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Copyright (c),
1979, Scottish Academic Press. Permission to reprint granted May 23, 1996 by
Dr. Douglas Grant of the Scottish Academic Press. Reprint published by Scottish
Academic Press in Edinburgh in 1979 as Fletcher of Saltoun, Selected Writings
by David Daiches.
Permission from Scottish Academic Press to reprint this material, was
obtained by Dr. Bill Boyle of New Mexico State University. The original British
style of spelling has been retained (e.g., favour vs. favor). The word
"prentice" was changed to "apprentice" in the two places
where it occurred. The original preference for lengthy paragraphs has likewise
been preserved.
[Last two paragraphs of the Preface]
A full account of the political context within which Fletcher's
pamphlets and speeches were produced will be found in the present writer's
Scotland and the Union (London, 1977).
The text of the pamphlets and speeches here reprinted is taken from The
Political Works of Andrew Fletcher, Esq., London, 1732. This reprints
accurately the original pamphlets but with a somewhat more modern spelling and
punctuation. The Glasgow edition of 1749 is also an accurate reprint but
modernizes spelling and punctuation rather more. The present text is therefore
in the tradition of continuous discreet modernising combined with otherwise
accurate reprinting, and it is hoped that it will be accessible to a wider
reading public than a simple reproduction of the original pamphlets.
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Fletcher of Saltoun, Selected Writings
Edinburgh; Printed in the Year MDCXCVIII
A Discourse of Government With Relation to Militias
There is not perhaps in human affairs anything so unaccountable as the
indignity and cruelty with which the far greater part of mankind suffer
themselves to be used under pretence of government. For some men falsely
persuading themselves that bad governments are advantageous to them, as most
conducing to gratify their ambition, avarice, and luxury, set themselves with
the utmost art and violence to procure their establishment: and by such men
almost the whole world has been trampled underfoot, and subjected to tyranny,
for want of understanding by what means and methods they were enslaved. For
though mankind take great care and pains to instruct themselves in other arts
and sciences, yet very few apply themselves to consider the nature of
government, an enquiry so useful and necessary both to magistrate and people. Nay,
in most countries the arts of state being altogether directed either to enslave
the people, or to keep them under slavery; it is become almost everywhere a
crime to reason about matters of government. But if men would bestow a small part
of the time and application which they throw away upon curious but useless
studies, or endless gaming, in perusing those excellent rules and examples of
government which the ancients have left us, they would soon be enabled to
discover all such abuses and corruptions as tend to the ruin of public
societies. It is therefore very strange that they should think study and
knowledge necessary in everything they go about, except in the noblest and most
useful of all applications, the art of government.
Now if any man in compassion to the miseries of a people should
endeavour to disabuse them in anything relating to government, he will
certainly incur the displeasure, and perhaps be pursued by the rage of those,
who think they find their account in the oppression of the world; but will
hardly succeed in his endeavours to undeceive the multitude. For the generality
of all ranks of men are cheated by words and names; and provided the ancient
terms and outward forms of any government be retained, let the nature of it be
never so much altered, they continue to dream that they shall still enjoy their
former liberty, an are not to be awakened till it prove too late. Of this there
are many remarkable examples in history; but that particular instance which I
have chosen to insist on, as most suitable to my purpose, is the alteration of
government which happened in most countries of Europe about the year 1500. And
it is worth observation, that though this change was fatal to their liberty,
yet it was not introduced by the contrivance of ill-designing men; nor were the
mischievous consequences perceived, unless perhaps by a few wise men, who, if
they saw it, wanted power to prevent it.
Two hundred years being already passed since this alteration began,
Europe has felt the effects of it by sad experience; and the true causes of the
change are now become more visible.
To lay open this matter in its full extent, it will be necessary to
look farther back, and examine the original and constitution of those
governments that were established in Europe about the year 400, and continued
till this alteration.
