On November 5,
1720, the first letter from Cato (pseudonym for John Trenchard and Thomas
Gordon, honoring Cato the Younger, whose dedication to principles of liberty
led him to oppose Julius Caesar) appeared in the London Journal.
Many more followed, reflecting the ideas of John Locke, soon making it
England's most influential newspaper, and leading to collections of
Cato's Letters that were, according to Clinton Rossiter "the most
popular, quotable, esteemed source of political ideas in the colonial
period."
As one of the
letters said, "it is and has been the great design of this paper to maintain
and expose the glorious principles of liberty, and to expose the arts of
those who would darken or destroy them..." That theme was what made it so
important to our heritage as Americans.
According to
Ronald Hamowy, "From its first publication in the 1720s through the
revolutionary era that ended the century, its impact on both sides of the
Atlantic was enormous. Its arguments against oppressive government and in
support of the splendors of freedom were quoted constantly and its authors
were regarded as the country's most eloquent opponents of despotism...[and]
frequently served as the basis of the American response to the whole range
of depradations under which the colonies suffered. Freedom of speech and
conscience, the rights possessed by all Englishmen both by virtue of their
constitutional heritage and by their nature as human beings, the benefits of
freedom, the natural restraints on government, the nature of tyranny, the
right of men to resist oppressive government—all these notions found an
eager reception in the colonies."
It is worth
revisiting Cato's Letters' devotion to liberty, its central theme,
which so powerfully influenced our founding as a nation. Consider some of
its memorable insights (in the order of their appearance):
-
...general liberty...is
certainly the right of all mankind...
-
...brand those as enemies to
human society, who are enemies to equal and impartial liberty.
-
Freedom of speech is the
great bulwark of liberty; they prosper and die together.
-
The defense of liberty is a
noble, a heavenly office...
-
Few men have been desperate
enough to attack openly, and barefaced, the liberties of a free
people...Even when the enterprise is begun and visible, the end must
be hid, or denied.
-
...the people would
constantly be in the interests of truth and liberty, were it not for
external delusion and external force.
-
...government executed for
the good of all, and with the consent of all, is liberty; and the word
government is profaned, and its meaning abused, when it
signifies anything else.
-
...the inestimable blessing
of liberty. Can we ever over-rate it... It is the parent of virtue,
pleasure, plenty, and security...
-
In all contentions between
liberty and power, the latter has almost always been the aggressor.
-
...I know not what treason
is, if sapping and betraying the liberties of a people be not
treason...
-
The people's jealousy tends
to preserve liberty; and the prince's to destroy it.
-
Now, because liberty
chastises and shortens power, therefore power would extinguish
liberty; and consequently liberty has...cause to be exceeding jealous,
and always upon her defense.
-
...with the loss of liberty,
shame and honor are lost.
-
In most parts of the earth
there is neither light nor liberty..there being, in all places, many
engaged, through interest, in a perpetual conspiracy against them.
-
Wherever truth is dangerous,
liberty is precarious.
-
Only government founded upon
liberty is a public blessing; without liberty, it is a public curse...
-
...no nation ever lost its
liberty, but by the force of foreign invaders, or the domestic
treachery of its own magistrates
-
...with liberty light has
sprung in...We have learned that we are as fit to use our own
understandings, as they are whose understandings are no better than
ours...
-
...all mankind will allow it
a less crime in any man to attempt to recover his own liberty, then
wantonly and cruelly to destroy the liberty of his country.
-
...liberty is the unalienable
right of all mankind. All governments, under whatsoever form they are
administered, ought to be administered for the good of the society;
when they are otherwise administered, they cease to be government, and
become usurpations.
-
All men are born free;
liberty is a gift which they receive from God himself...
-
...the nature of government
does not alter the natural right of men to liberty, which is in all
political societies their due.
-
By liberty, I understand the
power which every man has over his own actions, and his right to enjoy
the fruits of his labor, art and industry, as far as by it he hurts
not the society, or any members of it, by taking from any member, or
hindering him from enjoying what he himself enjoys. The fruits of a
man's honest industry are the just rewards of it, ascertained to him
by natural and eternal equity, as is his title to use them in the
manner which he thinks fit: And thus, with the above limitations,
every man is sole lord and arbiter of his own private actions and
property...no man living can divest him but by usurpation, or by his
own consent.
