A Degraded King | |
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As | A Civil Officer |
A Political Officer | |
An Executive |
The Dauphin |
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The Need Of A King |
An Eminence Of Humiliation |
A Degraded King
Let us now turn our eyes to what they have done towards the
formation of an executive power. For this they have chosen a
degraded king. This their first executive officer is to be a
machine, without any sort of deliberative discretion in any
one act of his function. At best he is but a channel to
convey to the National Assembly such matter as it may import
that body to know. If he had been made the exclusive
channel, the power would not have been without its
importance; though infinitely perilous to those who would
choose to exercise it. But public intelligence and statement
of facts may pass to the Assembly with equal authenticity,
through any other conveyance. As to the means, therefore, of
giving a direction to measures by the statement of an
authorized reporter, this office of intelligence is as
nothing.
as a Civil Officer
To consider the French scheme of an executive officer, in
its two natural divisions of civil and political. — In the
first it must be observed, that, according to the new
constitution, the higher parts of judicature, in either of
its lines, are not in the king. The king of France is not
the fountain of justice. The judges, neither the original
nor the appellate, are of his nomination. He neither
proposes the candidates, nor has a negative on the choice.
He is not even the public prosecutor. He serves only as a
notary to authenticate the choice made of the judges in the
several districts. By his officers he is to execute their
sentence. When we look into the true nature of his
authority, he appears to be nothing more than a chief of
bumbailiffs, serjeants at mace, catchpoles, jailers, and hangmen. It is impossible to place anything called royalty in a more degrading point of view. A thousand times better had it been for the dignity of this unhappy prince, that he
had nothing at all to do with the administration of justice,
deprived as he is of all that is venerable, and all that is
consolatory, in that function, without power of originating
any process; without a power of suspension, mitigation, or
pardon. Everything in justice that is vile and odious is
thrown upon him. It was not for nothing that the Assembly
has been at such pains to remove the stigma from certain
offices, when they are resolved to place the person who had
lately been their king in a situation but one degree above
the executioner, and in an office nearly of the same
quality. It is not in nature, that, situated as the king of
the French now is, he can respect himself, or can be
respected by others.
as a Political Officer
View this new executive officer on the side of his political
capacity, as he acts under the orders of the National
Assembly. To execute laws is a royal office; to execute
orders is not to be a king. However, a political executive
magistracy, though merely such, is a great trust. It is a
trust indeed that has much depending upon its faithful and
diligent performance, both in the person presiding in it and
in all its subordinates. Means of performing this duty ought
to be given by regulation; and dispositions towards it ought
to be infused by the circumstances attendant on the trust.
It ought to be environed with dignity, authority, and
consideration, and it ought to lead to glory. The office of
execution is an office of exertion. It is not from impotence
we are to expect the tasks of power. What sort of person is
a king to command executory service, who has no means
whatsoever to reward it? Not in a permanent office; not in a
grant of land; no, not in a pension of fifty pounds a year; not in the vainest and
most trivial title. In France the king is no more the
fountain of honour than he is the fountain of justice. All
rewards, all distinctions, are in other hands. Those who
serve the king can be actuated by no natural motive but
fear; by a fear of everything except their master. His
functions of internal coercion are as odious as those which
he exercises in the department of justice. If relief is to
be given to any municipality, the Assembly gives it. If
troops are to be sent to reduce them to obedience to the
Assembly, the king is to execute the order; and upon every
occasion he is to be spattered over with the blood of his
people. He has no negative; yet his name and authority
is used to enforce every harsh decree. Nay, he must concur
in the butchery of those who shall attempt to free him from
his imprisonment, or show the slightest attachment to his
person or to his ancient authority.