When the Goths, Vandals, and other warlike nations had, at different
times, and under different leaders, overrun the western parts of the Roman
empire, they introduced the following form of government into all the nations
they subdued. The general of the army became king of the conquered country; and
the conquest being absolute, he divided the lands amongst the great officers of
his army, afterwards called barons; who again parcelled out their several
territories in smaller portions to the inferior soldiers that had followed them
in the wars, and who then became their vassals, enjoying those lands for
military service. The king reserved to himself some demesnes for the maintenance
of his court and attendance. When this was done, there was no longer any
standing army kept on foot, but every man went to live upon his own lands; and
when the defence of the country required an army, the king summoned the barons
to his standard, who came attended with their vassals. Thus were the armies of
Europe composed for about eleven hundred years; and this constitution of
government put the sword into the hands of the subject, because the vassals
depended more immediately on the barons than on the king, which effectually
secured the freedom of those governments. For the barons could not make use of
their power to destroy those limited monarchies, without destroying their own
grandeur; nor could the king invade their privileges, having no other forces
than the vassals of his own demesnes to rely upon for his support in such an
attempt.
I lay no great stress on any other limitations of those monarchies; nor
do I think any so essential to the liberties of the people, as that which
placed the sword in the hands of the subject. And since in our time most
princes of Europe are in possession of the sword, by standing mercenary forces
kept up in time of peace, absolutely depending upon them, I say that all such
governments are changed from monarchies to tyrannies. Nor can the power of
granting or refusing money, though vested in the subject, be a sufficient
security for liberty, where a standing mercenary army is kept up in time of
peace: for he that is armed is always master of the purse of him that is unarmed.
And not only that government is tyrannical, which is tyrannically exercised;
but all governments are tyrannical, which have not in their constitution a
sufficient security against the arbitrary power of the prince.
I do not deny that these limited monarchies, during the greatness of
the barons, had some defects: I know few governments free from them. But after
all, there was a balance that kept those governments steady, and an effectual
provision against the encroachments of the crown. I do less pretend that the
present governments can be restored to the constitution before-mentioned. The
following discourse will show the impossibility of it. My design in the first
place is to explain the nature of the past and present governments of Europe,
and to disabuse those who think them the same, because they are called by the
same names; and who ignorantly clamour against such as would preserve that
liberty which is yet left.
In order to this, and for a further and clearer illustration of the
matter, I shall deduce from their original, the causes, occasions, and the
complication of those many unforeseen accidents; which falling out much about
the same time, produced so great a change. And it will at first sight seem very
strange, when I shall name the restoration of learning, the invention of
printing, of the needle and of gunpowder, as the chief of them; things in
themselves so excellent, and which, the last only excepted, might have proved
of infinite advantage to the world, if their remote influence upon government
had been obviated by suitable remedies. Such odd consequences, and of such a
different nature, accompany extraordinary inventions of any kind.
Constantinople being taken by Mahomet the second, in the year 1453,
many learned Greeks fled over into Italy; where the favourable reception they
found from the popes, princes, and republics of that country, soon introduced
amongst the better sort of men, the study of the Greek tongue, and of the
ancient authors in that language. About the same time likewise some learned men
began to restore the purity of the Latin tongue. But that which most
contributed to the advancement of all kind of learning, and especially the
study of the ancients, was the art of printing; which was brought to a great
degree of perfection a few years after. By this means their books became
common, and their arts generally understood and admired. But as mankind from a
natural propension to pleasure, is always ready to choose out of everything
what may most gratify that vicious appetite; so the arts which the Italians
first applied themselves to improve were principally those that had been
subservient to the luxury of the ancients in the most corrupt ages, of which
they had many monuments still remaining. Italy was presently filled with architects,
painters, and sculptors; and a prodigious expense was made in buildings,
pictures, and statues. Thus the Italians began to come off from their frugal
and military way of living, and addicted themselves to the pursuit of refined
and expensive pleasures, as much as the wars of those times would permit. This
infection spread itself by degrees into the neighbouring nations. But these
things alone had not been sufficient to work so great a change in government,
if a preceding invention, brought into common use about that time, had not
produced more new and extraordinary effects than any had ever done before;
which probably may have many consequences yet unforeseen, and a farther
influence upon the manners of men, as long as the world lasts; I mean, the
invention of the needle, by the help of which navigation was greatly improved,
a passage opened by sea to the East Indies, and a new world discovered. By this
means the luxury of Asia and America was added to that of the ancients; and all
ages, and all countries concurred, to sink Europe into an abyss of pleasures;
which were rendered the more expensive by a perpetual change of the fashions in
clothes, equipage, and furniture of houses.
These things brought a total alteration in the way of living, upon which
all government depends. It is true, knowledge being mightily increased, and a
great curiosity and nicety in everything introduced, men imagined themselves to
be gainers in all points, by changing from their frugal and military way of
living, which I must confess had some mixture of rudeness and ignorance in it,
though not inseparable from it. But at the same time they did not consider the
unspeakable evils that are altogether inseparable from an expensive way of
living.