-
True and impartial liberty is
therefore the right of every man to pursue the natural, reasonable,
and religious dictates of his own mind; to think what he will, to act
as he thinks, provided he acts not to the prejudice of another; to
spend his own money himself, and lay out the produce of his labor his
own way; and to labor for his own pleasure and profits, and not for
others who are idle, and would live...by pillaging and oppressing him,
and those that are like him...
-
Free government is the
protecting of the people in their liberties by stated rules: Tyranny
is a brutish struggle for unlimited liberty to one or a few, who would
rob all the others of their liberty, and act by no rule but lawless
lust.
-
The love of liberty is an
appetite so strongly implanted in the nature of all living creatures,
that even the appetite of self-preservation...seems to be contained in
it; since by liberty they enjoy the means of preserving themselves,
and of satisfying their desires in the manner which they themselves
choose and like best.
-
Where liberty is lost, life
grows precarious, always miserable, often intolerable. Liberty is to
live upon one's own terms; slavery is to live at the mercy of
another...
-
This passion for liberty in
men, and their possession of it, is of that efficacy and importance,
that it seems the parent of all the virtues...
-
Indeed liberty is the divine
source of all human happiness...The privileges of thinking, saying and
doing what we please, and of growing rich as we can, without any other
restriction than that by all this we hurt not the public, nor one
another, are the glorious privileges of liberty; and its effects, to
live in freedom, plenty, and safety.
-
...all civil happiness and
prosperity is inseparable from liberty...
-
Now the laws which encourage
and increase virtue are the fixed laws of general and impartial
liberty...Where liberty is thoroughly established, and its laws
equally executed, every man will find his own account in doing as he
would be done unto, and no man will take from another what he would
not part with himself...The property of the poor will be as sacred as
the privileges of the prince, and the law will be the only bulwark of
both. Every man's honest industry and useful talents, while they are
employed for the public, will be employed for himself; and while he
serves himself, he will serve the public...
-
...the entering into society,
and becoming subject to the government, is only the parting with
natural liberty, in some instances, to be protected in the enjoyment
of it in others.
-
Where there is liberty, there
are encouragements to labor, because people labor for themselves, and
no one can take from them the acquisitions which they make by their
labor...
-
To live securely, happily,
and independently, is the end and effect of liberty...Nor did ever any
man that could live satisfactorily without a master desire to live
under one...
-
...all the advantages of
liberty must be lost with liberty, and all the evils of tyranny must
accompany tyranny.
-
...liberty: You are our Alpha
and Omega, our first and last resource; and when your virtue is gone,
all is gone.
-
You are born to liberty, and
it is in your interest and duty to preserve it...your governors have
every right to protect and defend you, none to injure and oppress you.
-
...make good use of this
present dawn, this precious day of liberty...if you suffer it to be
lost, will probably be forever lost.
-
Nothing is too hard for
liberty...
-
This therefore is the worst
of all prostitutions and most immoral of all sort of
slavery...supporting servitude with the breath of liberty, and
assaulting and mangling liberty with her own weapons.
-
...liberty and tyranny...
concerns the whole earth...Why should not the knowledge and love of
God be joined to the knowledge and love of liberty, his best gift,
which is the certain source of all the civil blessings of this life?
-
Liberty is salvation in
politics...We, who enjoy the precious, lovely, and invaluable blessing
of liberty, know that nothing can be paid too dear to purchase and
preserve it.
-
Without a doubt, every man
has a right to liberty...
-
A free trade, a free
government, and a free liberty of conscience, are the rights and the
blessings of mankind.
-
It is madness in extremity,
to hope that a government founded upon liberty...can be supported by
other principles; and whoever would maintain it by contrary ones
intends to blow it up, let him allege what he will.
-
...a power inconsistent with
liberty...will never be asked with an intention to make no use of it.
-
...when a government is
founded upon liberty and equal laws, it is ridiculous for those in the
administration to have any hopes of preserving themselves long there,
but by just actions...
-
Thus it is that liberty is
almost everywhere lost: Her foes are artful, united and diligent: Her
defenders are few, disunited, and inactive.
-
Truth has so many advantages
above error, that she wants only to be shown...she breaks the bonds of
tyranny and fraud...I would not destroy this liberty by methods which
will inevitably destroy all liberty.