Executive magistracy ought to be constituted in such a manner, that those who compose it should be disposed to love and to venerate those whom they are bound to obey. A purposed neglect, or, what is worse, a literal but perverse and malignant obedience, must be the ruin of the wisest counsels. In vain will the law attempt to anticipate or to follow such studied neglects and fraudulent attentions. To make them act zealously is not in the competence of law. Kings, even such as are truly kings, may and ought to bear the freedom of subjects that are obnoxious to them. They may too, without derogating from themselves, bear even the authority of such persons, if it promotes their service. Louis the Thirteenth mortally hated the Cardinal de Richelieu; but his support of that minister against his rivals was the source of all the glory of his reign, and the solid foundation of his throne itself. Louis the Fourteenth, when come to the throne, did not love the Cardinal Mazarin; but for his interests he preserved him in power. When old, he detested Louvois; but for years, whilst he faithfully served his greatness he endured his person. When George the Second took Mr. Pitt, who certainly was not agreeable to him, into his councils, he did nothing which could humble a wise sovereign. But these ministers, who were chosen by affairs, not by affections, acted in the name of, and in trust for, kings; and not as their avowed, constitutional, and ostensible masters. I think it impossible that any king, when he has recovered his first terrors, can cordially infuse vivacity and vigour into measures which he knows to be dictated by those, who, he must be persuaded, are in the highest degree ill affected to his person. Will any ministers, who serve such a king (or whatever he may be called) with but a decent appearance of respect, cordially obey the orders of those whom but the other day in his name they had committed to the Bastile? will they obey the orders of those whom, whilst they were exercising despotic justice upon them, they conceived they were treating with lenity; and from whom, in a prison, they thought they had provided an asylum? If you expect such obedience, amongst your other innovations and regenerations you ought to make a revolution in nature, and provide a new constitution for the human mind. Otherwise, your supreme government cannot harmonize with its executory system. There are cases in which we cannot take up with names and abstractions. You may call half-a-dozen leading individuals, whom we have reason to fear and hate, the nation. It makes no other difference, than to make us fear and hate them the more. If it had been thought justifiable and expedient to make such a revolution by such means, and through such persons, as you have made yours, it would have been more wise to have completed the business of the fifth and sixth of October. The new executive officer would then owe his situation to those who are his creators as well as his masters; and he might be bound in interest, in the society of crime, and (if in crimes there could be virtues) in gratitude, to serve those who had promoted him to a place of great lucre and great sensual indulgence; and of something more: for more he must have received from those who certainly would not have limited an aggrandized creature, as they have done a submitting antagonist.
as an Executive
A king circumstanced as the present, if he is totally
stupified by his misfortunes, so as to think it not the
necessity, but the premium and privilege, of life, to eat
and sleep, without any regard to glory, can never be fit for
the office. If he feels as men commonly feel, he must be
sensible, that an office so circumstanced is one in which he
can obtain no fame or reputation. He has no generous
interest that can excite him to action. At best, his conduct
will be passive and defensive. To inferior people such an
office might be matter of honour. But to be raised to it,
and to descend to it, are different things, and suggest
different sentiments. Does he really name the ministers?
They will have a sympathy with him. Are they forced upon
him? The whole business between them and the nominal king
will be mutual counteraction. In all other countries, the
office of ministers of state is of the highest dignity. In
France it is full of peril, and incapable of glory. Rivals,
however, they will have in their nothingness, whilst shallow
ambition exists in the world, or the desire of a miserable
salary is an incentive to short-sighted avarice. Those
competitors of the ministers are enabled by your
constitution to attack them in their vital parts, whilst
they have not the means of repelling their charges in any
other than the degrading character of culprits. The
ministers of state in France are the only persons in that
country who are incapable of a share in the national
councils. What ministers! What councils! What a nation! —
But they are responsible. It is a poor service that is to be
had from responsibility. The elevation of mind to be derived
from fear will never make a nation glorious. Responsibility
prevents crimes. It makes all attempts against the laws
dangerous. But for a principle of active and zealous
service, none but idiots could think of it. Is the conduct
of a war to be trusted to a man who may abhor its principle;
who, in every step he may take to render it successful,
confirms the power of those by whom he is oppressed? Will
foreign states seriously treat with him who has no
prerogative of peace or war; no, not so much as in a single
vote by himself or his ministers, or by any one whom he can
possibly influence? A state of contempt is not a state for
a prince: better get rid of him at once.
