Page:Montesquieu - The spirit of laws.djvu/437

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OF LAWS.
385

Book XVII.
Chap. 6, & 7.
The power in Asia ought to be always despotic: for if their slavery was not severe, they would soon make a division, inconsistent with the nature of the country.

In Europe the natural division forms many nations of a moderate extent, in which the government of the laws is not incompatible with the maintenance of the state: on the contrary, it is so favourable to it, that without this the state would fall into decay, and become inferior to all others.

It is this which has formed a genius for liberty, that renders every part extremely difficult to be subdued and subjected to a foreign power, otherwise than by the laws and the advantage of commerce.

On the contrary, there reigns in Asia a servile spirit, which they have never been able to shake off; and it is impossible to find, in all the histories of this country, a single passage which discovers a free soul: we shall never see any thing there but the heroism of slavery.


CHAP. VII:
Of Africa and America.

THIS is what I had to say of Asia and Europe. Africa is in a climate like that of the south of Asia, and is in the same servitude. America[1] being destroyed and lately re-peopled by the nations of Europe and Africa, can now scarcely shew its true genius; but what we know of its ancient history is very conformable to our principles.

  1. The petty barbarous nations of America are called by the Spaniards Indios Bravos, and are much more difficult to subdue than the great, empires of Mexico and Peru.
Vol. I.
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