The RIGHT CONSTITUTION of a COMMON WEALTH EXAMINED. [Continued from our IT was by flattery,bribery,artifice,and violence, that Marius andApuleius prevailed with the peo ple to continue tlieir power, in opposition to all that the senate could do to prevent it. Wliat Mould have been the consequence then if there had been no senate ? Would not the majority of the people in the tribes have continued their power, againit all that could have been done by the minority ? Would not ftillmore of the pub lic lands, money, and grain, have been laviihed npon proper inftruinents among the majority, and the minority have been compelled to pay the ex pence ? Our author affects to fay, that the " fe " l-.ate and people continued the power of Pom* " pey and Cxfar." But Ctefar himielf knew it was the people, and notthe senate ; and if the senate continued Pompey,it was because Ctefar and the people laid them under the necessity of doing it in their own defence. Would Csefar have had lels " command in Gallia," if the people, or their successive assemblies, had been poifeffed of all power ? It is molt obvious, that a majority of the people, in that cafe, would have continued Caelar as long as he desired, and have given him a-; much power as he wilhed : so that every Hep of our author's progress demonllrates his fyftein tobefalfe. It is idle to fay, that a continuation of power increases influence, and spreads cor ruption, unless you point out a way to prevent such a continuation of power. To give all power to the people's successive single representative as semblies, is to make the continuance of power, •with all its increasing influence and corruption, certain and inevitable. You may as wifely preach to the winds, as gravely exhort a triumphant majority to lay down their power. It is undoubtedly honorable in any man, who has acquired a great influence, unbounded confi dence, and unlimited power, to resign it volunta rily ; and odious to take advantage of such an opportunity to destroy a free government : but it would be madness in a legislator to frame his policy upon a supposition that such magnanimity would often appear. It is hisbufinefs to contrive his plan in such a manner, that such unlimited influence, confidence, and power, lhall never be obtained by any man. The laws alone can be rruftedwith unlimited confidence :—Tliofe laws, which alone can secure equity between all and every one * ; which are the bond of that dignity which we enjoy in the commonwealth ; the foun dation of liberty, and the foundation of equity ; the mind, the foul, the counsel, and judgment of the city ; whose ministers are the magistrates, whose interpreters the judges,whofe servants are all men who mean to be fieef: —Those laws, which are right reason, derived from the Divini ty,commanding lionefty,and forbidding iniquity; which are silent magiltrates, where the magis trates are only speaking laws ; which,as they are fotmded in eternal morals, are emanations of the Divine mind:f. If, the life of liberty, and the only remedy " against felf-intereft, lies in lucceffion of powers " and persons," the United States of America have taken the molt effectual measures to secure that life and that remedy, in establishing annual elections of their governors, senators, and repre sentatives. This will probably be allowed to be as perfect aneftablifhmentof afucceflion of pow ers and persons as human laws can make : but in what manner annual elec'tions of governors and senators will operate remains to be ascertained. It should always be remembered, that this is not the fii-ft experiment that was ever made in the world of elections to great offices of state : how they have hitherto operated in every great nation, and what has been their end, is very well known. Mankind have univerf.illy difcoveredthat chance was preferable to a corrupt choice, and have trufl ed providence rather than themfeives. Firlt ma giltrates and Senators had better be made here ditary at once, than that the people should be uni versally debauched and bribed,go to loggerheads, and fly to arms regularly every year. Thank Heaven ! Americans underftancl calling conven tions ; and if the time should come, as it is Very poiiible it may, when hereditary descent shall be come a less evil than annual fraud and violence, iucli a convention may still prevent the firlt ma gistrate from becoming absolute as well as here ditary.— 15ut if this argument of our author is considered as he intended it, as a proof that a fucceflion of powers and persons in one aflembiy is the most perfect commonwealth, it is totally fallacious. * Quod