
The Rights of Man to Property!; Being a Proposition to Make It Equal Among the Adults of the Present Generation, and to Provide for Its Equal Transmis
Paperback
Currently unavailable to order
ISBN10: 0217132405
ISBN13: 9780217132404
Publisher: General Books
Pages: 106
Weight: 0.45
Height: 0.22 Width: 7.44 Depth: 9.69
Language: English
ISBN13: 9780217132404
Publisher: General Books
Pages: 106
Weight: 0.45
Height: 0.22 Width: 7.44 Depth: 9.69
Language: English
Purchase of this book includes free trial access to www.million-books.com where you can read more than a million books for free. This is an OCR edition with typos. Excerpt from book: locracy obtained the entire ascendency over the people, and from that day began the decline of the Roman Empire. But formidable as this vicinity to Rome, of powerful and warlike neighbours, was, to the welfare of the great majority of the Roman people, it was not the only obstacle they had to contend with. Constituted as their government was, as already stated, they had not the power of original legislation. This was invested in the Aristocracy; all that the people had power to do, was through the tribunes, appointed by themselves, to forbid the enactment of any law, which they deemed injurious to their welfare. They could not originate any new measures, however beneficial they might deem them to be to their condition. And the only method by which they could accomplish any thing of the kind, was by treaty with the governing power. Thus, when the State was attacked, or in danger of it, by enemies from abroad, they could refuse to enlist, or to defend it; or, as the price of so doing, demand, as they often did, the enactment, or the strict fulfilment of the Agrarian Law. The Roman people seem not to have Jearnt; indeed it is a lesson learnt only within the last half century by any nation; that the legislative power of all nations, particularly, in the sense in which such power is ordinarily understood, resides in the majority of those over whom it is exercised. It U no subject of wonder, then, even in the absence of foreign and hostile nations, that the Roman people could not succeed in permanently establishing the Agrarian Law. To have done this, required that they should have ascended to first principles: that they should have explored, philosophically, the primitive condition of man, and there have made themselves acquainted with the origin and fountain of all right, an...