Part 17 (2/2)
_Servius Tullius_.--Yes, Marcus, though I own you to have been the first of mankind in virtue and goodness--though, while you governed, Philosophy sat on the throne and diffused the benign influences of her administration over the whole Roman Empire--yet as a king I might, perhaps, pretend to a merit even superior to yours.
_Marcus Aurelius_.--That philosophy you ascribe to me has taught me to feel my own defects, and to venerate the virtues of other men. Tell me, therefore, in what consisted the superiority of your merit as a king.
_Servius Tullius_.--It consisted in this--that I gave my people freedom.
I diminished, I limited the kingly power, when it was placed in my hands.
I need not tell you that the plan of government inst.i.tuted by me was adopted by the Romans when they had driven out Tarquin, the destroyer of their liberty; and gave its form to that republic, composed of a due mixture of the regal, aristocratical, and democratical powers, the strength and wisdom of which subdued the world. Thus all the glory of that great people, who for many ages excelled the rest of mankind in the arts of war and of policy, belongs originally to me.
_Marcus Aurelius_.--There is much truth in what you say. But would not the Romans have done better if, after the expulsion of Tarquin, they had vested the regal power in a limited monarch, instead of placing it in two annual elective magistrates with the t.i.tle of consuls? This was a great deviation from your plan of government, and, I think, an unwise one. For a divided royalty is a solecism--an absurdity in politics. Nor was the regal power committed to the administration of consuls continued in their hands long enough to enable them to finish any difficult war or other act of great moment. From hence arose a necessity of prolonging their commands beyond the legal term; of shortening the interval prescribed by the laws between the elections to those offices; and of granting extraordinary commissions and powers, by all which the Republic was in the end destroyed.
_Servius Tullius_.--The revolution which ensued upon the death of Lucretia was made with so much anger that it is no wonder the Romans abolished in their fury the name of king, and desired to weaken a power the exercise of which had been so grievous, though the doing this was attended with all the inconveniences you have justly observed. But, if anger acted too violently in reforming abuses, philosophy might have wisely corrected that error. Marcus Aurelius might have new-modelled the const.i.tution of Rome. He might have made it a limited monarchy, leaving to the emperors all the power that was necessary to govern a wide-extended empire, and to the Senate and people all the liberty that could be consistent with order and obedience to government--a liberty purged of faction and guarded against anarchy.
_Marcus Aurelius_.--I should have been happy indeed if it had been in my power to do such good to my country. But the G.o.ds themselves cannot force their blessings on men who by their vices are become incapable to receive them. Liberty, like power, is only good for those who possess it when it is under the constant direction of virtue. No laws can have force enough to hinder it from degenerating into faction and anarchy, where the morals of a nation are depraved; and continued habits of vice will eradicate the very love of it out of the hearts of a people. A Marcus Brutus in my time could not have drawn to his standard a single legion of Romans. But, further, it is certain that the spirit of liberty is absolutely incompatible with the spirit of conquest. To keep great conquered nations in subjection and obedience, great standing armies are necessary. The generals of those armies will not long remain subjects; and whoever acquires dominion by the sword must rule by the sword. If he does not destroy liberty, liberty will destroy him.
_Servius Tullius_.--Do you then justify Augustus for the change he made in the Roman government?
_Marcus Aurelius_.--I do not, for Augustus had no lawful authority to make that change. His power was usurpation and breach of trust. But the government which he seized with a violent hand came to me by a lawful and established rule of succession.
_Servius Tullius_.--Can any length of establishment make despotism lawful? Is not liberty an inherent, inalienable right of mankind?
_Marcus Aurelius_.--They have an inherent right to be governed by laws, not by arbitrary will. But forms of government may, and must, be occasionally changed, with the consent of the people. When I reigned over them the Romans were governed by laws.
_Servius Tullius_.--Yes, because your moderation and the precepts of that philosophy in which your youth had been tutored inclined you to make the laws the rules of your government and the bounds of your power. But if you had desired to govern otherwise, had they power to restrain you?
_Marcus Aurelius_.--They had not. The imperial authority in my time had no limitations.
_Servius Tullius_.--Rome therefore was in reality as much enslaved under you as under your son; and you left him the power of tyrannising over it by hereditary right?
_Marcus Aurelius_.--I did; and the conclusion of that tyranny was his murder.
_Servius Tullius_.--Unhappy father! unhappy king! what a detestable thing is absolute monarchy when even the virtues of Marcus Aurelius could not hinder it from being destructive to his family and pernicious to his country any longer than the period of his own life. But how happy is that kingdom in which a limited monarch presides over a state so justly poised that it guards itself from such evils, and has no need to take refuge in arbitrary power against the dangers of anarchy, which is almost as bad a resource as it would be for a s.h.i.+p to run itself on a rock in order to escape from the agitation of a tempest.
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