed in the executive, and has one of these
two limitations in respect of time:- that either the
original constitution requires their assembling and
acting at certain intervals; and then the executive power
does nothing but ministerially issue directions for their
electing and assembling according to due forms; or else
it is left to his prudence to call them by new elections
when the occasions or exigencies of the public require
the amendment of old or making of new laws, or the
redress or prevention of any inconveniencies that lie on
or threaten the people.
155. It may be demanded here, what if the executive
power, being possessed of the force of the commonwealth,
shall make use of that force to hinder the meeting and
acting of the legislative, when the original constitution
or the public exigencies require it? I say, using force
upon the people, without authority, and contrary to the
trust put in him that does so, is a state of war with the
people, who have a right to reinstate their legislative
in the exercise of their power. For having erected a
legislative with an intent they should exercise the power
of making laws, either at certain set times, or when
there is need of it, when they are hindered by any force
from what is so necessary to the society, and wherein the
safety and preservation of the people consists, the
people have a right to remove it by force. In all states
and conditions the true remedy of force without authority
is to oppose force to it. The use of force without
authority always puts him that uses it into a state of
war as the aggressor, and renders him liable to be
treated accordingly.
156. The power of assembling and dismissing the
legislative, placed in the executive, gives not the
executive a superiority over it, but is a fiduciary trust
placed in him for the safety of the people in a case
where the uncertainty and variableness of human affairs
could not bear a steady fixed rule. For it not being
possible that the first framers of the government should
by any foresight be so much masters of future events as
to be able to prefix so just periods of return and
duration to the assemblies of the legislative, in all
times to come, that might exactly answer all the
exigencies of the commonwealth, the best remedy could be
found for this defect was to trust this to the prudence
of one who was always to be present, and whose business
it was to watch over the public good. Constant, frequent
meetings of the legislative, and long continuations of
their assemblies, without necessary occasion, could not
but be burdensome to the people, and must necessarily in
time produce more dangerous inconveniencies, and yet the
quick turn of affairs might be sometimes such as to need
their present help; any delay of their convening might
endanger the public; and sometimes, too, their business
might be so great that the limited time of their sitting
might be too short for their work, and rob the public of
that benefit which could be had only from their mature
deliberation. What, then, could be done in this case to
prevent the community from being exposed some time or
other to imminent hazard on one side or the other, by
fixed intervals and periods set to the meeting and acting
of the legislative, but to entrust it to the prudence of
some who, being present and acquainted with the state of
public affairs, might make use of this prerogative for
the public good? And where else could this be so well
placed as in his hands who was entrusted with the
execution of the laws for the same end? Thus, supposing
the regulation of times for the assembling and sitting of
the legislative not settled by the original constitution,
it naturally fell into the hands of the executive; not as
an arbitrary power depending on his good pleasure, but
with this trust always to have it exercised only for the
public weal, as the occurrences of times and change of
affairs might require. Whether settled periods of their
convening, or a liberty left to the prince for convoking
the legislative, or perhaps a mixture of both, hath the
least inconvenience attending it, it is not my business
here to inquire, but only to show that, though the
executive power may have the prerogative of convoking and
dissolving such conventions of the legislative, yet it is
not thereby superior to it.
157. Things of this world are in so constant a flux that
nothing remains long in the same state. Thus people,
riches, trade, power, change their stations; flourishing
mighty cities come to ruin, and prove in time neglected
desolate corners, whilst other unfrequented places grow
into populous countries filled with wealth and
inhabitants. But things not always changing equally, and
private interest often keeping up customs and privileges
when the reasons of them are ceased, it often comes to
pass that in governments where part of the legislative
consists of representatives chosen by the people, that in
tract of time this representation becomes very unequal
and disproportionate to the reasons it was at first
established upon. To what gross absurdities the following
of custom when reason has left it may lead, we may be
satisfied when we see the bare name of a town, of which
there remains not so much as the ruins, where scarce so
much housing as a sheepcote, or more inhabitants than a
shepherd is to be found, send as many representatives to
the grand assembly of law-makers as a whole county
numerous in people and powerful in riches. This strangers
stand amazed at, and every one must confess needs a
remedy; though most think it hard to find one, because
the constitution of the legislative being the original
and supreme act of the society, antecedent to all
positive laws in it, and depending wholly on the people,
no inferior power can alter it. And, therefore, the
people when the legislative is once constituted, having
in such a government as we have been speaking of no power
to act as long as the government stands, this
inconvenience is thought incapable of a remedy.
158. Salus populi suprema lex is certainly so just and
fundamental a rule, that he who sincerely follows it
cannot dangerously err. If, therefore, the executive who
has the power of convoking the legislative, observing
rather the true proportion than fashion of
representation, regulates not by old custom, but true
reason, the number of members in all places, that have a
right to be distinctly represented, which no part of the
people, however incorporated, can pretend to, but in
proportion to the assistance which it affords to the
public, it cannot be judged to have set up a new
legislative, but to have restored the old and true one,
and to have rectified the disorders which succession of
time had insensibly as well as inevitably introduced; for
it being the interest as well as intention of the people
to have a fair and equal representative, whoever brings
it nearest to that is an undoubted friend to and
establisher of the government, and cannot miss the
consent and approbation of the community; prerogative
being nothing but a power in the hands of the prince to
provide for the public good in such cases which,
depending upon unforeseen and uncertain occurrences,
certain and unalterable laws could not safely direct.
Whatsoever shall be done manifestly for the good of the
people, and establishing the government upon its true
foundations is, and always will be, just prerogative. The
power of erecting new corporations, and therewith new
representatives, carries with it a supposition that in
time the measures of representation might vary, and those
have a just right to be represented which before had
none; and by the same reason, those cease to have a
right, and be too inconsiderable for such a privilege,
which before had it. It is not a change from the present
state which, perhaps, corruption or decay has introduced,
that makes an inroad upon the government, but the
tendency of it to injure or oppress the people, and to
set up one part or party with a distinction from and an
unequal subjection of the rest. Whatsoever cannot but be
acknowledged to be of advantage to the society and people
in general, upon just and lasting measures, will always,
when done, justify itself; and whenever the people shall
choose their representatives upon just and undeniably
equal measures, suitable to the original frame of the
government, it cannot be doubted to be the will and act
of the society, whoever permitted or proposed to them so
to do.
Of Prerogative
159. WHERE the legislative and executive power are in
distinct hands, as they are in all moderated monarchies
and well-framed governments, there the good of the
society requires that several things should be left to
the discretion of him that has the executive power. For
the legislators not being able to foresee and provide by
laws for all that may be useful to the community, the
executor of the laws, having the power in his hands, has
by the common law of Nature a right to make use of it for
the good of the society, in many cases where the
municipal law has given no direction, till the
legislative can conveniently be assembled to provide for
it; nay, many things there are which the law can by no
means provide for, and those must necessarily be left to
the discretion of him that has the executive power in his
hands, to be ordered by him as the public good and
advantage shall require; nay, it is fit that the laws
themselves should in some cases give way to the executive
power, or rather to this fundamental law of Nature and
government- viz., that as much as may be all the members
of the society are to be preserved. For since many
accidents may happen wherein a strict and rigid
observation of the laws may do harm, as not to pull down
an innocent man's house to stop the fire when the next to
it is burning; and a man may come sometimes within the
reach of the law, which makes no distinction of persons,
by an action that may deserve reward and pardon; it is
fit the ruler should have a power in many cases to
mitigate the severity of the law, and pardon some
offenders, since the end of government being the
preservation of all as much as may be, even the guilty
are to be spared where it can prove no prejudice to the
innocent.
160. This power to act according to discretion for the
public good, without the prescription of the law and
sometimes even against it, is that which is called
prerogative; for since in some governments the law-making
power is not always in being and is usually too numerous,
and so too slow for the dispatch requisite to execution,
and because, also, it is impossible to foresee and so by
laws to provide for all accidents and necessities that
may concern the public, or make such laws as will do no
harm, if they are executed with an inflexible rigour on
all occasions and upon all persons that may come in their
way, therefore there is a latitude left to the executive
power to do many things of choice which the laws do not
prescribe.
161. This power, whilst employed for the benefit of the
community and suitably to the trust and ends of the
government, is undoubted prerogative, and never is
questioned. For the people are very seldom or never
scrupulous or nice in the point or questioning of
prerogative whilst it is in any tolerable degree employed
for the use it was meant- that is, the good of the
people, and not manifestly against it. But if there comes
to be a question between the executive power and the
people about a thing claimed as a prerogative, the
tendency of the exercise of such prerogative, to the good
or hurt of the people, will easily decide that question.
162. It is easy to conceive that in the infancy of
governments, when commonwealths differed little from
families in number of people, they differed from them too
but little in number of laws; and the governors being as
the fathers of them, watching over them for their good,
the government was almost all prerogative. A few
established laws served the turn, and the discretion and
care of the ruler suppled the rest. But when mistake or
flattery prevailed with weak princes, to make use of this
power for private ends of their own and not for the
public good, the people were fain, by express laws, to
get prerogative determined in those points wherein they
found disadvantage from it, and declared limitations of
prerogative in those cases which they and their ancestors
had left in the utmost latitude to the wisdom of those
princes who made no other but a right use of it- that is,
for the good of their people.
163. And therefore they have a very wrong notion of
government who say that the people have encroached upon
the prerogative when they have got any part of it to be
defined by positive laws. For in so doing they have not
pulled from the prince anything that of right belonged to
him, but only declared that that power which they
indefinitely left in his or his ancestors' hands, to be
exercised for their good, was not a thing they intended
him, when he used it otherwise. For the end of government
being the good of the community, whatsoever alterations
are made in it tending to that end cannot be an
encroachment upon anybody; since nobody in government can
have a right tending to any other end; and those only are
encroachments which prejudice or hinder the public good.
Those who say otherwise speak as if the prince had a
distinct and separate interest from the good of the
community, and was not made for it; the root and source
from which spring almost all those evils and disorders
which happen in kingly governments. And indeed, if that
be so, the people under his government are not a society
of rational creatures, entered into a community for their
mutual good, such as have set rulers over themselves, to
guard and promote that good; but are to be looked on as a
herd of inferior creatures under the dominion of a
master, who keeps them and works them for his own
pleasure or profit. If men were so void of reason and
brutish as to enter into society upon such terms,
prerogative might indeed be, what some men would have it,
an arbitrary power to do things hurtful to the people.
