Page:Montesquieu - The spirit of laws.djvu/218

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166
THE SPIRIT

Book VIII.
Chap. 6 & 7.
Monarchy is destroyed, when a prince thinks he shews a greater exertion of power in changing, than in conforming to, the order of things; when he deprives some of his subjects of their hereditary employments to bestow them arbitrarily upon others; and when he is fonder of being guided by fancy than judgment.

Monarchy is destroyed, when the prince, directing every thing entirely to himself, calls the state to his capital, the capital to his court, and the court to his own person.

Monarchy is destroyed, in fine, when the prince mistakes his authority, his situation, and the love of his people; and when he is not fully persuaded that a monarch ought to think himself secure, as a despotic prince ought to think himself in danger.


CHAP. VII.
The same Subject continued.

THE principle of monarchy is corrupted, when the first dignities are marks of the first servitude, when the great men are stripped of popular respect, and rendered the low tools of arbitrary power.

It is still more corrupted, when honor is set up in contradiction to honors, and when men are capable of being loaded at the very same time with infamy[1] and with dignities.

  1. Under the reign of Tiberius statues were erected to, and triumphal ornaments conferred on. informers; which debased these honors to such a degree, that those who had really merited them disdained to accept of them. Fragm of Dio, book 58. taken from the extract of virtues and vices, by Constantine Porphyrog. See in Tacitus in what manner Nero on the discovery and punishment of a pretended conspiracy, bestowed triumphal ornaments on Petronius Turpilianus, Nerva, and Tigellinus Annal book 14. See likewise how the generals refused to serve, because they contemned the military honors, pervnlgatis triumphi insignibus, Tacit. Annal. book 13.
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