To touch upon all these, though slightly, would carry me too far from
my subject: I shall therefore content myself to apply what has been said, to
the immediate design of this discourse.
The far greater share of all those expenses fell upon the barons; for
they were the persons most able to make them, and their dignity seemed to
challenge whatever might distinguish them from other men. This plunged them on
a sudden into so great debts, that if they did not sell, or otherwise alienate
their lands, they found themselves at least obliged to turn the military
service their vassals owed them into money; partly by way of rent, and partly
by way of lease, or fine, for payment of their creditors. And by this means the
vassal having his lands no longer at so easy a rate as before, could no more be
obliged to military service, and so became a tenant. Thus the armies, which in
preceding times had been always composed of such men as these, ceased of course,
and the sword fell out of the hands of the barons. But there being always a
necessity to provide for the defence of every country, princes were afterwards
allowed to raise armies of volunteers and mercenaries. And great sums were
given by diets and parliaments for their maintenance, to be levied upon the
people grown rich by trade, and dispirited for want of military exercise. Such
forces were at first only raised for present exigencies, and continued no
longer on foot than the occasions lasted. But princes soon found pretences to
make them perpetual, the chief of which was the garrisoning frontier towns and
fortresses; the methods of war being altered to the tedious and chargeable way
of sieges, principally by the invention of gunpowder. The officers and soldiers
of these mercenary armies depending for their subsistence and preferment, as
immediately upon the prince, as the former militias did upon the barons, the
power of the sword was transferred from the subject to the king, and war grew a
constant trade to live by. Nay, many of the barons themselves being reduced to
poverty by their expensive way of living, took commands in those mercenary
troops; and being still continued hereditary members of diets, and other
assemblies of state, after the loss of their vassals, whom they formerly
represented, they were now the readiest of all others to load the people with
heavy taxes, which were employed to increase the prince's military power, by
guards, armies, and citadels, beyond bounds or remedy.
Some princes with much impatience pressed on to arbitrary power before
things were ripe, as the kings of France and Charles duke of Burgundy. Philip
de Commines says of the latter, 'That having made a truce with the King of
France he called an assembly of the estates of his country, and remonstrated to
them the prejudice he had sustained by not having standing troops as that king
had; that if five hundred men had been in garrison upon their frontier, the
king of France would never have undertaken that war; and having represented the
mischiefs that were ready to fall upon them for want of such a force, he
earnestly pressed them to grant such a sum as would maintain eight hundred
lances. At length they gave him a hundred and twenty thousand crowns more than
his ordinary revenue (from which tax Burgundy_ was exempted). But his subjects
were for many reasons under great apprehensions of falling into the subjection
to which they saw the kingdom of France already reduced by means of such
troops. And truly their apprehensions were not ill-grounded; for when he had
got together five or six hundred men at arms, he presently had a mind to more,
and with them disturbed the peace of all his neighbours: he augmented the tax
from one hundred and twenty to five hundred thousand crowns, and increased the
numbers of those men at arms, by whom his subjects were greatly oppressed.' Francis
de Beaucaire, bishop of Metz, in his history of France speaking of the same
affair, says, 'That the foresaid states could not be induced to maintain mercenary
forces, being sensible of the difficulties into which thecommonalty of France
had brought themselves by the like concession; that princes might increase
their forces at pleasure, and sometimes (even when they had obtained money)'pay
them ill, to the vexation and destruction of the poor people; and likewise that
kings and princes not contented with their ancient patrimony, were always ready
under this pretext to break in upon the properties of all men, and to raise
what money they pleased. That nevertheless they gave him a hundred and twenty
thousand crowns yearly, which he soon increased to five hundred thousand: but
that Burgundy (which was the ancient dominion of that family) retained its
ancient liberty, and could by no means be obliged to pay any part of this new
tax.' it is true, Philip de Commines subjoins to the forecited passage, that he
believes standing forces may be well employed under a wise king or prince; but
that if he be not so, or leaves his children young, the use that he or their governors
make of them, is not always profitable either for the king or his subjects. If
this addition be his own, and not rather an insertion added by the president of
the parliament of Paris, who published and, as the foresaid Francis de
Beaucaire says he was credibly informed, corrupted his memoirs, yet experience
shows him to be mistaken: for the example of his master Louis the eleventh,
whom upon many occasions he calls a wise prince, and those of most princes
under whom standing forces were first allowed, demonstrates, that they are more
dangerous under a wise prince than any other: and reason tells us, that if they
are the only proper instruments to introduce arbitrary power, as shall be made
plain, a cunning and able prince, who by the world is called a wise one, is
more capable of using them to that end than a weak prince, or governors during
a minority; and that a wise prince having once procured them to be established,
they will maintain themselves under any.
