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Letters on England [13]

By Root 1636 0
people of Rome, much less is there any

affinity between their Governments. There is in London a senate,

some of the members whereof are accused (doubtless very unjustly) of

selling their voices on certain occasions, as was done in Rome; this

is the only resemblance. Besides, the two nations appear to me

quite opposite in character, with regard both to good and evil. The

Romans never knew the dreadful folly of religious wars, an

abomination reserved for devout preachers of patience and humility.

Marius and Sylla, Caesar and Pompey, Anthony and Augustus, did not

draw their swords and set the world in a blaze merely to determine

whether the flamen should wear his shirt over his robe, or his robe

over his shirt, or whether the sacred chickens should eat and drink,

or eat only, in order to take the augury. The English have hanged

one another by law, and cut one another to pieces in pitched

battles, for quarrels of as trifling a nature. The sects of the

Episcopalians and Presbyterians quite distracted these very serious

heads for a time. But I fancy they will hardly ever be so silly

again, they seeming to be grown wiser at their own expense; and I do

not perceive the least inclination in them to murder one another

merely about syllogisms, as some zealots among them once did.



But here follows a more essential difference between Rome and

England, which gives the advantage entirely to the latter--viz.,

that the civil wars of Rome ended in slavery, and those of the

English in liberty. The English are the only people upon earth who

have been able to prescribe limits to the power of kings by

resisting them; and who, by a series of struggles, have at last

established that wise Government where the Prince is all-powerful to

do good, and, at the same time, is restrained from committing evil;

where the nobles are great without insolence, though there are no

vassals; and where the people share in the Government without

confusion.



The House of Lords and that of the Commons divide the legislative

power under the king, but the Romans had no such balance. The

patricians and plebeians in Rome were perpetually at variance, and

there was no intermediate power to reconcile them. The Roman

senate, who were so unjustly, so criminally proud as not to suffer

the plebeians to share with them in anything, could find no other

artifice to keep the latter out of the administration than by

employing them in foreign wars. They considered the plebeians as a

wild beast, whom it behoved them to let loose upon their neighbours,

for fear they should devour their masters. Thus the greatest defect

in the Government of the Romans raised them to be conquerors. By

being unhappy at home, they triumphed over and possessed themselves

of the world, till at last their divisions sunk them to slavery.



The Government of England will never rise to so exalted a pitch of

glory, nor will its end be so fatal. The English are not fired with

the splendid folly of making conquests, but would only prevent their

neighbours from conquering. They are not only jealous of their own

liberty, but even of that of other nations. The English were

exasperated against Louis XIV. for no other reason but because he

was ambitious, and declared war against him merely out of levity,

not from any interested motives.



The English have doubtless purchased their liberties at a very high

price, and waded through seas of blood to drown the idol of

arbitrary power. Other nations have been involved in as great

calamities, and have shed as much blood; but then the blood they

spilt in defence of their liberties only enslaved them the more.



That which rises to a revolution in England is no more than a

sedition in other countries. A city in Spain, in Barbary, or in

Turkey, takes up arms in defence of its privileges, when immediately

it is stormed by mercenary troops, it is punished by executioners,
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