164. But since a rational creature cannot be supposed,
when free, to put himself into subjection to another for
his own harm (though where he finds a good and a wise
ruler he may not, perhaps, think it either necessary or
useful to set precise bounds to his power in all things),
prerogative can be nothing but the people's permitting
their rulers to do several things of their own free
choice where the law was silent, and sometimes too
against the direct letter of the law, for the public good
and their acquiescing in it when so done. For as a good
prince, who is mindful of the trust put into his hands
and careful of the good of his people, cannot have too
much prerogative- that is, power to do good, so a weak
and ill prince, who would claim that power his
predecessors exercised, without the direction of the law,
as a prerogative belonging to him by right of his office,
which he may exercise at his pleasure to make or promote
an interest distinct from that of the public, gives the
people an occasion to claim their right and limit that
power, which, whilst it was exercised for their good,
they were content should be tacitly allowed.
165. And therefore he that will look into the history of
England will find that prerogative was always largest in
the hands of our wisest and best princes, because the
people observing the whole tendency of their actions to
be the public good, or if any human frailty or mistake
(for princes are but men, made as others) appeared in
some small declinations from that end, yet it was visible
the main of their conduct tended to nothing but the care
of the public. The people, therefore, finding reason to
be satisfied with these princes, whenever they acted
without, or contrary to the letter of the law, acquiesced
in what they did, and without the least complaint, let
them enlarge their prerogative as they pleased, judging
rightly that they did nothing herein to the prejudice of
their laws, since they acted conformably to the
foundation and end of all laws- the public good.
166. Such God-like princes, indeed, had some title to
arbitrary power by that argument that would prove
absolute monarchy the best government, as that which God
Himself governs the universe by, because such kings
partake of His wisdom and goodness. Upon this is founded
that saying, "That the reigns of good princes have been
always most dangerous to the liberties of their people."
For when their successors, managing the government with
different thoughts, would draw the actions of those good
rulers into precedent and make them the standard of their
prerogative- as if what had been done only for the good
of the people was a right in them to do for the harm of
the people, if they so pleased- it has often occasioned
contest, and sometimes public disorders, before the
people could recover their original right and get that to
be declared not to be prerogative which truly was never
so; since it is impossible anybody in the society should
ever have a right to do the people harm, though it be
very possible and reasonable that the people should not
go about to set any bounds to the prerogative of those
kings or rulers who themselves transgressed not the
bounds of the public good. For "prerogative is nothing
but the power of doing public good without a rule."
167. The power of calling parliaments in England, as to
precise time, place, and duration, is certainly a
prerogative of the king, but still with this trust, that
it shall be made use of for the good of the nation as the
exigencies of the times and variety of occasion shall
require. For it being impossible to foresee which should
always be the fittest place for them to assemble in, and
what the best season, the choice of these was left with
the executive power, as might be best subservient to the
public good and best suit the ends of parliament.
168. The old question will be asked in this matter of
prerogative, "But who shall be judge when this power is
made a right use of?" I answer: Between an executive
power in being, with such a prerogative, and a
legislative that depends upon his will for their
convening, there can be no judge on earth. As there can
be none between the legislative and the people, should
either the executive or the legislative, when they have
got the power in their hands, design, or go about to
enslave or destroy them, the people have no other remedy
in this, as in all other cases where they have no judge
on earth, but to appeal to Heaven; for the rulers in such
attempts, exercising a power the people never put into
their hands, who can never be supposed to consent that
anybody should rule over them for their harm, do that
which they have not a right to do. And where the body of
the people, or any single man, are deprived of their
right, or are under the exercise of a power without
right, having no appeal on earth they have a liberty to
appeal to Heaven whenever they judge the cause of
sufficient moment. And therefore, though the people
cannot be judge, so as to have, by the constitution of
that society, any superior power to determine and give
effective sentence in the case, yet they have reserved
that ultimate determination to themselves which belongs
to all mankind, where there lies no appeal on earth, by a
law antecedent and paramount to all positive laws of men,
whether they have just cause to make their appeal to
Heaven. And this judgement they cannot part with, it
being out of a man's power so to submit himself to
another as to give him a liberty to destroy him; God and
Nature never allowing a man so to abandon himself as to
neglect his own preservation. And since he cannot take
away his own life, neither can he give another power to
take it. Nor let any one think this lays a perpetual
foundation for disorder; for this operates not till the
inconvenience is so great that the majority feel it, and
are weary of it, and find a necessity to have it amended.
And this the executive power, or wise princes, never need
come in the danger of; and it is the thing of all others
they have most need to avoid, as, of all others, the most
perilous.
Of Paternal, Political and Despotical Power
Considered Together
169. THOUGH I have had occasion to speak of these
separately before, yet the great mistakes of late about
government having, as I suppose, arisen from confounding
these distinct powers one with another, it may not
perhaps be amiss to consider them here together.
170. First, then, paternal or parental power is nothing
but that which parents have over their children to govern
them, for the children's good, till they come to the use
of reason, or a state of knowledge, wherein they may be
supposed capable to understand that rule, whether it be
the law of Nature or the municipal law of their country,
they are to govern themselves by- capable, I say, to know
it, as well as several others, who live as free men under
that law. The affection and tenderness God hath planted
in the breasts of parents towards their children makes it
evident that this is not intended to be a severe
arbitrary government, but only for the help, instruction,
and preservation of their offspring. But happen as it
will, there is, as I have proved, no reason why it should
be thought to extend to life and death, at any time, over
their children, more than over anybody else, or keep the
child in subjection to the will of his parents when grown
to a man and the perfect use of reason, any farther than
as having received life and education from his parents
obliges him to respect, honour, gratitude, assistance,
and support, all his life, to both father and mother. And
thus, it is true, the paternal is a natural government,
but not at all extending itself to the ends and
jurisdictions of that which is political. The power of
the father doth not reach at all to the property of the
child, which is only in his own disposing.
171. Secondly, political power is that power which every
man having in the state of Nature has given up into the
hands of the society, and therein to the governors whom
the society hath set over itself, with this express or
tacit trust, that it shall be employed for their good and
the preservation of their property. Now this power, which
every man has in the state of Nature, and which he parts
with to the society in all such cases where the society
can secure him, is to use such means for the preserving
of his own property as he thinks good and Nature allows
him; and to punish the breach of the law of Nature in
others so as (according to the best of his reason) may
most conduce to the preservation of himself and the rest
of mankind; so that the end and measure of this power,
when in every man's hands, in the state of Nature, being
the preservation of all of his society- that is, all
mankind in general- it can have no other end or measure,
when in the hands of the magistrate, but to preserve the
members of that society in their lives, liberties, and
possessions, and so cannot be an absolute, arbitrary
power over their lives and fortunes, which are as much as
possible to be preserved; but a power to make laws, and
annex such penalties to them as may tend to the
preservation of the whole, by cutting off those parts,
and those only, which are so corrupt that they threaten
the sound and healthy, without which no severity is
lawful. And this power has its original only from compact
and agreement and the mutual consent of those who make up
the community.
172. Thirdly, despotical power is an absolute, arbitrary
power one man has over another, to take away his life
whenever he pleases; and this is a power which neither
Nature gives, for it has made no such distinction between
one man and another, nor compact can convey. For man, not
having such an arbitrary power over his own life, cannot
give another man such a power over it, but it is the
effect only of forfeiture which the aggressor makes of
his own life when he puts himself into the state of war
with another. For having quitted reason, which God hath
given to be the rule betwixt man and man, and the
peaceable ways which that teaches, and made use of force
to compass his unjust ends upon another where he has no
right, he renders himself liable to be destroyed by his
adversary whenever he can, as any other noxious and
brutish creature that is destructive to his being. And
thus captives, taken in a just and lawful war, and such
only, are subject to a despotical power, which, as it
arises not from compact, so neither is it capable of any,
but is the state of war continued. For what compact can
be made with a man that is not master of his own life?
What condition can he perform? And if he be once allowed
to be master of his own life, the despotical, arbitrary
power of his master ceases. He that is master of himself
and his own life has a right, too, to the means of
preserving it; so that as soon as compact enters, slavery
ceases, and he so far quits his absolute power and puts
an end to the state of war who enters into conditions
with his captive.
173. Nature gives the first of these- viz., paternal
power to parents for the benefit of their children during
their minority, to supply their want of ability and
understanding how to manage their property. (By property
I must be understood here, as in other places, to mean
that property which men have in their persons as well as
goods.) Voluntary agreement gives the second- viz.,
political power to governors, for the benefit of their
subjects, to secure them in the possession and use of
their properties. And forfeiture gives the third-
despotical power to lords for their own benefit over
those who are stripped of all property.
174. He that shall consider the distinct rise and extent,
and the different ends of these several powers, will
plainly see that paternal power comes as far short of
that of the magistrate as despotical exceeds it; and that
absolute dominion, however placed, is so far from being
one kind of civil society that it is as inconsistent with
it as slavery is with property. Paternal power is only
where minority makes the child incapable to manage his
property; political where men have property in their own
disposal; and despotical over such as have no property at
all.
Of Conquest
175. THOUGH governments can originally have no other
rise than that before mentioned, nor polities be founded
on anything but the consent of the people, yet such have
been the disorders ambition has filled the world with,
that in the noise of war, which makes so great a part of
the history of mankind, this consent is little taken
notice of; and, therefore, many have mistaken the force
of arms for the consent of the people, and reckon
conquest as one of the originals of government. But
conquest is as far from setting up any government as
demolishing a house is from building a new one in the
place. Indeed, it often makes way for a new frame of a
commonwealth by destroying the former; but, without the
consent of the people, can never erect a new one.
176. That the aggressor, who puts himself into the state
of war with another, and unjustly invades another man's
right, can, by such an unjust war, never come to have a
right over the conquered, will be easily agreed by all
men, who will not think that robbers and pirates have a
right of empire over whomsoever they have force enough to
master, or that men are bound by promises which unlawful
force extorts from them. Should a robber break into my
house, and, with a dagger at my throat, make me seal
deeds to convey my estate to him, would this give him any
title? Just such a title by his sword has an unjust
conqueror who forces me into submission. The injury and
the crime is equal, whether committed by the wearer of a
crown or some petty villain. The title of the offender
and the number of his followers make no difference in the
offence, unless it be to aggravate it. The only
difference is, great robbers punish little ones to keep
them in their obedience; but the great ones are rewarded
with laurels and triumphs, because they are too big for
the weak hands of justice in this world, and have the
power in their own possession which should punish
offenders. What is my remedy against a robber that so
broke into my house? Appeal to the law for justice. But
perhaps justice is denied, or I am crippled and cannot
stir; robbed, and have not the means to do it. If God has
taken away all means of seeking remedy, there is nothing
left but patience. But my son, when able, may seek the
relief of the law, which I am denied; he or his son may
renew his appeal till he recover his right. But the
conquered, or their children, have no court- no
arbitrator on earth to appeal to. Then they may appeal,
as Jephtha did, to Heaven, and repeat their appeal till
they have recovered the native right of their ancestors,
which was to have such a legislative over them as the
majority should approve and freely acquiesce in. If it be
objected this would cause endless trouble, I answer, no
more than justice does, where she lies open to all that
appeal to her. He that troubles his neighbour without a
cause is punished for it by the justice of the court he
appeals to. And he that appeals to Heaven must be sure he
has right on his side, and a right, too, that is worth
the trouble and cost of the appeal, as he will answer at
a tribunal that cannot be deceived, and will be sure to
retribute to every one according to the mischiefs he hath
created to his fellow-subjects- that is, any part of
mankind. From whence it is plain that he that conquers in
an unjust war can thereby have no title to the subjection
and obedience of the conquered.