I am not ignorant that before this change, subsidies were often given
by diets, states, and parliaments, and some raised by the edicts of princes for
maintaining wars; but these were small, and no way sufficient to subsist such
numerous armies as those of the barons' militia. There were likewise mercenary
troops sometimes entertained by princes who aimed at arbitrary power, and by
some commonwealths in time of war for their own defence; but these were only
strangers, or in very small numbers, and held no proportion with those vast
armies of mercenaries which this change has fixed upon Europe to her affliction
and ruin.
What I have said hitherto has been always with regard to one or other,
and often to most countries in Europe. What follows will have a more particular
regard to Britain; where, though the power of the barons be ceased, yet no
mercenary troops are yet established. The reason of which is, that England had
before this great alteration lost all her conquests in France, the town of
Calais only excepted; and that also was taken by the French before the change
was thoroughly made. So that the Kings of England had no pretence to keep up
standing forces, either to defend conquests abroad or to garrison a frontier
towards France, since the sea was now become the only frontier between those
two countries.
Neither could the frontier towards Scotland afford any colour to those
princes for raising such forces, since the Kings of Scotland had none; and that
Scotland was not able to give money for the subsisting any considerable number.
It is true, the example of France, with which country Scotland had constant
correspondence, and some French counsellors about Mary of Guise, Queen dowager
and regent of Scotland, induced her to propose a tax for the subsisting of
mercenary soldiers to be employed for the defence of the frontier of Scotland;
and to ease, as was pretended, the barons of that trouble. But in that
honourable and wise remonstrance, which was made by three hundred of the lesser
barons (as much dissatisfied with the lords, who by their silence betrayed the
public liberty, as with the Regent herself) she was told, that their
forefathers had defended themselves and their fortunes against the English,
when that nation was much more powerful than they were at that time, and had
made frequent incursions into their country: that they themselves had not so
far degenerated from their ancestors, to refuse, when occasion required, to
hazard their lives and fortunes in the service of their country: that as to the
hiring of mercenary soldiers, it was a thing of great danger to put the liberty
of Scotland into the hands of men, who are of no fortunes, nor have any hopes
but in the public calamity; who for money would attempt anything; whose
excessive avarice opportunity would inflame to a desire of all manner of
innovations, and whose faith would follow the wheel of fortune. That though
these men should be more mindful of the duty they owe to their country, than of
their own particular interest, was it to be supposed, that mercenaries would
fight more bravely for the defence of other men's fortunes, than the possessors
would do for themselves or their own; or that a little money should excite
their ignoble minds to a higher pitch of honour than that with which the barons
are inspired, when they fight for the preservation of their fortunes, wives and
children, religion and liberty: that most men did suspect and apprehend, that
this new way of making war, might be not only useless, but dangerous to the
nation; since the English, if they should imitate the example, might, without
any great trouble to their people, raise far greater sums for the maintenance
of mercenary soldiers, than Scotland could, and by this means not only spoil
and lay open the frontier, but penetrate into the bowels of the kingdom: and
that it was in the militia of the barons their ancestors had placed their chief
trust, for the defence of themselves against a greater power.
By these powerful reasons being made sensible of her error, the Queen
desisted from her demands. Her daughter Queen Mary, who, as the great historian
says, looked upon the moderate government of a limited kingdom, to be
disgraceful to monarchs, and upon the slavery of the people, as the freedom of
kings, resolved to have guards about her person; but could not fall upon a way to
compass them: for she could find no pretext, unless it were the empty show of
magnificence which belongs to a court, and the example of foreign princes; for
the former kings had always trusted themselves to the faith of the barons. At
length upon a false and ridiculous pretence, of an intention in a certain
nobleman to seize her person, she assumed them; but they were soon abolished. Nor
had her son King James any other guards whilst he was King of Scotland only,
than forty gentlemen: and that King declares in the act of parliament, by which
they are established, that he will not burden his people by any tax or
imposition for their maintenance.
