18. Thus at Venice the College, even in the absence of the Doge, is
called "Most Serene Prince."
19. The Palatine of Posen, father of the King of Poland, Duke of
Lorraine.
20. I prefer liberty with danger to peace with slavery.
21. It is clear that the word optimales meant, among the ancients, not
the best, but the most powerful.
22. It is of great importance that the form of the election of
magistrates should be regulated by law; for if it is left at the
discretion of the prince, it is impossible to avoid falling into
hereditary aristocracy, as the Republics of Venice and Berne actually
did. The first of these has therefore long been a State dissolved; the
second, however, is maintained by the extreme wisdom of the senate, and
forms an honourable and highly dangerous exception.
23. Machiavelli was a proper man and a good citizen; but, being attached
to the court of the Medici, he could not help veiling his love of
liberty in the midst of his country's oppression. The choice of his
detestable hero, Caesar Borgia, clearly enough shows his hidden aim; and
the contradiction between the teaching of the Prince and that of the
Discourses on Livy and the History of Florence shows that this profound
political thinker has so far been studied only by superficial or corrupt
readers. The Court of Rome sternly prohibited his book. I can well
believe it; for it is that Court it most clearly portrays.
24. Tacitus, Histories, i. 16. "For the best, and also the shortest way
of finding out what is good and what is bad is to consider what you
would have wished to happen or not to happen, had another than you been
Emperor."
26. This does not contradict what I said before (Book II, ch. 9) about
the disadvantages of great States; for we were then dealing with the
authority of the government over the members, while here we are dealing
with its force against the subjects. Its scattered members serve it as
rallying-points for action against the people at a distance, but it has
no rallying-point for direct action on its members themselves. Thus the
length of the lever is its weakness in the one case, and its strength in
the other.
27. On the same principle it should be judged what centuries deserve the
preference for human prosperity. Those in which letters and arts have
flourished have been too much admired, because the hidden object of
their culture has not been fathomed, and their fatal effects not taken
into account. "ldque apud imperitos humanitas vocabatur, cum pars
servitutis esset." (Fools called "humanity" what was a part of slavery,
Tacitus, Agricola, 31.) Shall we never see in the maxims books lay down
the vulgar interest that makes their writers speak? No, whatever they
may say, when, despite its renown, a country is depopulated, it is not
true that all is well, and it is not enough that a poet should have an
income of 100,000 francs to make his age the best of all. Less attention
should be paid to the apparent repose and tranquillity of the rulers
than to the well-being of their nations as wholes, and above all of the
most numerous States. A hail-storm lays several cantons waste, but it
rarely makes a famine. Outbreaks and civil wars give rulers rude shocks,
but they are not the real ills of peoples, who may even get a respite,
while there is a dispute as to who shall tyrannise over them. Their true
prosperity and calamities come from their permanent condition: it is
when the whole remains crushed beneath the yoke, that decay sets in, and
that the rulers destroy them at will, and "ubi solitudinem faciunt,
pacem appellant." (Where they create solitude, they call it peace,
Tacitus, Agricola, 31.) When the bickerings of the great disturbed the
kingdom of France, and the Coadjutor of Paris took a dagger in his
pocket to the Parliament, these things did not prevent the people of
France from prospering and multiplying in dignity, ease and freedom.
Long ago Greece flourished in the midst of the most savage wars; blood
ran in torrents, and yet the whole country was covered with inhabitants.
It appeared, says Machiavelli, that in the midst of murder, proscription
and civil war, our republic only throve: the virtue, morality and
independence of the citizens did more to strengthen it than all their
dissensions had done to enfeeble it. A little disturbance gives the soul
elasticity; what makes the race truly prosperous is not so much peace as
liberty.
28. The slow formation and the progress of the Republic of Venice in its
lagoons are a notable instance of this sequence; and it is most
astonishing that, after more than twelve hundred years' existence, the
Venetians seem to be still at the second stage, which they reached with
the Serrar di Consiglio in 1198. As for the ancient Dukes who are
brought up against them, it is proved, whatever the Squittinio della
libertà veneta may say of them, that they were in no sense sovereigns.
A case certain to be cited against my view is that of the Roman
Republic, which, it will be said, followed exactly the opposite course,
and passed from monarchy to aristocracy and from aristocracy to
democracy. I by no means take this view of it.
What Romulus first set up was a mixed government, which soon
deteriorated into despotism. From special causes, the State died an
untimely death, as new-born children sometimes perish without reaching
manhood. The expulsion of the Tarquins was the real period of the birth
of the Republic. But at first it took on no constant form, because, by
not abolishing the patriciate, it left half its work undone. For, by
this means, hereditary aristocracy, the worst of all legitimate forms of
administration, remained in conflict with democracy, and the form of the
government, as Machiavelli has proved, was only fixed on the
establishment of the tribunate: only then was there a true government
and a veritable democracy. In fact, the people was then not only
Sovereign, but also magistrate and judge; the senate was only a
subordinate tribunal, to temper and concentrate the government, and the
consuls themselves, though they were patricians, first magistrates, and
absolute generals in war, were in Rome itself no more than presidents of
the people.
From that point, the government followed its natural tendency, and
inclined strongly to aristocracy. The patriciate, we may say, abolished
itself, and the aristocracy was found no longer in the body of
patricians as at Venice and Genoa, but in the body of the senate, which
was composed of patricians and plebeians, and even in the body of
tribunes when they began to usurp an active function: for names do not
affect facts, and, when the people has rulers who govern for it,
whatever name they bear, the government is an aristocracy.
The abuse of aristocracy led to the civil wars and the triumvirate.
Sulla, Julius Caesar and Augustus became in fact real monarchs; and
finally, under the despotism of Tiberius, the State was dissolved. Roman
history then confirms, instead of invalidating, the principle I have
laid down.
29. "Omnes enim et habentur et dicuntur tyranni, qui potestate utuntur
perpetua in ea civitate quæ libertate usa est" (Cornelius Nepos, Life of
Miltiades). (For all those are called and considered tyrants, who hold
perpetual power in a State that has known liberty.) It is true that
Aristotle (Ethics, Book viii, chapter x) distinguishes the tyrant from
the king by the fact that the former governs in his own interest, and
the latter only for the good of his subjects; but not only did all Greek
authors in general use the word tyrant in a different sense, as appears
most clearly in Xenophon's Hiero, but also it would follow from
Aristotle's distinction that, from the very beginning of the world,
there has not yet been a single king.
30. In nearly the same sense as this word has in the English Parliament.
The similarity of these functions would have brought the consuls and the
tribunes into conflict, even had all jurisdiction been suspended.
31. To adopt in cold countries the luxury and effeminacy of the East is
to desire to submit to its chains; it is indeed to bow to them far more
inevitably in our case than in theirs.
32. I had intended to do this in the sequel to this work, when in
dealing with external relations I came to the subject of confederations.
The subject is quite new, and its principles have still to be laid down.
33. Provided, of course, he does not leave to escape his obligations and
avoid having to serve his country in the hour of need. Flight in such a
case would be criminal and punishable, and would be, not withdrawal, but
desertion.