The Dauphin
I know it will be said that these humours in the court and
executive government will continue only through this
generation; and that the king has been brought to declare
the dauphin shall be educated in a conformity to his
situation. If he is made to conform to his situation, he
will have no education at all. His training must be worse
even than that of an arbitrary monarch. If he reads —
whether he reads or not, some good or evil genius will tell
him his ancestors were kings. Thenceforward his object must
be to assert himself, and to avenge his parents. This you
will say is not his duty. That may be; but it is nature —
and whilst you pique nature against you, you do unwisely to
trust to duty. In this futile scheme of polity, the state
nurses in its bosom, for the present, a source of weakness,
perplexity, counteraction, inefficiency, and decay; and it
prepares the means of its final ruin. In short, I see
nothing in the executive force (I cannot call it authority)
that has even an appearance of vigour, or that has the
smallest degree of just correspondence or symmetry, or
amicable relation with the supreme power, either as it now
exists, or as it is planned for the future government.
The Need Of A King
You have settled, by an economy as perverted as the policy,
two (48) establishments of government; one real, one
fictitious. Both maintained at a vast expense; but the
fictitious at, I think, the greatest. Such a machine as the
latter is not worth the grease of its wheels. The expense is
exorbitant; and neither the show nor the use deserve the
tenth part of the charge. Oh! but I don't do justice to the
talents of the legislators: I don't allow, as I ought to do,
for necessity. Their scheme of executive force was not their
choice. This pageant must be kept. The people would not
consent to part with it. Right; I understand you. You do, in
spite of your grand theories, to which you would have heaven
and earth to bend, you do know how to conform yourselves to
the nature and circumstances of things. But when you were
obliged to conform thus far to circumstances, you ought to
have carried your submission farther, and to have made, what
you were obliged to take, a proper instrument, and useful to
its end. That was in your power. For instance, among many
others, it was in your power to leave to your king the right
of peace and war. What! to leave to the executive
magistrate the most dangerous of all prerogatives? I know
none more dangerous; nor any one more necessary to be so
trusted. I do not say that this prerogative ought to be
trusted to your king, unless he enjoyed other auxiliary
trusts along with it, which he does not now hold. But, if he
did possess them, hazardous as they are undoubtedly,
advantages would arise from such a constitution, more than
compensating the risk. There is no other way of keeping the
several potentates of Europe from intriguing distinctly and
personally with the members of your Assembly, from
intermeddling in all your concerns, and fomenting, in the
heart of your country, the most pernicious of all factions;
factions in the interest and under the direction of foreign
powers. From that worst of evils, thank God, we are still
free. Your skill, if you had any, would be well employed to
find out indirect corrections and controls upon this
perilous trust. If you did not like those which in England
we have chosen, your leaders might have exerted their
abilities in contriving better. If it were necessary to
exemplify the consequences of such an executive government
as yours, in the management of great affairs, I should refer
you to the late reports of M. de Montmorin to the National Assembly, and all the other proceedings relative to
the differences between Great Britain and Spain. It would be treating your understanding with disrespect to point them out to you.
An Eminence Of Humiliation
I hear that the persons who are called ministers have
signified an intention of resigning their places. I am
rather astonished that they have not resigned long since.
For the universe I would not have stood in the situation in
which they have been for this last twelvemonth. They wished
well, I take it for granted, to the Revolution. Let this
fact be as it may, they could not, placed as they were upon
an eminence, though an eminence of humiliation, but be the
first to see collectively, and to feel each in his own
department, the evils which have been produced by that
Revolution. In every step which they took, or forbore to
take, they must have felt the degraded situation of their
country, and their utter incapacity of serving it. They are
in a species of subordinate servitude, in which no men
before them were ever seen. Without confidence from their
sovereign, on whom they were forced, or from the Assembly
who forced them upon him, all the noble functions of their
office are executed by committees of the Assembly, without
any regard whatsoever to their personal or their official
authority. They are to execute, without power; they are to
be responsible, without discretion; they are to deliberate,
without choice. In their puzzled situation, under two
sovereigns, over neither of whom they have any influence,
they must act in such a manner as (in effect, whatever they
may intend) sometimes to betray the one, sometimes the
other, and always to betray themselves. Such has been their
situation; such must be the situation of those who succeed
them. I have much respect, and many good wishes, for M.
Necker. I am obliged to him for attentions. I thought when his enemies had driven him from Versailles, that his exile was a subject of most serious congratulation — sed multae
urbes et publica vota vicerunt. He is now sitting on the
ruins of the finances, and of the monarchy of France.
A great deal more might be observed on the strange constitution of the executory part of the new government; but fatigue must give bounds to the discussion of subjects, which in themselves have hardly any limits.