Henry the seventh, King of England, seems to have perceived sooner, and
understood better the alteration before-mentioned, than any prince of his time,
and obtained several laws to favour and facilitate it. But his successors were
altogether improper to second him: for Henry the eighth was an unthinking
prince. The reigns of Edward the sixth and Queen Mary were short; and Queen
Elizabeth loved her people too well to attempt it. King James, who succeeded
her, was a stranger in England, and of no interest abroad. King Charles the
first did indeed endeavour to make himself absolute, though somewhat
preposterously; for he attempted to seize the purse, before he was master of
the sword. But very wise men have been of opinion, that if he had been
possessed of as numerous guards as those which were afterwards raised, and
constantly kept up by King Charles the second, he might easily have succeeded
in his enterprise. For we see that in those struggles which the country party
had with King Charles the second, and in those endeavours they used to bring
about that revolution which was afterwards compassed by a foreign power, the
chief and insuperable difficulty they met with, was from those guards. And
though King James the second had provoked these nations to the last degree, and
made his own game as hard as possible, not only by invading our civil
liberties, but likewise by endeavouring to change the established religion for
another which the people abhorred, whereby he lost their affections, and even
those of a great part of his army: yet notwithstanding all this mismanagement,
Britain stood in need of a foreign force to save it; and how dangerous a remedy
that is, the histories of all ages can witness. It is true, this circumstance
was favourable, that a prince who had married the next heir to these kingdoms,
was at the head of our deliverance: yet did it engage us in a long and
expensive war. And now that we are much impoverished, and England by means of
her former riches and present poverty, fallen into all the corruptions which
those great enemies of virtue, want, and excess of riches can produce; that
there are such numbers of mercenary forces on foot at home and abroad; that the
greatest part of the officers have no other way to subsist; that they are
commanded by a wise and active King, who has at his disposal the formidable
land and sea forces of a neighbouring nation, the great rival of our trade; a
King, who by blood, relation, other particular ties, and common interest, has
the house of Austria, most of the princes of Germany, and potentates of the
North, for his friends and allies; who can, whatever interest he join with, do
what he thinks fit in Europe; I say, if a mercenary standing army be kept up
(the first of that kind, except those of the usurper Cromwell, and the late
King James, that Britain has seen for thirteen hundred years) I desire to know
where the security of the British liberties lies, unless in the good will and
pleasure of the King: I desire to know, what real security can be had against
standing armies of mercenaries, backed by the corruption of both nations, the
tendency of the way of living, the genius of the age, and the example of the
world.
Having shown the difference between the past and present government of
Britain, how precarious our liberties are, and how from having the best
security for them we arc in hazard of having none at all; it is to be hoped
that those who are for a standing army, and losing no occasion of advancing and
extending the prerogative, from a mistaken opinion that they establish the
ancient government of these nations, will see what sort of patriots they are.
But we are told, that only standing mercenary forces can defend Britain
from the perpetual standing armies of France. However frivolous this assertion
be, as indeed no good argument can be brought to support it, either from reason
or experience, as shall be proved hereafter; yet allowing it to be good, what
security can the nations have that these standing forces shall not at some time
or other be made use of to suppress the liberties of the people, though not in
this king's time, to whom we owe their preservation? For I hope there is no man
so weak to think, that keeping up the army for a year, or for any longer time
than the parliaments of both nations shall have engaged the public faith to
make good all deficiencies of funds granted for their maintenance, is not the keeping
them up for ever. It is a pitiful shift in the undertakers for a standing army,
to say, we are not for a standing army, we are only for an army from year to
year, or till the militia be made useful. For Britain cannot be in any hazard
from France; at least till that kingdom, so much exhausted by war and
persecution, shall have a breathing space to recover. Before that time our
militias will be in order; and in the meantime the fleet. Besides, no prince
ever surrendered so great countries and so many strong places, I shall not say,
in order to make a new war; but as these men will have it, to continue the
same. The French King is old and diseased, and was never willing to hazard much
by any bold attempt. If he, or the dauphin, upon his decease, may be suspected
of any farther design, it must be upon the Spanish monarchy, in case of the
death of that King. And if it be objected, that we shall stand in need of an
army, in such a conjuncture, I answer, that our part in that, or in any other
foreign war, will be best managed by sea, as shall be shown hereafter.
