Considerations on the Choice of Public Rulers: On the Extent of Their Powers; and on the Best Means of Securing the Advantages, and Reforming the Abuses, of Popular Elections |
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Page 9
... obliged to yield up all the exclusive privileges which they had usurped , when settling the consular office , and which they acquired by the new method of voting , to allow the poor- est Roman an equal vote with the richest , in ...
... obliged to yield up all the exclusive privileges which they had usurped , when settling the consular office , and which they acquired by the new method of voting , to allow the poor- est Roman an equal vote with the richest , in ...
Page 35
... obliged to submit to under every government , who , after launching out into different branches of business , a monopoly is granted , or a prohibition . takes place , or a heavy tax is laid on , which ruins the trade and all concerned ...
... obliged to submit to under every government , who , after launching out into different branches of business , a monopoly is granted , or a prohibition . takes place , or a heavy tax is laid on , which ruins the trade and all concerned ...
Page 36
... oblige every one to give up certain possessions which they held in defiance of a former law , as the effects of this law fell upon the senators and rich men , instead of submitting peaceably , as they expected poor men to do in like ...
... oblige every one to give up certain possessions which they held in defiance of a former law , as the effects of this law fell upon the senators and rich men , instead of submitting peaceably , as they expected poor men to do in like ...
Page 71
... obliged to give notice of it to the whole nation ; and then the other ward clerks are obliged to transmit the number that chooses to vote for the measure , to the national clerk , although a minority of their ward , which otherwise they ...
... obliged to give notice of it to the whole nation ; and then the other ward clerks are obliged to transmit the number that chooses to vote for the measure , to the national clerk , although a minority of their ward , which otherwise they ...
Page 83
... obliged to leave home , they ought , like the Roman senators , to give their advice from pa- triotic motives , and disdain the idea of taking wages from their poorer neighbours ; but to show respect to virtue and talents , it seems ...
... obliged to leave home , they ought , like the Roman senators , to give their advice from pa- triotic motives , and disdain the idea of taking wages from their poorer neighbours ; but to show respect to virtue and talents , it seems ...
Other editions - View all
Considerations on the Choice of Public Rulers: On the Extent of Their Powers ... Thomas S. Arden No preview available - 2019 |
Considerations on the Choice of Public Rulers; On the Extent of Their Powers ... Thomas S. Arden No preview available - 2017 |
Considerations on the Choice of Public Rulers: On the Extent of Their Powers ... Thomas S. Arden No preview available - 2016 |
Common terms and phrases
absolute power affairs allow appointed army assembly bank bribing a majority cerns choose civil command consequence consul councils court direct disposal distribute justice district effects emoluments enacting laws equal votes executive expected friends give Gracchus HENCE higher ranks historians imprudent increase the number individuals interest intrusted judges jury legislators limited monarchy lord high admiral lute magistrates manage military force murder national officers national senate necessary neighbours neral number of men number of voters obliged obtain oppress passions patricians persons and property plebeians possessed pretences prevent produced proprietors province provincial senators prudent public agents public offices regulations representatives respective Roman constitution Roman republic Roman senate Rome rulers sanguinary schemes seems sena Servius Tullius slaves sole power sovereign power stewards suppose taking the votes talents Tarquin taxes tempted think proper Tiberius Tiberius Gracchus tion trust tyranny virtue ward ward-voters wardens and jury-men whole society
Popular passages
Page 57 - ... such persons with the magistracy, or even with the right of voting. " Would it not be prudent, and give greater steadiness and respectability to national deliberations, if none were allowed to hold any magistracy, or to vote for any public officer, until they were forty years of age ? Such a regulation would very much lessen the number of voters without injuring the...
Page 58 - Would it not be prudent, and give greater steadiness and respectability to national deliberations, if none were allowed to hold any magistracy, or to vote for any public officer, until they were forty years of age ? Such a regulation would very much lessen the number of voters, without injuring the rights of any class, and would put the magistracy, the election and control of public agents, and the judging and voting on laws, into the hands of men, who from having cooler pa*w>n(, and more experience,...
Page 57 - As there are so many instances of young persons, who, in a few years after their majority, spend their fortunes and ruin their health, from the want of experience, and from the violence of their passions, their own interest being an insufficient check to prevent them, nothing can appear more imprudent than to entrust such persons with the magistracy, or even with the right of voting.
Page 59 - Every three hundred of these, living most contiguous, to form a w«rd, and to meet in a church, or some other convenient place, on a certain day annually, to elect two provincial senators, and one ware'en or judge for the ward.
Page 50 - But by the constitution which was formed for the bank, the directors are not only elected annually, but they are liable to be superseded at any time by their constituents, and each director is liable individually, for every act which he has not protested against which the members of congress are not.
Page 51 - ... congress with power over the property of the nation; yet the American legislators did not think it prudent to allow the directors of the bank any absolute power whatever.