177. But supposing victory favours the right side, let us
consider a conqueror in a lawful war, and see what power
he gets, and over whom.
First, it is plain he gets no power by his conquest over
those that conquered with him. They that fought on his
side cannot suffer by the conquest, but must, at least,
be as much free men as they were before. And most
commonly they serve upon terms, and on condition to share
with their leader, and enjoy a part of the spoil and
other advantages that attend the conquering sword, or, at
least, have a part of the subdued country bestowed upon
them. And the conquering people are not, I hope, to be
slaves by conquest, and wear their laurels only to show
they are sacrifices to their leader's triumph. They that
found absolute monarchy upon the title of the sword make
their heroes, who are the founders of such monarchies,
arrant "draw-can-sirs," and forget they had any officers
and soldiers that fought on their side in the battles
they won, or assisted them in the subduing, or shared in
possessing the countries they mastered. We are told by
some that the English monarchy is founded in the Norman
Conquest, and that our princes have thereby a title to
absolute dominion, which, if it were true (as by the
history it appears otherwise), and that William had a
right to make war on this island, yet his dominion by
conquest could reach no farther than to the Saxons and
Britons that were then inhabitants of this country. The
Normans that came with him and helped to conquer, and all
descended from them, are free men and no subjects by
conquest, let that give what dominion it will. And if I
or anybody else shall claim freedom as derived from them,
it will be very hard to prove the contrary; and it is
plain, the law that has made no distinction between the
one and the other intends not there should be any
difference in their freedom or privileges.
178. But supposing, which seldom happens, that the
conquerors and conquered never incorporate into one
people under the same laws and freedom; let us see next
what power a lawful conqueror has over the subdued, and
that I say is purely despotical. He has an absolute power
over the lives of those who, by an unjust war, have
forfeited them, but not over the lives or fortunes of
those who engaged not in the war, nor over the
possessions even of those who were actually engaged in
it.
179. Secondly, I say, then, the conqueror gets no power
but only over those who have actually assisted,
concurred, or consented to that unjust force that is used
against him. For the people having given to their
governors no power to do an unjust thing, such as is to
make an unjust war (for they never had such a power in
themselves), they ought not to be charged as guilty of
the violence and injustice that is committed in an unjust
war any farther than they actually abet it, no more than
they are to be thought guilty of any violence or
oppression their governors should use upon the people
themselves or any part of their fellow-subjects, they
having empowered them no more to the one than to the
other. Conquerors, it is true, seldom trouble themselves
to make the distinction, but they willingly permit the
confusion of war to sweep all together; but yet this
alters not the right; for the conqueror's power over the
lives of the conquered being only because they have used
force to do or maintain an injustice, he can have that
power only over those who have concurred in that force;
all the rest are innocent, and he has no more title over
the people of that country who have done him no injury,
and so have made no forfeiture of their lives, than he
has over any other who, without any injuries or
provocations, have lived upon fair terms with him.
180. Thirdly, the power a conqueror gets over those he
overcomes in a just war is perfectly despotical; he has
an absolute power over the lives of those who, by putting
themselves in a state of war, have forfeited them, but he
has not thereby a right and title to their possessions.
This I doubt not but at first sight will seem a strange
doctrine, it being so quite contrary to the practice of
the world; there being nothing more familiar in speaking
of the dominion of countries than to say such an one
conquered it, as if conquest, without any more ado,
conveyed a right of possession. But when we consider that
the practice of the strong and powerful, how universal
soever it may be, is seldom the rule of right, however it
be one part of the subjection of the conquered not to
argue against the conditions cut out to them by the
conquering swords.
181. Though in all war there be usually a complication of
force and damage, and the aggressor seldom fails to harm
the estate when he uses force against the persons of
those he makes war upon, yet it is the use of force only
that puts a man into the state of war. For whether by
force he begins the injury, or else having quietly and by
fraud done the injury, he refuses to make reparation, and
by force maintains it, which is the same thing as at
first to have done it by force; it is the unjust use of
force that makes the war. For he that breaks open my
house and violently turns me out of doors, or having
peaceably got in, by force keeps me out, does, in effect,
the same thing; supposing we are in such a state that we
have no common judge on earth whom I may appeal to, and
to whom we are both obliged to submit, for of such I am
now speaking. It is the unjust use of force, then, that
puts a man into the state of war with another, and
thereby he that is guilty of it makes a forfeiture of his
life. For quitting reason, which is the rule given
between man and man, and using force, the way of beasts,
he becomes liable to be destroyed by him he uses force
against, as any savage ravenous beast that is dangerous
to his being.
182. But because the miscarriages of the father are no
faults of the children, who may be rational and
peaceable, notwithstanding the brutishness and injustice
of the father, the father, by his miscarriages and
violence, can forfeit but his own life, and involves not
his children in his guilt or destruction. His goods which
Nature, that willeth the preservation of all mankind as
much as is possible, hath made to belong to the children
to keep them from perishing, do still continue to belong
to his children. For supposing them not to have joined in
the war either through infancy or choice, they have done
nothing to forfeit them, nor has the conqueror any right
to take them away by the bare right of having subdued him
that by force attempted his destruction, though, perhaps,
he may have some right to them to repair the damages he
has sustained by the war, and the defence of his own
right, which how far it reaches to the possessions of the
conquered we shall see by-and-by; so that he that by
conquest has a right over a man's person, to destroy him
if he pleases, has not thereby a right over his estate to
possess and enjoy it. For it is the brutal force the
aggressor has used that gives his adversary a right to
take away his life and destroy him, if he pleases, as a
noxious creature; but it is damage sustained that alone
gives him title to another man's goods; for though I may
kill a thief that sets on me in the highway, yet I may
not (which seems less) take away his money and let him
go; this would be robbery on my side. His force, and the
state of war he put himself in, made him forfeit his
life, but gave me no title to his goods. The right, then,
of conquest extends only to the lives of those who joined
in the war, but not to their estates, but only in order
to make reparation for the damages received and the
charges of the war, and that, too, with reservation of
the right of the innocent wife and children.
183. Let the conqueror have as much justice on his side
as could be supposed, he has no right to seize more than
the vanquished could forfeit; his life is at the victor's
mercy, and his service and goods he may appropriate to
make himself reparation; but he cannot take the goods of
his wife and children, they too had a title to the goods
he enjoyed, and their shares in the estate he possessed.
For example, I in the state of Nature (and all
commonwealths are in the state of Nature one with
another) have injured another man, and refusing to give
satisfaction, it is come to a state of war wherein my
defending by force what I had gotten unjustly makes me
the aggressor. I am conquered; my life, it is true, as
forfeit, is at mercy, but not my wife's and children's.
They made not the war, nor assisted in it. I could not
forfeit their lives, they were not mine to forfeit. My
wife had a share in my estate, that neither could I
forfeit. And my children also, being born of me, had a
right to be maintained out of my labour or substance.
Here then is the case: The conqueror has a title to
reparation for damages received, and the children have a
title to their father's estate for their subsistence. For
as to the wife's share, whether her own labour or compact
gave her a title to it, it is plain her husband could not
forfeit what was hers. What must be done in the case? I
answer: The fundamental law of Nature being that all, as
much as may be, should be preserved, it follows that if
there be not enough fully to satisfy both- viz., for the
conqueror's losses and children's maintenance, he that
hath and to spare must remit something of his full
satisfaction, and give way to the pressing and preferable
title of those who are in danger to perish without it.
184. But supposing the charge and damages of the war are
to be made up to the conqueror to the utmost farthing,
and that the children of the vanquished, spoiled of all
their father's goods, are to be left to starve and
perish, yet the satisfying of what shall, on this score,
be due to the conqueror will scarce give him a title to
any country he shall conquer. For the damages of war can
scarce amount to the value of any considerable tract of
land in any part of the world, where all the land is
possessed, and none lies waste. And if I have not taken
away the conqueror's land which, being vanquished, it is
impossible I should, scarce any other spoil I have done
him can amount to the value of mine, supposing it of an
extent any way coming near what I had overrun of his, and
equally cultivated too. The destruction of a year's
product or two (for it seldom reaches four or five) is
the utmost spoil that usually can be done. For as to
money, and such riches and treasure taken away, these are
none of Nature's goods, they have but a phantastical
imaginary value; Nature has put no such upon them. They
are of no more account by her standard than the
Wampompeke of the Americans to an European prince, or the
silver money of Europe would have been formerly to an
American. And five years' product is not worth the
perpetual inheritance of land, where all is possessed and
none remains waste, to be taken up by him that is
disseised, which will be easily granted, if one do but
take away the imaginary value of money, the disproportion
being more than between five and five thousand; though,
at the same time, half a year's product is more worth
than the inheritance where, there being more land than
the inhabitants possess and make use of, any one has
liberty to make use of the waste. But their conquerors
take little care to possess themselves of the lands of
the vanquished. No damage therefore that men in the state
of Nature (as all princes and governments are in
reference to one another) suffer from one another can
give a conqueror power to dispossess the posterity of the
vanquished, and turn them out of that inheritance which
ought to be the possession of them and their descendants
to all generations. The conqueror indeed will be apt to
think himself master; and it is the very condition of the
subdued not to be able to dispute their right. But, if
that be all, it gives no other title than what bare force
gives to the stronger over the weaker; and, by this
reason, he that is strongest will have a right to
whatever he pleases to seize on.
185. Over those, then, that joined with him in the war,
and over those of the subdued country that opposed him
not, and the posterity even of those that did, the
conqueror, even in a just war, hath, by his conquest, no
right of dominion. They are free from any subjection to
him, and if their former government be dissolved, they
are at liberty to begin and erect another to themselves.
186. The conqueror, it is true, usually by the force he
has over them, compels them, with a sword at their
breasts, to stoop to his conditions, and submit to such a
government as he pleases to afford them; but the inquiry
is, what right he has to do so? If it be said they submit
by their own consent, then this allows their own consent
to be necessary to give the conqueror a title to rule
over them. It remains only to be considered whether
promises, extorted by force, without right, can be
thought consent, and how far they bind. To which I shall
say, they bind not at all; because whatsoever another
gets from me by force, I still retain the right of, and
he is obliged presently to restore. He that forces my
horse from me ought presently to restore him, and I have
still a right to retake him. By the same reason, he that
forced a promise from me ought presently to restore it-
i.e., quit me of the obligation of it; or I may resume it
myself- i.e., choose whether I will perform it. For the
law of Nature laying an obligation on me, only by the
rules she prescribes, cannot oblige me by the violation
of her rules; such is the extorting anything from me by
force. Nor does it at all alter the case, to say I gave
my promise, no more than it excuses the force, and passes
the right, when I put my hand in my pocket and deliver my
purse myself to a thief who demands it with a pistol at
my breast.