Let us then see if mercenary armies be not exactly calculated to
enslave a nation. Which I think may be easily proved, if we consider that such
troops are generally composed of men who make a trade of war; and having little
or no patrimony, or spent what they once had, enter into that employment in
hopes of its continuance during life, not at all thinking how to make
themselves capable of any other. By which means heavy and perpetual taxes must
be entailed for ever upon the people for their subsistence; and since all their
relations stand engaged to support their interest, let all men judge, if this
will not prove a very united and formidable party in a nation.
But the undertakers must pardon me if I tell them, that no
well-constituted government ever suffered any such men in it, whose interest
leads them to embroil the state in war, and are a useless and insupportable
burden in time of peace. Venice or Holland are neither of them examples to
prove the contrary; for had not their situation been different from that of
other countries, their liberty had not continued to this time. And they suffer
no forces to remain within those inaccessible places, which are the chief seats
of their power. Carthage, that had not those advantages of situation, and yet
used mercenary forces, was brought to the brink of ruin by them in a time of
peace, beaten in three wars, and at last subdued by the Romans. If ever any
government stood in need of such a sort of men, it was that of ancient Rome,
because they were engaged in perpetual war. The argument can never be so strong
in any other case. But the Romans well knowing such men and liberty to be
incompatible, and yet being under a necessity of having armies constantly on
foot, made frequent changes of the men that served in them; who, when they had
been some time in the army, were permitted to return to their possessions,
trades, or other employments. And to show how true a judgment that wise state
made of this matter, it is sufficient to observe, that those who subverted that
government, the greatest that ever was amongst men, found themselves obliged to
continue the same soldiers always in constant pay and service.
If during the late war we had followed so wise a course as that of
Rome, there had been thrice as many trained men in the nations as at present
there are; no difficulties about recruits, nor debates about keeping up armies
in time of peace, because some men resolve to live by arms in time of peace,
whether it be for the good of the nations or not. And since such was the
practice of Rome, I hope no man will have the confidence to say that this
method was not as effectual for war as any other. If it be objected that Rome
had perpetual wars, and therefore that might be a good practice among them,
which would not be so with us, I confess I cannot see the consequence; for if
Rome had perpetual wars, the Romans ought still to have continued the same men
in their armies, that they might, according to the notion of these men, render
their troops more useful. And if we did change our men during a war, we should
have more men that would understand something of it. If any man say, not so
much as if they continued in the army: I answer, that many of those who
continue in the army are afterwards swept away by the war, and live not to be
of use in time of peace; that those who escape the war, being fewer than in the
other case, are soon consumed: and that mercenary standing forces in time of
peace, if not employed to do mischief, soon become like those of Holland in 72,
fit only to lose forty strong places in forty days.
There is another thing which I would not mention if it were not
absolutely necessary to my present purpose; and that is, the usual manners of
those who are engaged in mercenary armies. I speak now of officers in other
parts of Europe, and not of those in our armies, allowing them to be the best,
and if they will have it so, quite different from all others. I will not apply
to them any part of what I shall say concerning the rest. They themselves best
know how far anything of that nature may be applicable to them. I say then,
most princes of Europe having put themselves upon the foot of keeping up
forces, rather numerous than well entertained, can give but small allowance to
officers, and that likewise is for the most part very ill paid, in order to
render them the more necessitous and depending; and yet they permit them to
live inall that extravagancy which mutual example and emulation prompts them
to. By which means the officers become insensibly engaged in numberless frauds,
oppressions, and cruelties, the colonels against the captains, and the captains
against the inferior soldiers; and all of them against all persons with whom
they have any kind of business. So that there is hardly any sort of men who are
less men of honour than the officers of mercenary forces: and indeed honour has
now no other signification amongst them than courage. Besides, most men that
enter into those armies, whether officers or soldiers, as if they were obliged
to show themselves new creatures, and perfectly regenerate, if before they were
modest or sober, immediately turn themselves to all manner of debauchery and
wickedness, committing all kinds of injustice and barbarity against poor and defenceless
people. Now though the natural temper of our men be more just and honest than
that of the French, or of any other people, yet may it not be feared, that such
bad manners may prove contagious? And if such manners do not fit men to enslave
a nation, devils only must do it. on the other hand, if it should happen that
the officers of standing armies in Britain should live with greater regularity
and modesty than was ever yet seen in that sort of men, it might very probably
fall out, that being quartered in all parts of the country, some of them might
be returned members of parliament for divers of the electing boroughs; and of
what consequence that would be, I leave all men to judge. So that whatever be
the conduct of a mercenary army, we can never be secure as long as any such
force is kept up in Britain.