-
The cause of liberty, and the
good of the whole, ought to prevail...This truth every man
acknowledges, when it becomes his own case...
-
...liberty...the people's
zeal to preserve it has ever been called ingratitude by such as had
designs against it...
-
You are born, Gentlemen, to
liberty; and from it you derive all the blessings which you possess.
-
...civil governments were
instituted by men, and for the sake of men...men have a right to
expect from them protection and liberty, and to oppose rapine and
tyranny wherever they are exercised...
On the subject
of property, the Letters are equally eloquent:
-
...the security of property and
the freedom of speech always go together...where a man cannot call his
tongue his own, he can scarce call anything else his own.
-
The people...the security of
their persons and property is their highest aim...The same can rarely be
said of great men, who, to gratify private passion, often bring down
public ruin; who, to fill their private purses with many thousands,
frequently load the people with many millions...
-
...men have been knocked down
for saying that they had a right to defend their property by force, when
a tyrant attempted to rob them of it against law.
-
...property, the preservation
of which is the principal business of government...
-
The truth is; if the people are
suffered to keep their own, it is the most that they desire: But even
this is a happiness which in few places falls to their lot; they are
frequently robbed by those whom they pay to protect them...
-
...every man has a right and a
call to provide for himself, to attend upon his own affairs, and to
study his own happiness.
-
As the preservation of property
is the source of national happiness; whoever violates property, or
lessens or endangers it...he is an enemy to his country...
-
When a magistrate fancies he is
not made for the people, but the people for him; that he does not govern
for them, but for himself...the magistrate gives the name of sedition
and rebellion to whatsoever they do for the preservation of themselves
and their own rights.
-
Every plowman knows a good
government from a bad one, from the effects of it; he knows whether the
fruits of his labor be his own, and whether he enjoy them in peace and
security.
-
...one man is only safe, while
it is in the interest of another to let him alone...
-
The two great laws of human
society, from whence all the rest derive their course and obligation,
are those of equity and self-preservation: By the first all men are
bound alike not to hurt one another; by the second all men have a right
alike to defend themselves.
-
Government therefore can have
no power, but such as men can give...no man can give to another what is
none of his own...
-
Nor has any man in the state of
nature power...to take away the life of another, unless to defend his
own, or what is as much his own, namely, his property. This power
therefore, which no man has, no man can transfer to another.
-
Nor could any man in the state
of nature have a right to violate the property of another...as long as
he himself was not injured by that industry and those enjoyments. No
man therefore could transfer to the magistrate that right which he had
not himself.
-
No man in his senses was ever
so wild as to give an unlimited power to another to take away his life,
or the means of living...But if any man restrained himself from any part
of his pleasures, or parted with any portion of his acquisitions, he did
it with the honest purpose of enjoying the rest with greater security,
and always in subservience to his own happiness, which no man will or
can willingly and intentionally give away to any other whatsoever.
-
The fruits of a man's honest
industry are the just rewards of it, ascertained to him by natural and
eternal equity, as is his title to use them in the manner which he
thinks fit: And thus, with the above limitations, every man is sole lord
and arbiter of his own private actions and property. A character of
which no man living can divest him but by usurpation, or by his own
consent.
-
It is a mistaken notion of
government, that the interest of the majority is only to be
consulted...otherwise the greater number may sell the lesser, and divide
their estates among themselves; and so, instead of a society, where all
peaceable men are protected, become a conspiracy of the many against the
minority...
-
Every man is in nature and
reason the judge and disposer of his own domestic affairs...Government
being intended to protect men from the injuries of one another, and not
to direct them in their own affairs...
-
Let people alone, and they will
take care of themselves, and do it best; and if they do not, a
sufficient punishment will follow their neglect, without the
magistrate's interposition and penalties...
-
True and impartial liberty is
therefore the right of every man to pursue the natural, reasonable, and
religious dictates of his own mind; to think what he will, to act as he
thinks, provided he acts not to the prejudice of another; to spend his
own money himself, and lay out the produce of his labor his own way; and
to labor for his own pleasure and profits, and not for others who are
idle, and would live...by pillaging and oppressing him, and those that
are like him.
-
Indeed liberty is the divine
source of all human happiness. To possess, in security, the effects of
our industry, is the most powerful and reasonable incitement to be
industrious: And to be able to provide for our children, and to leave
them all that we have, is the best motive to beget them. But where
property is precarious, labor will languish. The privileges of
thinking, saying and doing what we please, and of growing rich as we
can, without any other restriction, than that by all this we hurt not
the public, nor one another, are the glorious privileges of liberty; and
its effects, to live in freedom, plenty, and safety.
