CHAPTER XIX. OF THE DISSOLUTION OF GOVERNMENT.
Sect. 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
intire
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
an
house
to
subsist
when
the
materials
of
it
are
scattered
and
dissipated
by
a whirl-wind,
or
jumbled
into
a
confused
heap
by
an
earthquake. Sect. 212. Besides
this
over-turning
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
connexion:
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
authorized
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
any
thing
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. Sect. 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. Sect. 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
inforced,
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
authorized
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. Sect. 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. Sect. 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
authorized
thereunto,
do
chuse,
or
in
another
way
than
what
the
society
hath prescribed,
those
chosen
are
not
the
legislative appointed
by
the
people. Sect. 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
intire, free,
independent
society,
to
be
governed
by
its
own
laws;
this
is
lost, whenever
they
are
given
up
into
the
power
of
another. Sect. 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
uncapable
of
controul;
he
alone
is
in
a condition
to
make
great
advances
toward
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
certa
inly
the
greatest
crime
which
men
can
partake
of
one
towards
another. Sec. 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
effectually
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
connexion.
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, unconceivable
to
human
capacity,
and
inconsistent
with
human
society. Sect. 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
freemen. 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. Sect. 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. First,
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. Sect. 222.
The
reason
why
men
enter
into
society,
is
the
preservation
of
their
property;
and
the
end
why
they
chuse
and
authorize
a legislative, is,
that
there
may
be
laws
made,
and
rules
set,
as
guards
and
fences
to
the
properties
of
all
the
members
of
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
either
employs
the
force, treasure,
and
offices
of
the
society,
to
corrupt
the
representatives,
and
gain
them
to
his
purposes;
or
openly
preengages
the
electors,
and
prescribes
to
their
choice, such,
whom
he
has,
by
sollicitations, threats, promises,
or
otherwise, won
to
his
designs;
and
employs
them
to
bring
in
such,
who
have
promised
before-hand
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
went
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. Sect. 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
which
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. Sect. 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
authorized
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. Sect. 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
born
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
rouze 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. Sect. 226. Thirdly, I answer,
that
this
doctrine
of
a power
in
the
people
of
providing
for
their
safety
a-new,
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
probablest
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
properest
way
to
prevent
the
evil,
is
to
shew
them
the
danger
and
injustice
of
it,
who
are
under
the
greatest
temptation
to
run
into
it. Sect. 227.
In
both
the
fore-mentioned
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
no
body
can
have,
but
by
the
appointment
and
consent
of
the
people;
and
so
destroying
the
authority
which
the
people
did,
and
no
body
else
can
set
up,
and
introducing
a power
which
the
people
hath
not
authorized,
they
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
a-new
to
the
state
of
war,
And
if
those,
who
by
force
take
away
the
legislative,
are
rebels,
the
legislators
themselves,
as
has been shewn,
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. Sect. 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
neighbours.
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
a
kind
of
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
betwix
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,
and
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
shewing
the
inconveniences
might
happen,
if
they
should
offer
to
resist
Polyphemus,
who
had
now
the
power
over
them. Sect. 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? Sect. 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 persuation, 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
into
such
a posture,
that
they
would
not
have
them
thought
to
be
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
peoples
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,
is
highly
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. Sect. 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. Sect. 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
shew,
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 & furori jugulum
semper
praebebit? Ergone
multitude
civitates suas fame, ferro, & flamma vastari, seque, conjuges, & liberos fortunae ludibrio & tyranni libidini exponi, inque omnia vitae pericula omnesque miserias & molestias a rege deduci patientur? Num illis quod omni animantium generi est a natura tributum, denegari debet, ut sc.
vim
vi repellant, seseq;
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 & 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: & restituendae injuriae illatae,
non
recedendi a debita reverentia propter acceptam injuriam. Praesentem denique impetum propulsandi
non
vim
praeteritam ulciscenti
jus
habet. Horum enim alterum a natura est, ut vitam
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 tyrannus est (modicum enim ferre omnino debet) resistere
cum
reverentia possit, Barclay
contra
Monarchom. 1. iii. c. 8.
In
English
thus: Sect. 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
shew
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
tyrannize
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. Sect. 234.
Thus
far
that
great
advocate
of
monarchical power
allows
of
resistance. Sect. 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:
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
any
body
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,
desire
for
his
pains, a civil, respectful cudgeling where-ever
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 agressor, 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
un-king
himself.
His
words
are,
Quid
ergo, nulline
casus
incidere possunt quibus populo sese erigere atque
in
regem impotentius dominantem arma capere & invadere jure suo suaque authoritate liceat? Nulli certe quamdiu
rex
manet.
Semper
enim ex divinis
id
obstat, Regem honorificato; &
qui
potestati resistit, Dei ordinationi resisit:
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 &
superior
efficitur, reverso ad eum sc. 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 & omni honore & 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 meditator & molitur serio, omnem regnandi curam & animum ilico abjicit, ac proinde
imperium
in
subditos amittit, ut dominus servi pro derelicto habiti dominium. Sect. 236.
Alter
casus
est,
Si
rex
in
alicujus clientelam se contulit, ac regnum quod liberum a majoribus & 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 amifit, ut summus
scilicet
in
regno secundum Deum sit, &
solo
Deo
inferior, atque populum etiam totum ignorantem vel invitum, cujus libertatem sartam & tectam conservare debuit,
in
alterius gentis ditionem & potestatem dedidit; hac velut quadam regni
ab
alienatione 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 & suae potestatis populum relinquit, cujus rei exemplum unum annales Scotici suppeditant. Barclay
contra
Monarchom. 1. iii. c. 16.
Which
in
English
runs
thus: Sect. 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
wisht
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. Sect. 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. Sect. 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
he
instances
in,
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.
This
farther
I
desire
may
be
taken notice
of
out
of
Barclay,
that
he
says,
The
mischief
that
is
designed
them,
the
people
may
prevent
before
it
be
clone: whereby
he
allows
resistance
when
tyranny
is
but
in
design.
Such
designs
as
these
(says he)
when
any
king
harbours
in
his
thoughts
and
seriously promotes,
he
immediately
gives
up
all
care
and
thought
of
the
commonwealth;
so
that, according
to
him,
the
neglect
of
the
public
good
is
to
be
taken
as
an
evidence
of
such
design,
or
at
least
for
a
sufficient
cause
of
resistance.
And
the
reason
of
all,
he
gives
in
these
words,
Because
he
betrayed
or
forced
his
people,
whose
liberty
he
ought
carefully
to
have
preserved.
What
he
adds,
into
the
power
and
dominion
of
a
foreign
nation,
signifies
nothing,
the
fault
and
forfeiture
lying
in
the
loss
of
their
liberty,
which
he
ought
to
have
preserved,
and
not
in
any
distinction
of
the
persons
to
whose
dominion
they
were
subjected.
The
peoples
right
is
equally invaded,
and
their
liberty
lost,
whether
they
are
made
slaves
to
any
of
their
own,
or
a
foreign
nation;
and
in
this
lies
the
injury,
and
against
this
only
have
they
the
right
of
defence.
And
there
are
instances
to
be
found
in
all
countries,
which
shew,
that
it
is
not
the
change
of
nations
in
the
persons
of
their
governors,
but
the
change
of
government,
that
gives
the
offence. 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
Mirrour,
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-task-masters,
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
for, slavery. Sect. 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? Sect. 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
Jeptha did. Sect. 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
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
no
where
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. Sect. 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,
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
erect
a
new
form,
or
under
the
old
form
place
it
in
new
hands,
as
they
think
good.