But the undertakers for a standing army will say: will you turn so many
gentlemen to starve, who have faithfully served the government? This question I
allow to be founded upon some reason. For it ought to be acknowledged in
justice to our soldiery, that on all occasions, and in all actions, both
officers and soldiers have done their part; and therefore I think it may be
reasonable, that all officers and soldiers of above forty years, in consideration
of their unfitness to apply themselves at that age to any other employment,
should be recommended to the bounty of both parliaments.
I confess I do not see by what rules of good policy any mercenary
forces have been connived at either in Scotland, England, or Ireland. Sure, it
is allowing the dispensing power in the most essential point of the
constitution of government in these nations.
Scotland and England are nations that were formerly very jealous of
liberty; of which there are many remarkable instances in the histories of these
countries. And we may hope that the late revolution having given such a blow to
arbitrary power in these kingdoms, they will be very careful to preserve their
rights and privileges. And sure it is not very suitable to these, that any
standing forces be kept up in Britain: or that there should be any Scots,
English, or Irish regiments maintained in Ireland, or anywhere abroad; or
regiments of any nation at the charge of England. I shall not say how readily
the regiments that were in the service of Holland came over against the duke of
Monmouth: he was a rebel, and did not succeed. But we all know with what expedition
the Irish mercenary forces were brought into Britain to oppose his present
majesty in that glorious enterprise for our deliverance.
The subjects formerly had a real security for their liberty, by having
the sword in their own hands. That security, which is the greatest of all
others, is lost; and not only so, but the sword is put into the hand of the
king by his power over the militia. All this is not enough; but we must have in
both kingdoms standing armies of mercenaries, who for the most part have no
other way to subsist, and consequently are capable to execute any commands: and
yet every man must think his liberties as safe as ever, under pain of being
thought disaffected to the monarchy. But sure it must not be the ancient
limited and legal monarchies of Scotland and England that these gentlemen mean.
It must be a French fashion of monarchy, where the king has power to do what he
pleases, and the people no security for anything they possess. We have quitted
our ancient security, and put the militia into the power of the king. The only
remaining security we have is, that no standing armies were ever yet allowed in
time of peace, the parliament of England having so often and so expressly
declared them to be contrary to law: and that of Scotland having not only
declared them to be a grievance, but made the keeping them up an article in the
forfeiture of the late King James. If a standing army be allowed, what
difference will there be between the government we shall then live under, and
any kind of government under a good prince? Of which there have been some in
the most despotic tyrannies. If these be limited and not absolute monarchies,
then, as there are conditions, so there ought to be securities on both sides. The
barons never pretended that their militias should be constantly on foot, and
together in bodies in times of peace. It is evident that would have subverted
the constitution, and made every one of them a petty tyrant. And it is as
evident, that standing forces are the fittest instruments to make a tyrant. Whoever
is for making the king's power too great or too little, is an enemy to the
monarchy. But to give him standing armies, puts his power beyond control, and
consequently makes him absolute. If the people had any other real security for
their liberty than that there be no standing armies in time of peace, there
might be some colour to demand them. But if that only remaining security be
taken away from the people, we have destroyed these monarchies.
It is pretended we are in hazard of being invaded by a powerful enemy;
shall we therefore destroy our government? What is it then that we would
defend? Is it our persons, by the ruin of our government? in what then shall we
be gainers? In saving our lives by the loss of our liberties? if our pleasures
and luxury make us live like brutes, it seems we must not pretend to reason any
better than they. I would fain know, if there be any other way of making a
prince absolute, than by allowing him a standing army: if by it all princes
have not been made absolute; if without it, any. Whether our enemies shall
conquer us is uncertain; but whether standing armies will enslave us, neither
reason nor experience will suffer us to doubt. It is therefore evident that no
pretence of danger from abroad can be an argument to keep up standing armies or
any mercenary forces.
Let us now consider whether we may not be able to defend ourselves by
well- regulated militias against any foreign force, though never so formidable:
that these nations may be free from the fears of invasion from abroad, as well
as from the danger of slavery at home.
