CHAPTER XI. OF THE EXTENT OF THE LEGISLATIVE POWER.
Sect. 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
any
body
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
no
body
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. (*The
lawful
power
of
making
laws
to
command
whole
politic
societies
of
men,
belonging
so
properly
unto
the
same
intire societies,
that
for
any
prince
or
potentate
of
what
kind
soever
upon
earth,
to
exercise
the
same
of
himself,
and
not
by
express commission immediately
and
personally received
from
God,
or
else
by
authority
derived
at
the
first
from
their
consent,
upon
whose
persons
they
impose
laws,
it
is
no
better
than
mere
tyranny.
Laws
they
are
not
therefore
which
public
approbation
hath
not
made
so. Hooker's Eccl. Pol. l. i. sect. 10.
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
so
ever,
are
available
by
consent. Ibid.) Sect. 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
up
to
the
community:
for
no
body
can
transfer
to
another
more
power
than
he
has
in
himself;
and
no
body
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
inforce
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. (*Two
foundations
there
are
which
bear
up
public societies;
the
one
a
natural
inclination, whereby
all
men
desire
sociable
life
and
fellowship;
the
other
an
order, expresly
or
secretly
agreed
upon, touching
the
manner
of
their
union
in
living
together:
the
latter
is
that
which
we
call
the
law
of
a common-weal,
the
very
soul
of
a politic body,
the
parts
whereof
are
by
law
animated,
held
together,
and
set
on
work
in
such
actions
as
the
common
good
requireth.
Laws
politic,
ordained
for
external
order
and
regiment
amongst
men,
are
never
framed
as
they
should
be, unless
presuming
the
will
of
man
to
be
inwardly
obstinate, rebellious,
and
averse
from
all
obedience
to
the
sacred
laws
of
his
nature;
in
a word, unless
presuming
man
to
be,
in
regard
of
his
depraved
mind,
little
better
than
a wild beast,
they
do
accordingly provide, notwithstanding,
so
to
frame
his
outward
actions,
that
they
be
no
hindrance
unto
the
common
good,
for
which
societies
are
instituted. Unless
they
do
this,
they
are
not
perfect. Hooker's Eccl. Pol. l. i. sect. 10.) Sect. 136. Secondly,
The
legislative,
or
supreme
authority, cannot
assume
to
its
self
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
authorized
judges:*
for
the
law
of
nature
being unwritten,
and
so
no
where
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
ought,
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
to
punish
delinquents.
To
avoid
these
inconveniences,
which
disorder men's propperties
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
which
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. (*Human
laws
are
measures
in
respect
of
men
whose
actions
they
must
direct, howbeit
such
measures
they
are
as
have
also
their
higher
rules
to
be
measured by,
which
rules
are
two,
the
law
of
God,
and
the
law
of
nature;
so
that
laws
human
must
be
made
according
to
the
general
laws
of
nature,
and
without
contradiction
to
any
positive
law
of
scripture,
otherwise
they
are
ill
made. Hooker's Eccl. Pol. l. iii. sect. 9.
To
constrain
men
to
any
thing
inconvenient
doth
seem
unreasonable. Ibid. l. i. sect. 10.) Sect. 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
to
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,
who
is
exposed
to
the
arbitrary
power
of
one
man,
who
has
the
command
of
100,000,
than
he
that
is
exposed
to
the
arbitrary
power
of
100,000 single men;
no
body
being secure,
that
his
will,
who
has
such
a command,
is
better
than
that
of
other
men,
though
his
force
be
100,000 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
bounds,
and
not
be
tempted,
by
the
power
they
have
in
their
hands,
to
employ
it
to
such
purposes,
and
by
such
measures,
as
they
would
not
have
known,
and
own
not
willingly. Sect. 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
their's,
that
no
body
hath a
right
to
take
their
substance
or
any
part
of
it
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, tho'
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. Sect. 139.
But
government,
into
whatsoever
hands
it
is
put, being,
as
I
have
before
shewed, intrusted
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
serjeant,
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
for
not
obeying
the
most
desperate
orders,
can
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
any
thing,
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. Sect. 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? Sect. 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
to
rules,
and
be
governed
by
laws
made
by
such
men,
and
in
such
forms,
no
body
else
can
say
other
men
shall
make
laws
for
them;
nor
can
the
people
be
bound
by
any
laws,
but
such
as
are
enacted
by
those
whom
they
have
chosen,
and
authorized
to
make
laws
for
them.
The
power
of
the
legislative, being
derived
from
the
people
by
a positive
voluntary
grant
and
institution,
can
be
no
other
than
what
that
positive
grant
conveyed,
which
being
only
to
make
laws,
and
not
to
make
legislators,
the
legislative
can
have
no
power
to
transfer
their
authority
of
making
laws,
and
place
it
in
other
hands. Sect. 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
country
man
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,
The
legislative
neither
must
nor
can
transfer
the
power
of
making
laws
to
any
body
else,
or
place
it
any
where,
but
where
the
people
have.