The RIGHT CQNSTITUTION of a COMMON WEALTH EXAMINED. (continuation.) IN the Roman Itory, some few of their brave patriots and conquerors were men of finall for tune, and of so rare a temper of spirit, that they little cared to improve them, or enrich them selves by their public employment. Some, in deed, were buried at the public charge. And perhaps this race is not quite extinct ; but the examples are so rare, that he who shall build his frame of government upon a presumption that characters of this stamp will arif'e in succession, in fuflicient numbers to preserve the honor and li berty, and promote the prosperity of his people, ■will find himfelf iniftaken. " The time will come," said a Roman senator, " when Hora tii and Valerii will not be found to forego their •" private fortunes for the fake of plebeian liber "" ty." His prediction was fulfilled ; and a simi lar prophecy will be accomplished in every nati on under heaven. The instances too of this kind, an the Roman liiitory, are all of patricians and senators : We do not find one example of a po pular tribune who was so in love with poverty. Cincinnatus was a patrician, a senator of a splen did family and no mean fortune,until his son Ciefo ■was prosecuted, and obliged to fly from his bail. The father had too noble and sublime a spirit to let the bail be ruined, and fold his fortune to pay the forfeiture : When this was done, he had on ly four or fix acres left. But who was it that made him dictator ? Not the people, nor the tri bunes, but the senate/- that very Handing power againil which our author's whole book is writ ten : By no means by a fucceflive sovereignty of the people's representatives, which our author all along contends for. Had the appointment of a dictator at that time lain with the people, mod probably a richer man would have had the pre ference. He behaved with so much magnanimi ty, integrity, and wisdom, that he subdued the enemy,and quitted his authority with all willing ness, and returned to painful private life. This example is a good argument for a mixed govern ment, and for a senate as an eflential part of it ; but 110 argument for a fucceflive sovereignty in the peoples representatives. Gracchus, Marius, Sylla, and Crefar, whose elevation to power was by the. people, in opposition to the senate, did not exhibit such moderation and contentment. Our author s other examples of Lucius Tarquin, and Attilius Regulus, by no means prove such disinterested and magnanimous virtue to be ordi nary in that state, nor Lucius Paulus iEmilius. Lucius Tarquin, or Lucius Tarquinius Collati nus, was not only a patrician and a senator, but of the royal family, and therefore by 110 means an example to /how what the conduit of a general, or other officer or magistrate, will be, who shall be appointed by a majority of the people's fuc cellive annual representatives. He was the hus band of Lucretia, whole blood had expelled the king. It was in an afl'embly of the centuries, where the senate were all powerful, that he was appointed consul with Brutus. Valerius was the favorite of the plebeians. Collatiahadbeengiv en by the king to Ancus Tarquin, because he had 110 estate; ana from thence the family were call ed Collating. At the siege of Ardea the frolic commenced between CtJllatinus and the othei young Tarquinus, over wine, which ended in the visit to their wives, which proved at firft so ho norable to the domestic virtues of Lucretia, and afterward so fatal to her life ; it occasioned alfa the expulsion of kings, andinftitutionof consuls. Brutus and Collatinus were created consuls, but by whom By the people, it is true, but it was in their aflemblies by centuries ; so that it was the senate and patricians who decided the vote. If the people in their tribes, or by their fuccef live representatives, had made the election, Col latinus wouldnot have been chofen,but Valerius, ■who expected it, and had moll contributed, next to Brutus, to rhe revolution. And, by the way, we may observe here, that an aversion to public honors and offices by no means appears in the be havior of the virtuous and popular Valerius. liis desire of the office of consul was so ardent, that his di(appointment and chagrin induced liiin, in a fallen ill-humour, to withdraw from the fe -—jiSieand the forum, and renounce public affairs ; that they dreaded his reconciliation and coalition with the exliiled family. He soon removed this jcaloufy by ta king the oath by which Brutus wanted to bindthe senate againfl: kings and kingly government. All the art of the patricians, with Brutus at their head, was now exerted, to intoxicate the people with fupcrftition. Sacrifices and ceremonies were in troduced, and the consuls approaching the altar, fworc, for themselves, their children, and all posterity, never to recal Tarquin or his sons, or any of liis family ; that the Romans should ne ver more be governed by kings ; that those who ihould attempt toreftore monarchy fhouldbe de voted to the infernal gods, and condemned to the molt cruel torments : And an abhorrence of royalty became the predominant character of the Romans, to such a degree, that they could never bear the name of king, even when, under the em perors they admitted much more than the thing in an unlimitted despotism. But is the cause oi li berty, are the rights of mankind, to Hand for ever on no better a foundation than a blind super stition, and a popular prejudice against a word, a mere name ? It was really no more in this cafe : For even Brutus liimfelf intended that the con suls lliould have all the power of the kings ; and it was only against a family and a name that he declared war. If nations and peoples cannot be brought to a more rational way of thinking, and to judge of things, ol being intoxicated with prejudice and fuperllition against words, it cannot be expe