CHAPTER XVIII. OF TYRANNY.
Sect. 199.
AS
usurpation
is
the
exercise
of
power,
which
another
hath a
right
to;
so
tyranny
is
the
exercise
of
power
beyond
right,
which
no
body
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 intitled,
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. Sect. 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
the
first,
in
his
speech
to
the
parliament, 1603,
tells
them
thus,
And
again,
in
his
speech
to
the
parliament, 1609,
he
hath
these
words:
And
a
little
after,
Thus
that
learned king,
who
well
understood
the
notion
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. Sect. 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. Sect. 202. Where-ever
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
impower
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
the
exceeding
the
bounds
of
authority
is
no
more
a
right
in
a great,
than
in
a
petty
officer;
no
more
justifiable
in
a
king
than
a constable;
but
is
so
much
the
worse
in
him,
in
that
he
has
more
trust
put
in
him, has
already
a
much
greater
share
than
the
rest
of
his
brethren,
and
is
supposed,
from
the
advantages
of
his
education, employment,
and
counsellors,
to
be
more
knowing
in
the
measures
of
right
and
wrong. Sect. 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. Sect. 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, Sect. 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 shewed
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. Sect. 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
authorizes
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 impower
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. Sect. 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
indanger him,
or
imbroil
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
in
the
high-way,
when
perhaps
I
have
not
twelve
pence
in
my pocket:
this
man
I
may
lawfully
kill.
To
another
I
deliver
100
pounds
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,
if
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
may
have
the
benefit
of
appealing
to
the
law,
and
have
reparation
for
my 100
pounds
that
way. Sect. 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 mad-man,
or
heady
malcontent
to
overturn a
well
settled state;
the
people
being
as
little
apt
to
follow
the
one,
as
the
other. Sect. 209.
But
if
either
these
illegal
acts
have
extended
to
the
majority
of
the
people;
or
if
the
mischief
and
oppression
has
lighted
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
which
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. Sect. 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, (tho' 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:
if
a
long
train
of
actions
shew
the
councils
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
the
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?