187. From all which it follows that the government of a
conqueror, imposed by force on the subdued, against whom
he had no right of war, or who joined not in the war
against him, where he had right, has no obligation upon
them.
188. But let us suppose that all the men of that
community being all members of the same body politic, may
be taken to have joined in that unjust war, wherein they
are subdued, and so their lives are at the mercy of the
conqueror.
189. I say this concerns not their children who are in
their minority. For since a father hath not, in himself,
a power over the life or liberty of his child, no act of
his can possibly forfeit it; so that the children,
whatever may have happened to the fathers, are free men,
and the absolute power of the conqueror reaches no
farther than the persons of the men that were subdued by
him, and dies with them; and should he govern them as
slaves, subjected to his absolute, arbitrary power, he
has no such right of dominion over their children. He can
have no power over them but by their own consent,
whatever he may drive them to say or do, and he has no
lawful authority, whilst force, and not choice, compels
them to submission.
190. Every man is born with a double right. First, a
right of freedom to his person, which no other man has a
power over, but the free disposal of it lies in himself.
Secondly, a right before any other man, to inherit, with
his brethren, his father's goods.
191. By the first of these, a man is naturally free from
subjection to any government, though he be born in a
place under its jurisdiction. But if he disclaim the
lawful government of the country he was born in, he must
also quit the right that belonged to him, by the laws of
it, and the possessions there descending to him from his
ancestors, if it were a government made by their consent.
192. By the second, the inhabitants of any country, who
are descended and derive a title to their estates from
those who are subdued, and had a government forced upon
them, against their free consents, retain a right to the
possession of their ancestors, though they consent not
freely to the government, whose hard conditions were, by
force, imposed on the possessors of that country. For the
first conqueror never having had a title to the land of
that country, the people, who are the descendants of, or
claim under those who were forced to submit to the yoke
of a government by constraint, have always a right to
shake it off, and free themselves from the usurpation or
tyranny the sword hath brought in upon them, till their
rulers put them under such a frame of government as they
willingly and of choice consent to (which they can never
be supposed to do, till either they are put in a full
state of liberty to choose their government and
governors, or at least till they have such standing laws
to which they have, by themselves or their
representatives, given their free consent, and also till
they are allowed their due property, which is so to be
proprietors of what they have that nobody can take away
any part of it without their own consent, without which,
men under any government are not in the state of free
men, but are direct slaves under the force of war). And
who doubts but the Grecian Christians, descendants of the
ancient possessors of that country, may justly cast off
the Turkish yoke they have so long groaned under,
whenever they have a power to do it?
193. But granting that the conqueror, in a just war, has
a right to the estates, as well as power over the persons
of the conquered, which, it is plain, he hath not,
nothing of absolute power will follow from hence in the
continuance of the government. Because the descendants of
these being all free men, if he grants them estates and
possessions to inhabit his country, without which it
would be worth nothing, whatsoever he grants them they
have so far as it is granted property in; the nature
whereof is, that, without a man's own consent, it cannot
be taken from him.
194. Their persons are free by a native right, and their
properties, be they more or less, are their own, and at
their own dispose, and not at his; or else it is no
property. Supposing the conqueror gives to one man a
thousand acres, to him and his heirs for ever; to another
he lets a thousand acres, for his life, under the rent of
L50 or L500 per annum. Has not the one of these a right
to his thousand acres for ever, and the other during his
life, paying the said rent? And hath not the tenant for
life a property in all that he gets over and above his
rent, by his labour and industry, during the said term,
supposing it be double the rent? Can any one say, the
king, or conqueror, after his grant, may, by his power of
conqueror, take away all, or part of the land, from the
heirs of one, or from the other during his life, he
paying the rent? Or, can he take away from either the
goods or money they have got upon the said land at his
pleasure? If he can, then all free and voluntary
contracts cease, and are void in the world; there needs
nothing but power enough to dissolve them at any time,
and all the grants and promises of men in power are but
mockery and collusion. For can there be anything more
ridiculous than to say, I give you and yours this for
ever, and that in the surest and most solemn way of
conveyance can be devised, and yet it is to be understood
that I have right, if I please, to take it away from you
again to-morrow?
195. I will not dispute now whether princes are exempt
from the laws of their country, but this I am sure, they
owe subjection to the laws of God and Nature. Nobody, no
power can exempt them from the obligations of that
eternal law. Those are so great and so strong in the case
of promises, that Omnipotency itself can be tied by them.
Grants, promises, and oaths are bonds that hold the
Almighty, whatever some flatterers say to princes of the
world, who, all together, with all their people joined to
them, are, in comparison of the great God, but as a drop
of the bucket, or a dust on the balance- inconsiderable,
nothing!
196. The short of the case in conquest, is this: The
conqueror, if he have a just cause, has a despotical
right over the persons of all that actually aided and
concurred in the war against him, and a right to make up
his damage and cost out of their labour and estates, so
he injure not the right of any other. Over the rest of
the people, if there were any that consented not to the
war, and over the children of the captives themselves or
the possessions of either he has no power, and so can
have, by virtue of conquest, no lawful title himself to
dominion over them, or derive it to his posterity; but is
an aggressor, and puts himself in a state of war against
them, and has no better a right of principality, he, nor
any of his successors, than Hingar, or Hubba, the Danes,
had here in England, or Spartacus, had be conquered
Italy, which is to have their yoke cast off as soon as
God shall give those under their subjection courage and
opportunity to do it. Thus, notwithstanding whatever
title the kings of Assyria had over Judah, by the sword,
God assisted Hezekiah to throw off the dominion of that
conquering empire. "And the Lord was with Hezekiah, and
he prospered; wherefore he went forth, and he rebelled
against the king of Assyria, and served him not" (II
Kings 18. 7). Whence it is plain that shaking off a power
which force, and not right, hath set over any one, though
it hath the name of rebellion, yet is no offence before
God, but that which He allows and countenances, though
even promises and covenants, when obtained by force, have
intervened. For it is very probable, to any one that
reads the story of Ahaz and Hezekiah attentively, that
the Assyrians subdued Ahaz, and deposed him, and made
Hezekiah king in his father's lifetime, and that
Hezekiah, by agreement, had done him homage, and paid him
tribute till this time.
Of Usurpation
197. As conquest may be called a foreign usurpation, so
usurpation is a kind of domestic conquest, with this
difference- that an usurper can never have right on his
side, it being no usurpation but where one is got into
the possession of what another has right to. This, so far
as it is usurpation, is a change only of persons, but not
of the forms and rules of the government; for if the
usurper extend his power beyond what, of right, belonged
to the lawful princes or governors of the commonwealth,
it is tyranny added to usurpation.
198. In all lawful governments the designation of the
persons who are to bear rule being as natural and
necessary a part as the form of the government itself,
and that which had its establishment originally from the
people- the anarchy being much alike, to have no form of
government at all, or to agree that it shall be
monarchical, yet appoint no way to design the person that
shall have the power and be the monarch- all
commonwealths, therefore, with the form of government
established, have rules also of appointing and conveying
the right to those who are to have any share in the
public authority; and whoever gets into the exercise of
any part of the power by other ways than what the laws of
the community have prescribed hath no right to be obeyed,
though the form of the commonwealth be still preserved,
since he is not the person the laws have appointed, and,
consequently, not the person the people have consented
to. Nor can such an usurper, or any deriving from him,
ever have a title till the people are both at liberty to
consent, and have actually consented, to allow and
confirm in him the power he hath till then usurped.
Of Tyranny
199. As usurpation is the exercise of power which
another hath a right to, so tyranny is the exercise of
power beyond right, which nobody can have a right to; and
this is making use of the power any one has in his hands,
not for the good of those who are under it, but for his
own private, separate advantage. When the governor,
however entitled, makes not the law, but his will, the
rule, and his commands and actions are not directed to
the preservation of the properties of his people, but the
satisfaction of his own ambition, revenge, covetousness,
or any other irregular passion.
200. If one can doubt this to be truth or reason because
it comes from the obscure hand of a subject, I hope the
authority of a king will make it pass with him. King
James, in his speech to the Parliament, 16O3, tells them
thus: "I will ever prefer the weal of the public and of
the whole commonwealth, in making of good laws and
constitutions, to any particular and private ends of
mine, thinking ever the wealth and weal of the
commonwealth to be my greatest weal and worldly felicity-
a point wherein a lawful king doth directly differ from a
tyrant; for I do acknowledge that the special and
greatest point of difference that is between a rightful
king and an usurping tyrant is this- that whereas the
proud and ambitious tyrant doth think his kingdom and
people are only ordained for satisfaction of his desires
and unreasonable appetites, the righteous and just king
doth, by the contrary, acknowledge himself to be ordained
for the procuring of the wealth and property of his
people." And again, in his speech to the Parliament,
1609, he hath these words: "The king binds himself, by a
double oath, to the observation of the fundamental laws
of his kingdom- tacitly, as by being a king, and so bound
to protect, as well the people as the laws of his
kingdom; and expressly by his oath at his coronation; so
as every just king, in a settled kingdom, is bound to
observe that paction made to his people, by his laws, in
framing his government agreeable thereunto, according to
that paction which God made with Noah after the deluge:
'Hereafter, seed-time, and harvest, and cold, and heat,
and summer, and winter, and day, and night, shall not
cease while the earth remaineth.' And therefore a king,
governing in a settled kingdom, leaves to be a king, and
degenerates into a tyrant, as soon as he leaves off to
rule according to his laws." And a little after:
"Therefore, all kings that are not tyrants, or perjured,
will be glad to bound themselves within the limits of
their laws, and they that persuade them the contrary are
vipers, pests, both against them and the commonwealth."
Thus, that learned king, who well understood the notions
of things, makes the difference betwixt a king and a
tyrant to consist only in this: that one makes the laws
the bounds of his power and the good of the public the
end of his government; the other makes all give way to
his own will and appetite.
201. It is a mistake to think this fault is proper only
to monarchies. Other forms of government are liable to it
as well as that; for wherever the power that is put in
any hands for the government of the people and the
preservation of their properties is applied to other
ends, and made use of to impoverish, harass, or subdue
them to the arbitrary and irregular commands of those
that have it, there it presently becomes tyranny, whether
those that thus use it are one or many. Thus we read of
the thirty tyrants at Athens, as well as one at Syracuse;
and the intolerable dominion of the Decemviri at Rome was
nothing better.