-
Now the laws which encourage
and increase virtue are the fixed laws of general and impartial liberty;
laws, which being the rule of every man's actions, and the measures of
every man's power, make honesty and equity their interest. Where
liberty is thoroughly established, and its laws equally executed, every
man will find his own account in doing as he would be done unto, and no
man will take from another what he would not part with himself: Honor
and advantage will follow the upright, punishment overtake the
oppressor. The property of the poor will be as sacred as the privileges
of the prince, and the law will be the only bulwark of both. Every
man's honest industry and useful talents, while they are employed for
the public, will be employed for himself; and while he serves himself,
he will serve the public...
-
Force is often dangerous; and
when employed to acquire what is not ours, it is always unjust; and
therefore men, to procure from others what they had not before, must
gain their consent...
-
Where there is liberty, there
are encouragements to labor, because people labor for themselves, and no
one can take from them the acquisitions which they make by their
labor...
-
To live securely, happily, and
independently, is the end and effect of liberty...Nor did every any man
that could live satisfactorily without a master desire to live under
one...all men are animated by the passion of acquiring and defending
property, because property is the best support of that independency...as
happiness is the effect of independency, and independency the effect of
property; so certain property is the effect of liberty alone, and can
only be secured by the laws of liberty; laws which are made by consent,
and cannot be repealed without it.
-
All these blessings, therefore,
are only the gifts and consequences of liberty, and only to be found in
free countries, where power is fixed on one side, and property secured
on the other; where one cannot break bounds without check, penalties or
forfeiture, nor the other suffer diminution without redress...
-
...chose whether you will be
freemen or vassals; whether you will spend your own money and estates,
or let others worse than you spend them for you: Methinks the choice
should be easy.
-
...while men are men, ambition,
avarice, and vanity, and other passions, will govern their actions; in
spite of all equity and reason, they will be ever usurping, or
attempting to usurp, upon the liberty and fortunes of one another, and
all men will be striving to enlarge their own. Dominion will always
desire increase, and property always to preserve itself; and these
opposite views and interests will be causing a perpetual struggle: But
by this struggle liberty is preserved...
-
This is not a dispute about
dreams or speculations, which affect not your property; but it is a
dispute whether you shall have any property, which these wretches throw
away...
-
Would you allow the common laws
of neighborhood to such as steal or plunder your goods, rob you of your
money, seize your houses, drive you from your possessions, enslave your
persons, and starve your families? No, sure, you would not.
-
...[pretending concern for the
public good] will appear only to be a project for picking pockets, and
getting away other people's money; which, in reality, at present makes,
and ever did make, most of the squabbles which at any time have
disturbed the world.
-
...government is only the union
of many individuals for their common defense...
-
...to prevent the unfair gains
and depredations of one another; which is indeed the business of the
government; viz. to secure to every one his own...
-
A free trade, a free
government, and a free liberty of conscience, are the rights and the
blessings of mankind.
-
The first care which wise
governors will always take is...to secure to them the possession of
their property, upon which everything else depends.
-
...the product of the whole
people's labor and sustenance is not suffered to be devoured by a few...
-
...political power...This is
the greatest trust that can be committed by men to one another; and
contains in it all that is valuable here on earth, the lives, the
properties, the liberties, of your countrymen...This great trust,
Gentlemen, is not committed to you for your own sakes, but for the
protection, security and happiness of those whom you represent.
Cato's
Letters, widely echoed by our founding fathers, was a central
inspiration behind what became America, and a light of liberty to the rest
of the world. As we pass the anniversary of its first appearance, it merits
revisiting that commitment to liberty which we are all now beneficiaries of,
and asking ourselves whether we, or our government, are still as committed
to liberty.
Gary M. Galles is a professor of economics at Pepperdine University. Send
him
MAIL,
and see his Mises.org
Daily Articles Archive.
Visit TRA's Yahoo! Group, the newest
means of notification and communication for our subscribers. You can find it
at
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/rationalargumentator.
You can sign up by sending an e-mail to
rationalargumentator-subscribe@yahoogroups.com.
Click here to return to the main index. |