Page:History of the Indian Archipelago Vol 3.djvu/285

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

EUROPEAN NATIONS. 2G9 bounded freedom of commerce and settlement to persons of all nations and religions. It need hard- ly be insisted, that the latter implies a right of pri- vate property in the soil, so unjustly and absurdly withheld from our countrymen in India, for with- out it the settlers would be no better than disreputa- ble vagrants, having no attachment to the land, nor to the government that afforded them protection. To establish, in all respects, a free government on a representative system, will be found, perhaps, im- practicable with the motley population, * of which such a colony would consist. To a representative body, however, the right of imposing taxes must be left, and, if the representatives are chosen alike from all the classes of inhabitants — if the elective franchise be confined to those who, by long resi- dence, have acquired the right of naturalization, and to persons of considerable estate, no danger from turbulence or anarchy can be apprehended. A pure and impartial administration of a code of laws suited to the state of such a colony, and adapt- ed to the peculiar character of its varied population, will form the most important branch of its admi- nistration. With respect to the duty of the chief magistrate.

  • At Pcnang, it is reckoned that tlicre are twenty- two lan-

guages spoken, and at Batavia there are many more.