202. Wherever law ends, tyranny begins, if the law be
transgressed to another's harm; and whosoever in
authority exceeds the power given him by the law, and
makes use of the force he has under his command to
compass that upon the subject which the law allows not,
ceases in that to be a magistrate, and acting without
authority may be opposed, as any other man who by force
invades the right of another. This is acknowledged in
subordinate magistrates. He that hath authority to seize
my person in the street may be opposed as a thief and a
robber if he endeavours to break into my house to execute
a writ, notwithstanding that I know he has such a warrant
and such a legal authority as will empower him to arrest
me abroad. And why this should not hold in the highest,
as well as in the most inferior magistrate, I would
gladly be informed. Is it reasonable that the eldest
brother, because he has the greatest part of his father's
estate, should thereby have a right to take away any of
his younger brothers' portions? Or that a rich man, who
possessed a whole country, should from thence have a
right to seize, when he pleased, the cottage and garden
of his poor neighbour? The being rightfully possessed of
great power and riches, exceedingly beyond the greatest
part of the sons of Adam, is so far from being an excuse,
much less a reason for rapine and oppression, which the
endamaging another without authority is, that it is a
great aggravation of it. For exceeding the bounds of
authority is no more a right in a great than a petty
officer, no more justifiable in a king than a constable.
But so much the worse in him as that he has more trust
put in him, is supposed, from the advantage of education
and counsellors, to have better knowledge and less reason
to do it, having already a greater share than the rest of
his brethren.
203. May the commands, then, of a prince be opposed? May
he be resisted, as often as any one shall find himself
aggrieved, and but imagine he has not right done him?
This will unhinge and overturn all polities, and instead
of government and order, leave nothing but anarchy and
confusion.
204. To this I answer: That force is to be opposed to
nothing but to unjust and unlawful force. Whoever makes
any opposition in any other case draws on himself a just
condemnation, both from God and man; and so no such
danger or confusion will follow, as is often suggested.
For-
205. First. As in some countries the person of the prince
by the law is sacred, and so whatever he commands or
does, his person is still free from all question or
violence, not liable to force, or any judicial censure or
condemnation. But yet opposition may be made to the
illegal acts of any inferior officer or other
commissioned by him, unless he will, by actually putting
himself into a state of war with his people, dissolve the
government, and leave them to that defence, which belongs
to every one in the state of Nature. For of such things,
who can tell what the end will be? And a neighbour
kingdom has showed the world an odd example. In all other
cases the sacredness of the person exempts him from all
inconveniencies, whereby he is secure, whilst the
government stands, from all violence and harm whatsoever,
than which there cannot be a wiser constitution. For the
harm he can do in his own person not being likely to
happen often, nor to extend itself far, nor being able by
his single strength to subvert the laws nor oppress the
body of the people, should any prince have so much
weakness and ill-nature as to be willing to do it. The
inconveniency of some particular mischiefs that may
happen sometimes when a heady prince comes to the throne
are well recompensed by the peace of the public and
security of the government in the person of the chief
magistrate, thus set out of the reach of danger; it being
safer for the body that some few private men should be
sometimes in danger to suffer than that the head of the
republic should be easily and upon slight occasions
exposed.
206. Secondly. But this privilege, belonging only to the
king's person, hinders not but they may be questioned,
opposed, and resisted, who use unjust force, though they
pretend a commission from him which the law authorises
not; as is plain in the case of him that has the king's
writ to arrest a man which is a full commission from the
king, and yet he that has it cannot break open a man's
house to do it, nor execute this command of the king upon
certain days nor in certain places, though this
commission have no such exception in it; but they are the
limitations of the law, which, if any one transgress, the
king's commission excuses him not. For the king's
authority being given him only by the law, he cannot
empower any one to act against the law, or justify him by
his commission in so doing. The commission or command of
any magistrate where he has no authority, being as void
and insignificant as that of any private man, the
difference between the one and the other being that the
magistrate has some authority so far and to such ends,
and the private man has none at all; for it is not the
commission but the authority that gives the right of
acting, and against the laws there can be no authority.
But notwithstanding such resistance, the king's person
and authority are still both secured, and so no danger to
governor or government.
207. Thirdly. Supposing a government wherein the person
of the chief magistrate is not thus sacred, yet this
doctrine of the lawfulness of resisting all unlawful
exercises of his power will not, upon every slight
occasion, endanger him or embroil the government; for
where the injured party may be relieved and his damages
repaired by appeal to the law, there can be no pretence
for force, which is only to be used where a man is
intercepted from appealing to the law. For nothing is to
be accounted hostile force but where it leaves not the
remedy of such an appeal. and it is such force alone that
puts him that uses it into a state of war, and makes it
lawful to resist him. A man with a sword in his hand
demands my purse on the highway, when perhaps I have not
12d. in my pocket. This man I may lawfully kill. To
another I deliver L100 to hold only whilst I alight,
which he refuses to restore me when I am got up again,
but draws his sword to defend the possession of it by
force. I endeavour to retake it. The mischief this man
does me is a hundred, or possibly a thousand times more
than the other perhaps intended me (whom I killed before
he really did me any); and yet I might lawfully kill the
one and cannot so much as hurt the other lawfully. The
reason whereof is plain; because the one using force
which threatened my life, I could not have time to appeal
to the law to secure it, and when it was gone it was too
late to appeal. The law could not restore life to my dead
carcass. The loss was irreparable; which to prevent the
law of Nature gave me a right to destroy him who had put
himself into a state of war with me and threatened my
destruction. But in the other case, my life not being in
danger, I might have the benefit of appealing to the law,
and have reparation for my L100 that way.
208. Fourthly. But if the unlawful acts done by the
magistrate be maintained (by the power he has got), and
the remedy, which is due by law, be by the same power
obstructed, yet the right of resisting, even in such
manifest acts of tyranny, will not suddenly, or on slight
occasions, disturb the government. For if it reach no
farther than some private men's cases, though they have a
right to defend themselves, and to recover by force what
by unlawful force is taken from them, yet the right to do
so will not easily engage them in a contest wherein they
are sure to perish; it being as impossible for one or a
few oppressed men to disturb the government where the
body of the people do not think themselves concerned in
it, as for a raving madman or heady malcontent to
overturn a well-settled state, the people being as little
apt to follow the one as the other.
209. But if either these illegal acts have extended to
the majority of the people, or if the mischief and
oppression has light only on some few, but in such cases
as the precedent and consequences seem to threaten all,
and they are persuaded in their consciences that their
laws, and with them, their estates, liberties, and lives
are in danger, and perhaps their religion too, how they
will be hindered from resisting illegal force used
against them I cannot tell. This is an inconvenience, I
confess, that attends all governments whatsoever, when
the governors have brought it to this pass, to be
generally suspected of their people, the most dangerous
state they can possibly put themselves in; wherein they
are the less to be pitied, because it is so easy to be
avoided. It being as impossible for a governor, if he
really means the good of his people, and the preservation
of them and their laws together, not to make them see and
feel it, as it is for the father of a family not to let
his children see he loves and takes care of them.
210. But if all the world shall observe pretences of one
kind, and actions of another, arts used to elude the law,
and the trust of prerogative (which is an arbitrary power
in some things left in the prince's hand to do good, not
harm, to the people) employed contrary to the end for
which it was given; if the people shall find the
ministers and subordinate magistrates chosen, suitable to
such ends, and favoured or laid by proportionably as they
promote or oppose them; if they see several experiments
made of arbitrary power, and that religion underhand
favoured, though publicly proclaimed against, which is
readiest to introduce it, and the operators in it
supported as much as may be; and when that cannot be
done, yet approved still, and liked the better, and a
long train of acting show the counsels all tending that
way, how can a man any more hinder himself from being
persuaded in his own mind which way things are going; or,
from casting about how to save himself, than he could
from believing the captain of a ship he was in was
carrying him and the rest of the company to Algiers, when
he found him always steering that course, though cross
winds, leaks in his ship, and want of men and provisions
did often force him to turn his course another way for
some time, which he steadily returned to again as soon as
the wind, weather, and other circumstances would let him?
Of the Dissolution of Government
211. HE that will, with any clearness, speak of the
dissolution of government, ought in the first place to
distinguish between the dissolution of the society and
the dissolution of the government. That which makes the
community, and brings men out of the loose state of
Nature into one politic society, is the agreement which
every one has with the rest to incorporate and act as one
body, and so be one distinct commonwealth. The usual, and
almost only way whereby this union is dissolved, is the
inroad of foreign force making a conquest upon them. For
in that case (not being able to maintain and support
themselves as one entire and independent body) the union
belonging to that body, which consisted therein, must
necessarily cease, and so every one return to the state
he was in before, with a liberty to shift for himself and
provide for his own safety, as he thinks fit, in some
other society. Whenever the society is dissolved, it is
certain the government of that society cannot remain.
Thus conquerors' swords often cut up governments by the
roots, and mangle societies to pieces, separating the
subdued or scattered multitude from the protection of and
dependence on that society which ought to have preserved
them from violence. The world is too well instructed in,
and too forward to allow of this way of dissolving of
governments, to need any more to be said of it; and there
wants not much argument to prove that where the society
is dissolved, the government cannot remain; that being as
impossible as for the frame of a house to subsist when
the materials of it are scattered and displaced by a
whirlwind, or jumbled into a confused heap by an
earthquake.
212. Besides this overturning from without, governments
are dissolved from within:
First. When the legislative is altered, civil society
being a state of peace amongst those who are of it, from
whom the state of war is excluded by the umpirage which
they have provided in their legislative for the ending
all differences that may arise amongst any of them; it is
in their legislative that the members of a commonwealth
are united and combined together into one coherent living
body. This is the soul that gives form, life, and unity
to the commonwealth; from hence the several members have
their mutual influence, sympathy, and connection; and
therefore when the legislative is broken, or dissolved,
dissolution and death follows. For the essence and union
of the society consisting in having one will, the
legislative, when once established by the majority, has
the declaring and, as it were, keeping of that will. The
constitution of the legislative is the first and
fundamental act of society, whereby provision is made for
the continuation of their union under the direction of
persons and bonds of laws, made by persons authorised
thereunto, by the consent and appointment of the people,
without which no one man, or number of men, amongst them
can have authority of making laws that shall be binding
to the rest. When any one, or more, shall take upon them
to make laws whom the people have not appointed so to do,
they make laws without authority, which the people are
not therefore bound to obey; by which means they come
again to be out of subjection, and may constitute to
themselves a new legislative, as they think best, being
in full liberty to resist the force of those who, without
authority, would impose anything upon them. Every one is
at the disposure of his own will, when those who had, by
the delegation of the society, the declaring of the
public will, are excluded from it, and others usurp the
place who have no such authority or delegation.
