CHAPTER VIII. OF THE BEGINNING OF POLITICAL SOCIETIES.
Sect. 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.
The
only
way
whereby
any
one
divests
himself
of
his
natural
liberty,
and
puts
on
the
bonds
of
civil
society,
is
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. Sect. 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
necessary
to
that
which
is
one
body
to
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, impowered
to
act
by
positive laws,
where
no
number
is
set
by
that
positive
law
which
impowers 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. Sect. 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
hath,
who
may
submit
himself,
and
consent
to
any
acts
of
it
if
he
thinks
fit. Sect. 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
any
thing
to
be
the
act
of
the
whole:
but
such
a
consent
is
next
to
impossible
ever
to
be
had,
if
we
consider
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.
To
which
if
we
add
the
variety
of
opinions,
and
contrariety
of
interests,
which
unavoidably
happen
in
all
collections
of
men,
the
coming
into
society
upon
such
terms
would
be
only
like
Cato's coming
into
the
theatre,
only
to
go
out
again.
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. Sect. 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
expresly
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
a
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. Sect. 100.
To
this
I find
two
objections
made. First,
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. Secondly,
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. Sect. 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
inconveniences
of
that
condition,
and
the
love
and
want
of
society,
no
sooner
brought
any
number
of
them
together,
but
they
presently united
and
incorporated,
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
imbodied
in
armies.
Government
is
every
where
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
any
thing
of
their
original,
they
are
beholden
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. Sect. 102.
He
must
shew a
strange
inclination
to
deny
evident
matter
of
fact,
when
it
agrees
not
with
his
hypothesis,
who
will
not
allow,
that
shew 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, 1. i. c. 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
not
away
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. Sect. 103.
And
I
hope
those
who
went
away
from
Sparta
with
Palantus,
mentioned
by
Justin, 1. iii. c. 4.
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
best
an
argument
from
what
has been,
to
what
should
of
right
be, has
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. Sect. 104.
But
to
conclude,
reason
being
plain
on
our
side,
that
men
are
naturally free,
and
the
examples
of
history
shewing,
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. Sect. 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
to
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
uncapable,
they
pass
him
by,
and
set
up
the
stoutest
and
bravest
man
for
their
ruler. Sect. 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. Sect. 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
to
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
inconveniences
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.
The
equality
of
a
simple
poor
way
of
living,
confining
their
desires
within
the
narrow
bounds
of
each
man's small property,
made
few
controversies,
and
so
no
need
of
many
laws
to
decide
them,
or
variety
of
officers
to
superintend
the
process,
or
look
after
the
execution
of
justice,
where
there
were
but
few
trespasses,
and
few
offenders.
Since
then
those,
who
like
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
chuse
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. Sect. 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. Tho'
the
war
itself,
which
admits
not
of
plurality
of
governors, naturally
devolves
the
command
into
the
king's
sole
authority. Sect. 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
in
the
heads
of
their
forces)
appears
plainly
in
the
story
of
lephtha.
The
Ammonites
making
war
upon
Israel,
the
Gileadites
in
fear
send
to
lephtha, 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, Judg. xi, ii.
which
was,
as
it
seems,
all
one
as
to
be
judge.
And
he
judged
Israel, judg. xii. 7.
that
is,
was
their
captain-general
six
years.
So
when
lotham
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
far,
and
delivered
you
out
of
the
hands
of
Midian, Judg. ix. 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, I. Sam viii. 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, ix. 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, x. 1.
And
therefore
those,
who
after
Saul's being
solemnly
chosen
and
saluted
king
by
the
tribes
at
Mispah,
were
unwilling
to
have
him
their
king,
made
no
other
objection
but
this,
How
shall
this
man
save us? v. 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, xiii. 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
reddest
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. Sect. 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,
uniting
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:
which
ever
of
those
it
was
that
at
first
put
the
rule
into
the
hands
of
a single person,
certain
it
is
no
body
was
intrusted
with
it
but
for
the
public
good
and
safety,
and
to
those
ends,
in
the
infancies
of
commonwealths,
those
who
had
it
commonly used it.
And
unless
they
had
done
so,
young
societies
could
not
have
subsisted;
without
such
nursing fathers
tender
and
careful
of
the
public weal,
all
governments
would
have
sunk
under
the
weakness
and
infirmities
of
their
infancy,
and
the
prince
and
the
people
had
soon
perished
together. Sect. 111.
But
though
the
golden
age
(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
intrusted
in
another's
hands
only
for
their
own
good,
they
found
was
made
use
of
to
hurt them. (*At first,
when
some
certain
kind
of
regiment
was
once
approved,
it
may
be
nothing
was
then
farther
thought
upon
for
the
manner
of
governing,
but
all
permitted
unto
their
wisdom
and
discretion
which
were
to
rule,
till
by
experience
they
found
this
for
all
parts
very
inconvenient,
so
as
the
thing
which
they
had
devised
for
a remedy,
did
indeed
but
increase
the
sore
which
it
should
have
cured.
They
saw,
that
to
live
by
one
man's will, became
the
cause
of
all
men's misery.
This
constrained
them
to
come
unto
laws
wherein
all
men
might
see
their
duty
before
hand,
and
know
the
penalties
of
transgressing
them. Hooker's Eccl. Pol. l. i. sect. 10.) Sect. 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
chuse
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
lure
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
shew,
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. Sect. 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
any
body,
upon
this
supposition,
can
shew
me
any
one
man
in
any
age
of
the
world
free
to
begin
a
lawful
monarchy, I
will
be
bound
to
shew
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
shew
us
which
that
is;
which
when
they
have
done, I
doubt
not
but
all
mankind
will
easily
agree
to
pay
obedience
to
him. Sect. 114.
Though
it
be
a
sufficient
answer
to
their
objection,
to
shew
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. Sect. 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;
all
must
have
been
but
only
one
universal
monarchy,
if
men had
not
been
at
liberty
to
separate
themselves
from
their
families,
and
the
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. Sect. 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
has
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
any
body
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. Sect. 117.
And
this
has generally
given
the
occasion
to
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
commonwealth.
And
thus
the
consent
of
freemen,
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. Sect. 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
English
woman
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
who
ever
was
judged
as
a traytor
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
or
government.
He
is
under
his
father's
tuition
and
authority,
till
he
comes
to
age
of
discretion;
and
then
he
is
a freeman,
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's being a
subject
of
this
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
any
where
else?
Since
the
power
that
a father hath naturally
over
his
children,
is
the
same, where-ever
they
be
born,
and
the
ties
of
natural
obligations,
are
not
bounded
by
the
positive
limits
of
kingdoms
and
commonwealths. Sect. 119.
Every
man
being,
as
has been shewed, 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.
No
body
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
possessions,
or
enjoyment,
of
any
part
of
the
dominions
of
any
government, doth
thereby
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. Sect. 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,
annexed
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,
the
proprietor
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, purchase, permission,
or
otherways,
enjoys
any
part
of
the
land,
so
annexed
to,
and
under
the
government
of
that
commonwealth,
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. Sect. 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
to
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
commonwealth,
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;
or
else
by
some
public
act
cuts
him
off
from
being
any
longer
a
member
of
it. Sect. 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:
this
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
laws
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
denison;
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.