Page:Montesquieu - The spirit of laws.djvu/226

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174
THE SPIRIT

Book VIII.
Chap. 14.
After the battle of Cannæ, the people were seized with such a panic, that they wanted to retire to Sicily. But Scipio having prevailed upon them to swear they would not stir from Rome; the fear of violating this oath surpassed all other apprehensions. Rome was a ship held by two anchors, religion and morality, in the midst a furious tempest.


CHAP. XIV.
How the smallest Charge in the Constitution is attended with the Ruin of its Principles.

ARISTOTLE mentions the city of Carthage as a well regulated republic. Polybius tells us[1], that there was this inconveniency at Carthage in the second Punic war, that the senate had lost almost all their authority. We are informed by Livy that when Hannibal returned to Carthage, he found that the magistrates and the principal citizens had abused their power, and converted the public revenues to their own emolument. The virtue therefore of the magistrates, and the authority of the senate both fell at the same time; and all was owing to the same cause.

Every one knows the wonderful effects of the censorship among the Romans. There was a time when it grew burthensome; but still it was supported, because there was more luxury than corruption. Claudius[2] weakened its authority, and by this means the corruption became greater than the luxury, and the censorship dwindled away of itself[3].

  1. About a hundred years after.
  2. See Book 11th Ch. 12th.
  3. The tribunes hindered them from making the census, and opposed their election. See Cicero to Atticus, Book 4th, Letter 10 and 15.
CHAP.