213. This being usually brought about by such in the
commonwealth, who misuse the power they have, it is hard
to consider it aright, and know at whose door to lay it,
without knowing the form of government in which it
happens. Let us suppose, then, the legislative placed in
the concurrence of three distinct persons:- First, a
single hereditary person having the constant, supreme,
executive power, and with it the power of convoking and
dissolving the other two within certain periods of time.
Secondly, an assembly of hereditary nobility. Thirdly, an
assembly of representatives chosen, pro tempore, by the
people. Such a form of government supposed, it is
evident:
214. First, that when such a single person or prince sets
up his own arbitrary will in place of the laws which are
the will of the society declared by the legislative, then
the legislative is changed. For that being, in effect,
the legislative whose rules and laws are put in
execution, and required to be obeyed, when other laws are
set up, and other rules pretended and enforced than what
the legislative, constituted by the society, have
enacted, it is plain that the legislative is changed.
Whoever introduces new laws, not being thereunto
authorised, by the fundamental appointment of the
society, or subverts the old, disowns and overturns the
power by which they were made, and so sets up a new
legislative.
215. Secondly, when the prince hinders the legislative
from assembling in its due time, or from acting freely,
pursuant to those ends for which it was constituted, the
legislative is altered. For it is not a certain number of
men- no, nor their meeting, unless they have also freedom
of debating and leisure of perfecting what is for the
good of the society, wherein the legislative consists;
when these are taken away, or altered, so as to deprive
the society of the due exercise of their power, the
legislative is truly altered. For it is not names that
constitute governments, but the use and exercise of those
powers that were intended to accompany them; so that he
who takes away the freedom, or hinders the acting of the
legislative in its due seasons, in effect takes away the
legislative, and puts an end to the government.
216. Thirdly, when, by the arbitrary power of the prince,
the electors or ways of election are altered without the
consent and contrary to the common interest of the
people, there also the legislative is altered. For if
others than those whom the society hath authorised
thereunto do choose, or in another way than what the
society hath prescribed, those chosen are not the
legislative appointed by the people.
217. Fourthly, the delivery also of the people into the
subjection of a foreign power, either by the prince or by
the legislative, is certainly a change of the
legislative, and so a dissolution of the government. For
the end why people entered into society being to be
preserved one entire, free, independent society to be
governed by its own laws, this is lost whenever they are
given up into the power of another.
218. Why, in such a constitution as this, the dissolution
of the government in these cases is to be imputed to the
prince is evident, because he, having the force,
treasure, and offices of the State to employ, and often
persuading himself or being flattered by others, that, as
supreme magistrate, he is incapable of control; he alone
is in a condition to make great advances towards such
changes under pretence of lawful authority, and has it in
his hands to terrify or suppress opposers as factious,
seditious, and enemies to the government; whereas no
other part of the legislative, or people, is capable by
themselves to attempt any alteration of the legislative
without open and visible rebellion, apt enough to be
taken notice of, which, when it prevails, produces
effects very little different from foreign conquest.
Besides, the prince, in such a form of government, having
the power of dissolving the other parts of the
legislative, and thereby rendering them private persons,
they can never, in opposition to him, or without his
concurrence, alter the legislative by a law, his consent
being necessary to give any of their decrees that
sanction. But yet so far as the other parts of the
legislative any way contribute to any attempt upon the
government, and do either promote, or not, what lies in
them, hinder such designs, they are guilty, and partake
in this, which is certainly the greatest crime men can be
guilty of one towards another.
219. There is one way more whereby such a government may
be dissolved, and that is: When he who has the supreme
executive power neglects and abandons that charge, so
that the laws already made can no longer be put in
execution; this is demonstratively to reduce all to
anarchy, and so effectively to dissolve the government.
For laws not being made for themselves, but to be, by
their execution, the bonds of the society to keep every
part of the body politic in its due place and function.
When that totally ceases, the government visibly ceases,
and the people become a confused multitude without order
or connection. Where there is no longer the
administration of justice for the securing of men's
rights, nor any remaining power within the community to
direct the force, or provide for the necessities of the
public, there certainly is no government left. Where the
laws cannot be executed it is all one as if there were no
laws, and a government without laws is, I suppose, a
mystery in politics inconceivable to human capacity, and
inconsistent with human society.
220. In these, and the like cases, when the government is
dissolved, the people are at liberty to provide for
themselves by erecting a new legislative differing from
the other by the change of persons, or form, or both, as
they shall find it most for their safety and good. For
the society can never, by the fault of another, lose the
native and original right it has to preserve itself,
which can only be done by a settled legislative and a
fair and impartial execution of the laws made by it. But
the state of mankind is not so miserable that they are
not capable of using this remedy till it be too late to
look for any. To tell people they may provide for
themselves by erecting a new legislative, when, by
oppression, artifice, or being delivered over to a
foreign power, their old one is gone, is only to tell
them they may expect relief when it is too late, and the
evil is past cure. This is, in effect, no more than to
bid them first be slaves, and then to take care of their
liberty, and, when their chains are on, tell them they
may act like free men. This, if barely so, is rather
mockery than relief, and men can never be secure from
tyranny if there be no means to escape it till they are
perfectly under it; and, therefore, it is that they have
not only a right to get out of it, but to prevent it.
221. There is, therefore, secondly, another way whereby
governments are dissolved, and that is, when the
legislative, or the prince, either of them act contrary
to their trust.
For the legislative acts against the trust reposed in
them when they endeavour to invade the property of the
subject, and to make themselves, or any part of the
community, masters or arbitrary disposers of the lives,
liberties, or fortunes of the people.
222. The reason why men enter into society is the
preservation of their property; and the end while they
choose and authorise a legislative is that there may be
laws made, and rules set, as guards and fences to the
properties of all the society, to limit the power and
moderate the dominion of every part and member of the
society. For since it can never be supposed to be the
will of the society that the legislative should have a
power to destroy that which every one designs to secure
by entering into society, and for which the people
submitted themselves to legislators of their own making:
whenever the legislators endeavour to take away and
destroy the property of the people, or to reduce them to
slavery under arbitrary power, they put themselves into a
state of war with the people, who are thereupon absolved
from any farther obedience, and are left to the common
refuge which God hath provided for all men against force
and violence. Whensoever, therefore, the legislative
shall transgress this fundamental rule of society, and
either by ambition, fear, folly, or corruption, endeavour
to grasp themselves, or put into the hands of any other,
an absolute power over the lives, liberties, and estates
of the people, by this breach of trust they forfeit the
power the people had put into their hands for quite
contrary ends, and it devolves to the people, who have a
right to resume their original liberty, and by the
establishment of a new legislative (such as they shall
think fit), provide for their own safety and security,
which is the end for which they are in society. What I
have said here concerning the legislative in general
holds true also concerning the supreme executor, who
having a double trust put in him, both to have a part in
the legislative and the supreme execution of the law,
acts against both, when he goes about to set up his own
arbitrary will as the law of the society. He acts also
contrary to his trust when he employs the force,
treasure, and offices of the society to corrupt the
representatives and gain them to his purposes, when he
openly pre-engages the electors, and prescribes, to their
choice, such whom he has, by solicitation, threats,
promises, or otherwise, won to his designs, and employs
them to bring in such who have promised beforehand what
to vote and what to enact. Thus to regulate candidates
and electors, and new model the ways of election, what is
it but to cut up the government by the roots, and poison
the very fountain of public security? For the people
having reserved to themselves the choice of their
representatives as the fence to their properties, could
do it for no other end but that they might always be
freely chosen, and so chosen, freely act and advise as
the necessity of the commonwealth and the public good
should, upon examination and mature debate, be judged to
require. This, those who give their votes before they
hear the debate, and have weighed the reasons on all
sides, are not capable of doing. To prepare such an
assembly as this, and endeavour to set up the declared
abettors of his own will, for the true representatives of
the people, and the law-makers of the society, is
certainly as great a breach of trust, and as perfect a
declaration of a design to subvert the government, as is
possible to be met with. To which, if one shall add
rewards and punishments visibly employed to the same end,
and all the arts of perverted law made use of to take off
and destroy all that stand in the way of such a design,
and will not comply and consent to betray the liberties
of their country, it will be past doubt what is doing.
What power they ought to have in the society who thus
employ it contrary to the trust that along with it in its
first institution, is easy to determine; and one cannot
but see that he who has once attempted any such thing as
this cannot any longer be trusted.
223. To this, perhaps, it will be said that the people
being ignorant and always discontented, to lay the
foundation of government in the unsteady opinion and
uncertain humour of the people, is to expose it to
certain ruin; and no government will be able long to
subsist if the people may set up a new legislative
whenever they take offence at the old one. To this I
answer, quite the contrary. People are not so easily got
out of their old forms as some are apt to suggest. They
are hardly to be prevailed with to amend the acknowledged
faults in the frame they have been accustomed to. And if
there be any original defects, or adventitious ones
introduced by time or corruption, it is not an easy thing
to get them changed, even when all the world sees there
is an opportunity for it. This slowness and aversion in
the people to quit their old constitutions has in the
many revolutions [that] have been seen in this kingdom,
in this and former ages, still kept us to, or after some
interval of fruitless attempts, still brought us back
again to, our old legislative of king, lords and commons;
and whatever provocations have made the crown be taken
from some of our princes' heads, they never carried the
people so far as to place it in another line.
224. But it will be said this hypothesis lays a ferment
for frequent rebellion. To which I answer:
First: no more than any other hypothesis. For when the
people are made miserable, and find themselves exposed to
the ill usage of arbitrary power, cry up their governors
as much as you will for sons of Jupiter, let them be
sacred and divine, descended or authorised from Heaven;
give them out for whom or what you please, the same will
happen. The people generally ill treated, and contrary to
right, will be ready upon any occasion to ease themselves
of a burden that sits heavy upon them. They will wish and
seek for the opportunity, which in the change, weakness,
and accidents of human affairs, seldom delays long to
offer itself He must have lived but a little while in the
world, who has not seen examples of this in his time; and
he must have read very little who cannot produce examples
of it in all sorts of governments in the world.
225. Secondly: I answer, such revolutions happen not upon
every little mismanagement in public affairs. Great
mistakes in the ruling part, many wrong and inconvenient
laws, and all the slips of human frailty will be borne by
the people without mutiny or murmur. But if a long train
of abuses, prevarications, and artifices, all tending the
same way, make the design visible to the people, and they
cannot but feel what they lie under, and see whither they
are going, it is not to be wondered that they should then
rouse themselves, and endeavour to put the rule into such
hands which may secure to them the ends for which
government was at first erected, and without which,
ancient names and specious forms are so far from being
better, that they are much worse than the state of Nature
or pure anarchy; the inconveniencies being all as great
and as near, but the remedy farther off and more
difficult.
226. Thirdly: I answer, that this power in the people of
providing for their safety anew by a new legislative when
their legislators have acted contrary to their trust by
invading their property, is the best fence against
rebellion, and the probable means to hinder it. For
rebellion being an opposition, not to persons, but
authority, which is founded only in the constitutions and
laws of the government: those, whoever they be, who, by
force, break through, and, by force, justify their
violation of them, are truly and properly rebels. For
when men, by entering into society and civil government,
have excluded force, and introduced laws for the
preservation of property, peace, and unity amongst
themselves, those who set up force again in opposition to
the laws, do rebellare- that is, bring back again the
state of war, and are properly rebels, which they who are
in power, by the pretence they have to authority, the
temptation of force they have in their hands, and the
flattery of those about them being likeliest to do, the
proper way to prevent the evil is to show them the danger
and injustice of it who are under the greatest temptation
to run into it.
227. In both the forementioned cases, when either the
legislative is changed, or the legislators act contrary
to the end for which they were constituted, those who are
guilty are guilty of rebellion. For if any one by force
takes away the established legislative of any society,
and the laws by them made, pursuant to their trust, he
thereby takes away the umpirage which every one had
consented to for a peaceable decision of all their
controversies, and a bar to the state of war amongst
them. They who remove or change the legislative take away
this decisive power, which nobody can have but by the
appointment and consent of the people, and so destroying
the authority which the people did, and nobody else can,
set up, and introducing a power which the people hath not
authorised, actually introduce a state of war, which is
that of force without authority; and thus by removing the
legislative established by the society, in whose
decisions the people acquiesced and united as to that of
their own will, they untie the knot, and expose the
people anew to the state of war. And if those, who by
force take away the legislative, are rebels, the
legislators themselves, as has been shown, can be no less
esteemed so, when they who were set up for the protection
and preservation of the people, their liberties and
properties shall by force invade and endeavour to take
them away; and so they putting themselves into a state of
war with those who made them the protectors and guardians
of their peace, are properly, and with the greatest
aggravation, rebellantes, rebels.
228. But if they who say it lays a foundation for
rebellion mean that it may occasion civil wars or
intestine broils to tell the people they are absolved
from obedience when illegal attempts are made upon their
liberties or properties, and may oppose the unlawful
violence of those who were their magistrates when they
invade their properties, contrary to the trust put in
them, and that, therefore, this doctrine is not to be
allowed, being so destructive to the peace of the world;
they may as well say, upon the same ground, that honest
men may not oppose robbers or pirates, because this may
occasion disorder or bloodshed. If any mischief come in
such cases, it is not to be charged upon him who defends
his own right, but on him that invades his neighbour's.
If the innocent honest man must quietly quit all he has
for peace sake to him who will lay violent hands upon it,
I desire it may be considered what kind of a peace there
will be in the world which consists only in violence and
rapine, and which is to be maintained only for the
benefit of robbers and oppressors. Who would not think it
an admirable peace betwixt the mighty and the mean, when
the lamb, without resistance, yielded his throat to be
torn by the imperious wolf? Polyphemus's den gives us a
perfect pattern of such a peace. Such a government
wherein Ulysses and his companions had nothing to do but
quietly to suffer themselves to be devoured. And no doubt
Ulysses, who was a prudent man, preached up passive
obedience, and exhorted them to a quiet submission by
representing to them of what concernment peace was to
mankind, and by showing [what] inconveniencies might
happen if they should offer to resist Polyphemus, who had
now the power over them.
229. The end of government is the good of mankind; and
which is best for mankind, that the people should be
always exposed to the boundless will of tyranny, or that
the rulers should be sometimes liable to be opposed when
they grow exorbitant in the use of their power, and
employ it for the destruction, and not the preservation,
of the properties of their people?
230. Nor let any one say that mischief can arise from
hence as often as it shall please a busy head or
turbulent spirit to desire the alteration of the
government. It is true such men may stir whenever they
please, but it will be only to their own just ruin and
perdition. For till the mischief be grown general, and
the ill designs of the rulers become visible, or their
attempts sensible to the greater part, the people, who
are more disposed to suffer than right themselves by
resistance, are not apt to stir. The examples of
particular injustice or oppression of here and there an
unfortunate man moves them not. But if they universally
have a persuasion grounded upon manifest evidence that
designs are carrying on against their liberties, and the
general course and tendency of things cannot but give
them strong suspicions of the evil intention of their
governors, who is to be blamed for it? Who can help it if
they, who might avoid it, bring themselves into this
suspicion? Are the people to be blamed if they have the
sense of rational creatures, and can think of things no
otherwise than as they find and feel them? And is it not
rather their fault who put things in such a posture that
they would not have them thought as they are? I grant
that the pride, ambition, and turbulency of private men
have sometimes caused great disorders in commonwealths,
and factions have been fatal to states and kingdoms. But
whether the mischief hath oftener begun in the people's
wantonness, and a desire to cast off the lawful authority
of their rulers, or in the rulers' insolence and
endeavours to get and exercise an arbitrary power over
their people, whether oppression or disobedience gave the
first rise to the disorder, I leave it to impartial
history to determine. This I am sure, whoever, either
ruler or subject, by force goes about to invade the
rights of either prince or people, and lays the
foundation for overturning the constitution and frame of
any just government, he is guilty of the greatest crime I
think a man is capable of, being to answer for all those
mischiefs of blood, rapine, and desolation, which the
breaking to pieces of governments bring on a country; and
he who does it is justly to be esteemed the common enemy
and pest of mankind, and is to be treated accordingly.
231. That subjects or foreigners attempting by force on
the properties of any people may be resisted with force
is agreed on all hands; but that magistrates doing the
same thing may be resisted, hath of late been denied; as
if those who had the greatest privileges and advantages
by the law had thereby a power to break those laws by
which alone they were set in a better place than their
brethren; whereas their offence is thereby the greater,
both as being ungrateful for the greater share they have
by the law, and breaking also that trust which is put
into their hands by their brethren.
232. Whosoever uses force without right- as every one
does in society who does it without law- puts himself
into a state of war with those against whom he so uses
it, and in that state all former ties are cancelled, all
other rights cease, and every one has a right to defend
himself, and to resist the aggressor. This is so evident
that Barclay himself- that great assertor of the power
and sacredness of kings- is forced to confess that it is
lawful for the people, in some cases, to resist their
king, and that, too, in a chapter wherein he pretends to
show that the Divine law shuts up the people from all
manner of rebellion. Whereby it is evident, even by his
own doctrine, that since they may, in some cases, resist,
all resisting of princes is not rebellion. His words are
these: "Quod siquis dicat, Ergone populus tyrannicae
crudelitati et furori jugulum semper praebebit? Ergone
multitudo civitates suas fame, ferro, et flamma vastari,
seque, conjuges, et liberos fortunae ludibrio et tyranni
libidini exponi, inque omnia vitae pericula omnesque
miserias et molestias a rege deduci patientur? Num illis
quod omni animantium generi est a natura tributum,
denegari debet, ut sc. vim vi repellant, seseque ab
injuria tueantur? Huic breviter responsum sit, populo
universo negari defensionem, quae juris naturalis est,
neque ultionem quae praeter naturam est adversus regem
concedi debere. Quapropter si rex non in singulares
tantum personas aliquot privatum odium exerceat, sed
corpus etiam reipublicae, cujus ipse, caput est- i.e.,
totum populum, vel insignem aliquam ejus partem immani et
intoleranda saevitia seu tyrannide divexet; populo,
quidem hoc casu resistendi ac tuendi se ab injuria
potestas competit, sed tuendi se tantum, non enim in
principem invadendi: et restituendae injuriae illatae,
non recedendi a debita reverentia propter acceptum
injuriam. Praesentem denique impetum propulsandi non vim
praeteritam ulciscendi jus habet. Horum enim alterum a
natura est, ut vitani scilicet corpusque tueamur. Alterum
vero contra naturam, ut inferior de superiori supplicium
sumat. Quod itaque populus malum, antequam factum sit,
impedire potest, ne fiat, id postquam factum est, in
regem authorem sceleris vindicare non potest, populus
igitur hoc amplius quam privatus quispiam habet: Quod
huic, vel ipsis adversariis judicibus, excepto Buchanano,
nullum nisi in patientia remedium superest. Cum ille si
intolerabilis tyrannis est (modicum enim ferre omnino
debet) resistere cum reverentia possit."- Barclay, Contra
Monarchomachos, iii. 8.
In English thus:
233. "But if any one should ask: Must the people, then,
always lay themselves open to the cruelty and rage of
tyranny- must they see their cities pillaged and laid in
ashes, their wives and children exposed to the tyrant's
lust and fury, and themselves and families reduced by
their king to ruin and all the miseries of want and
oppression, and yet sit still- must men alone be debarred
the common privilege of opposing force with force, which
Nature allows so freely to all other creatures for their
preservation from injury? I answer: Self-defence is a
part of the law of Nature; nor can it be denied the
community, even against the king himself; but to revenge
themselves upon him must, by no means, be allowed them,
it being not agreeable to that law. Wherefore, if the
king shall show an hatred, not only to some particular
persons, but sets himself against the body of the
commonwealth, whereof he is the head, and shall, with
intolerable ill-usage, cruelly tyrannise over the whole,
or a considerable part of the people; in this case the
people have a right to resist and defend themselves from
injury; but it must be with this caution, that they only
defend themselves, but do not attack their prince. They
may repair the damages received, but must not, for any
provocation, exceed the bounds of due reverence and
respect. They may repulse the present attempt, but must
not revenge past violences. For it is natural for us to
defend life and limb, but that an inferior should punish
a superior is against nature. The mischief which is
designed them the people may prevent before it be done,
but, when it is done, they must not revenge it on the
king, though author of the villany. This, therefore, is
the privilege of the people in general above what any
private person hath: That particular men are allowed, by
our adversaries themselves (Buchanan only excepted), to
have no other remedy but patience; but the body of the
people may, with respect, resist intolerable tyranny, for
when it is but moderate they ought to endure it."
234. Thus far that great advocate of monarchical power
allows of resistance.
235. It is true, he has annexed two limitations to it, to
no purpose:
First. He says it must be with reverence.
Secondly. It must be without retribution or punishment;
and the reason he gives is, "because an inferior cannot
punish a superior."
First. How to resist force without striking again, or how
to strike with reverence, will need some skill to make
intelligible. He that shall oppose an assault only with a
shield to receive the blows, or in any more respectful
posture, without a sword in his hand to abate the
confidence and force of the assailant, will quickly be at
an end of his resistance, and will find such a defence
serve only to draw on himself the worse usage. This is as
ridiculous a way of resisting as Juvenal thought it of
fighting: Ubi tu pulsas, ego vapulo tantum. And the
success of the combat will be unavoidably the same he
there describes it:
Libertas pauperis haec est;
Pulsatus rogat, et pugnis concisus, adorat,
Ut liceat paucis cum dentibus inde reverti.
This will always be the event of such an imaginary
resistance, where men may not strike again. He,
therefore, who may resist must be allowed to strike. And
then let our author, or anybody else, join a knock on the
head or a cut on the face with as much reverence and
respect as he thinks fit. He that can reconcile blows and
reverence may, for aught I know, deserve for his pains a
civil, respectful cudgelling wherever he can meet with
it.
Secondly. As to his second- "An inferior cannot punish a
superior"- that is true, generally speaking, whilst he is
his superior. But to resist force with force, being the
state of war that levels the parties, cancels all former
relation of reverence, respect, and superiority; and then
the odds that remains is- that he who opposes the unjust
aggressor has this superiority over him, that he has a
right, when he prevails, to punish the offender, both for
the breach of the peace and all the evils that followed
upon it. Barclay, therefore, in another place, more
coherently to himself, denies it to be lawful to resist a
king in any case. But he there assigns two cases whereby
a king may unking himself. His words are:
"Quid ergo, nulline casus incidere possunt quibus populo
sese erigere atque in regem impotentius dominantem arma
capere et invadere jure suo suaque authoritate liceat?
Nulli certe quamdiu rex manet. Semper enim ex divinis id
obstat, Regem honorificato, et qui potestati resistit,
Dei ordinationi resistit; non alias igitur in eum populo
potestas est quam si id committat propter quod ipso jure
rex esse desinat. Tunc enim se ipse principatu exuit
atque in privatis constituit liber; hoc modo populus et
superior efficitur, reverso ad eum scilicet jure illo
quod ante regem inauguratum in interregno habuit. At sunt
paucorum generum commissa ejusmodi quae hunc effectum
pariunt. At ego cum plurima animo perlustrem, duo tantum
invenio, duos, inquam, casus quibus rex ipso facto ex
rege non regem se facit et omni honore et dignitate
regali atque in subditos potestate destituit; quorum
etiam meminit Winzerus. Horum unus est, si regnum
disperdat, quemadmodum de Nerone fertur, quod is nempe
senatum populumque Romanum atque adeo urbem ipsam ferro
flammaque vastare, ac novas sibi sedes quaerere
decrevisset. Et de Caligula, quod palam denunciarit se
neque civem neque principem senatui amplius fore, inque
animo habuerit, interempto utriusque ordinis electissimo,
quoque Alexandriam commigrare, ac ut populum uno ictu
interimeret, unam ei cervicem optavit. Talia cum rex
aliquis meditatur et molitur serio, omnem regnandi curam
et animum ilico abjicit, ac proinde imperium in subditos
amittit, ut dominus servi pro derelicto habiti, dominium.
236. "Arlter casus est, si rex in alicujus clientelam se
contulit, ac regnum quod liberum a majoribus et populo
traditum accepit, alienae ditioni mancipavit. Nam tunc
quamvis forte non ea mente id agit populo plane ut
incommodet; tamen quia quod praecipuum est regiae
dignitatis amisit, ut summus scilicet in regno secundum
Deum sit, et solo Deo inferior, atque populum etiam totum
ignorantem vel invitum, cujus libertatem sartam et tectam
conservare debuit, in alterius gentis ditionem et
potestatem dedidit; hac velut quadam rengi abalienatione
effecit, ut nec quod ipse in regno imperium habuit
retineat, nec in eum cui collatum voluit, juris quicquam
transferat, atque ita eo facto liberum jam et suae
potestatis populum relinquit, cujus rei exemplum unum
annales Scotici suppeditant."- Barclay, Contra
Monarchomachos, I. iii., c. 16.
Which may be thus Englished:
237. "What, then, can there no case happen wherein the
people may of right, and by their own authority, help
themselves, take arms, and set upon their king,
imperiously domineering over them? None at all whilst he
remains a king. 'Honour the king,' and 'he that resists
the power, resists the ordinance of God,' are Divine
oracles that will never permit it. The people, therefore,
can never come by a power over him unless he does
something that makes him cease to be a king; for then he
divests himself of his crown and dignity, and returns to
the state of a private man, and the people become free
and superior; the power which they had in the
interregnum, before they crowned him king, devolving to
them again. But there are but few miscarriages which
bring the matter to this state. After considering it well
on all sides, I can find but two. Two cases there are, I
say, whereby a king, ipso facto, becomes no king, and
loses all power and regal authority over his people,
which are also taken notice of by Winzerus. The first is,
if he endeavour to overturn the government- that is, if
he have a purpose and design to ruin the kingdom and
commonwealth, as it is recorded of Nero that he resolved
to cut off the senate and people of Rome, lay the city
waste with fire and sword, and then remove to some other
place; and of Caligula, that he openly declared that he
would be no longer a head to the people or senate, and
that he had it in his thoughts to cut off the worthiest
men of both ranks, and then retire to Alexandria; and he
wished that the people had but one neck that he might
dispatch them all at a blow. Such designs as these, when
any king harbours in his thoughts, and seriously
promotes, he immediately gives up all care and thought of
the commonwealth, and, consequently, forfeits the power
of governing his subjects, as a master does the dominion
over his slaves whom he hath abandoned.
238. "The other case is, when a king makes himself the
dependent of another, and subjects his kingdom, which his
ancestors left him, and the people put free into his
hands, to the dominion of another. For however, perhaps,
it may not be his intention to prejudice the people, yet
because he has hereby lost the principal part of regal
dignity- viz., to be next and immediately under God,
supreme in his kingdom; and also because he betrayed or
forced his people, whose liberty he ought to have
carefully preserved, into the power and dominion of a
foreign nation. By this, as it were, alienation of his
kingdom, he himself loses the power he had in it before,
without transferring any the least right to those on whom
he would have bestowed it; and so by this act sets the
people free, and leaves them at their own disposal. One
example of this is to be found in the Scotch annals."
239. In these cases Barclay, the great champion of
absolute monarchy, is forced to allow that a king may be
resisted, and ceases to be a king. That is in short- not
to multiply cases- in whatsoever he has no authority,
there he is no king, and may be resisted: for wheresoever
the authority ceases, the king ceases too, and becomes
like other men who have no authority. And these two cases
that he instances differ little from those above
mentioned, to be destructive to governments, only that he
has omitted the principle from which his doctrine flows,
and that is the breach of trust in not preserving the
form of government agreed on, and in not intending the
end of government itself, which is the public good and
preservation of property. When a king has dethroned
himself, and put himself in a state of war with his
people, what shall hinder them from prosecuting him who
is no king, as they would any other man, who has put
himself into a state of war with them, Barclay, and those
of his opinion, would do well to tell us. Bilson, a
bishop of our Church, and a great stickler for the power
and prerogative of princes, does, if I mistake not, in
his treatise of "Christian Subjection," acknowledge that
princes may forfeit their power and their title to the
obedience of their subjects; and if there needed
authority in a case where reason is so plain, I could
send my reader to Bracton, Fortescue, and the author of
the "Mirror," and others, writers that cannot be
suspected to be ignorant of our government, or enemies to
it. But I thought Hooker alone might be enough to satisfy
those men who, relying on him for their ecclesiastical
polity, are by a strange fate carried to deny those
principles upon which he builds it. Whether they are
herein made the tools of cunninger workmen, to pull down
their own fabric, they were best look. This I am sure,
their civil policy is so new, so dangerous, and so
destructive to both rulers and people, that as former
ages never could bear the broaching of it, so it may be
hoped those to come, redeemed from the impositions of
these Egyptian under-taskmasters, will abhor the memory
of such servile flatterers, who, whilst it seemed to
serve their turn, resolved all government into absolute
tyranny, and would have all men born to what their mean
souls fitted them- slavery.
240. Here it is like the common question will be made:
Who shall be judge whether the prince or legislative act
contrary to their trust? This, perhaps, ill-affected and
factious men may spread amongst the people, when the
prince only makes use of his due prerogative. To this I
reply, The people shall be judge; for who shall be judge
whether his trustee or deputy acts well and according to
the trust reposed in him, but he who deputes him and
must, by having deputed him, have still a power to
discard him when he fails in his trust? If this be
reasonable in particular cases of private men, why should
it be otherwise in that of the greatest moment, where the
welfare of millions is concerned and also where the evil,
if not prevented, is greater, and the redress very
difficult, dear, and dangerous?
241. But, farther, this question, Who shall be judge?
cannot mean that there is no judge at all. For where
there is no judicature on earth to decide controversies
amongst men, God in heaven is judge. He alone, it is
true, is judge of the right. But every man is judge for
himself, as in all other cases so in this, whether
another hath put himself into a state of war with him,
and whether he should appeal to the supreme judge, as
Jephtha did.
242. If a controversy arise betwixt a prince and some of
the people in a matter where the law is silent or
doubtful, and the thing be of great consequence, I should
think the proper umpire in such a case should be the body
of the people. For in such cases where the prince hath a
trust reposed in him, and is dispensed from the common,
ordinary rules of the law, there, if any men find
themselves aggrieved, and think the prince acts contrary
to, or beyond that trust, who so proper to judge as the
body of the people (who at first lodged that trust in
him) how far they meant it should extend? But if the
prince, or whoever they be in the administration, decline
that way of determination, the appeal then lies nowhere
but to Heaven. Force between either persons who have no
known superior on earth or, which permits no appeal to a
judge on earth, being properly a state of war, wherein
the appeal lies only to heaven; and in that state the
injured party must judge for himself when he will think
fit to make use of that appeal and put himself upon it.
243. To conclude. The power that every individual gave
the society when he entered into it can never revert to
the individuals again, as long as the society lasts, but
will always remain in the community; because without this
there can be no community- no commonwealth, which is
contrary to the original agreement; so also when the
society hath placed the legislative in any assembly of
men, to continue in them and their successors, with
direction and authority for providing such successors,
the legislative can never revert to the people whilst
that government lasts: because, having provided a
legislative with power to continue for ever, they have
given up their political power to the legislative, and
cannot resume it. But if they have set limits to the
duration of their legislative, and made this supreme
power in any person or assembly only temporary; or else
when, by the miscarriages of those in authority, it is
forfeited; upon the forfeiture of their rulers, or at the
determination of the time set, it reverts to the society,
and the people have a right to act as supreme, and
continue the legislative in themselves or place it in a
new form, or new hands, as they think good.
"Of this point, therefore, we are to note that such men
naturally have no full and perfect power to command whole
politic multitudes of men, therefore utterly without our
consent we could in such sort be at no man's commandment
living. And to be commanded, we do consent when that
society, whereof we be a part, hath at any time before
consented, without revoking the same after by the like
universal agreement.
"Laws therefore human, of what kind soever, are available
by consent." Hooker, Ibid.]
"To constrain men to anything inconvenient doth seem
unreasonable." Ibid. i. 10.]
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19