After the barons had lost the military service of their vassals,
militias of some kind or other were established in most parts of Europe. But
the prince having everywhere the power of naming and preferring the officers of
these militias, they could be no balance in government as the former were. And
he that will consider what has been said in this discourse, will easily
perceive that the essential quality requisite to such a militia, as might fully
answer the ends of the former, must be, that the officers should be named and
preferred, as well as they and the soldiers paid, by the people that set them
out. So that if princes look upon the present militias as not capable of
defending a nation against foreign armies, the people have little reason to
entrust them with the defence of their liberties.
And though upon the dissolution of that ancient militia under the
barons, which made these nations so great and glorious, by setting up militias
generally through Europe, the sword came not into the hands of the Commons,
which was the only thing could have continued the former balance of government,
but was everywhere put into the hands of the king: nevertheless ambitious
princes, who aimed at absolute power, thinking they could never use it
effectually to that end, unless it were wielded by mercenaries, and men that
had no other interest in the commonwealth than their pay, have still
endeavoured by all means to discredit militias, and render them burdensome to
the people, by never suffering them to be upon any right, or so much as
tolerable foot, and all to persuade the necessity of standing forces. And
indeed they have succeeded too well in this design: for the greatest part of
the world has been fooled into an opinion that a militia cannot be made
serviceable. I shall not say it was only militias could conquer the world; and
that princes to have succeeded fully in the design before-mentioned must have
destroyed all the history and memory of ancient governments, where the accounts
of so many excellent models of militia are yet extant. I know the prejudice and
ignorance of the world concerning the art of war, as it was practised by the
ancients; though what remains of that knowledge in their writings be sufficient
to give a mean opinion of the modem discipline. For this reason I shall
examine, by what has passed of late years in these nations, whether experience
have convinced us, that officers bred in foreign wars, be so far preferable to
others who have been under no other discipline than that of an ordinary and
ill-regulated militia; and if the commonalty of both kingdoms, at their first
entrance upon service, be not as capable of a resolute military action, as any
standing forces. This doubt will be fully resolved, by considering the actions
of the marquis of Montrose, which may be compared, all circumstances
considered, with those of Caesar, as well for the military skill, as the bad
tendency of them; though the marquis had never served abroad, nor seen any
action, before the six victories, which, with numbers much inferior to those of
his enemies, he obtained in one year; and the most considerable of them were
chiefly gained by the assistance of the tenants and vassals of the family of
Gordon. The battle of Naseby will be a farther illustration of this matter,
which is generally thought to have been the deciding action of the late civil
war. The number of forces was equal on both sides; nor was there any advantage
in the ground, or extraordinary accident that happened during the fight, which
could be of considerable importance to either. In the army of the parliament,
nine only of the officers had served abroad, and most of the soldiers were
apprentices drawn out of London but two months before. In the king's army there
were above a thousand officers that had served in foreign parts: yet was that
army routed and broken by those new-raised apprentices; who were observed to be
obedient to command, and brave in fight; not only in that action, but on all
occasions during that active campaign. The people of these nations are not a
dastardly crew, like those born in misery under oppression and slavery, who
must have time to rub off that fear, cowardice, and stupidity which they bring
from home. And though officers seem to stand in more need of experience than
private soldiers; yet in that battle it was seen that the sobriety and
principle of the officers on the one side, prevailed over the experience of
those on the other.
It is well known that divers regiments of our army, lately in Flanders,
have never been once in action, and not one half of them above thrice, nor any
of them five times during the whole war. Oh, but they have been under
discipline, and accustomed to obey! And so may men in militias. We have had to
do with an enemy, who, though abounding in numbers of excellent officers, yet
durst never fight us without a visible advantage. Is that enemy like to invade
us, when he must be unavoidably necessitated to put all to hazard in ten days,
or starve?
A good militia is of such importance to a nation, that it is the chief
part of the constitution of any free government. For though as to other things,
the constitution be never so slight, a good militia will always preserve the
public liberty. But in the best constitution that ever was, as to all other
parts of government, if the militia be not upon a right foot, the liberty of
that people must perish. The militia of ancient Rome, the best that ever was in
any government, made her mistress of the world: but standing armies enslaved
that great people, and their excellent militia and freedom perished together. The
Lacedemonians continued eight hundred years free, and in great honour, because
they had a good militia. The Swisses at this day are the freest, happiest, and
the people of all Europe who can best defend themselves, because they have the
best militia.
I have shown that liberty in the monarchical governments of Europe,
subsisted so long as the militia of the barons was on foot: and that on the
decay of their militia (which though it was none of the best, so was it none of
the worst) standing forces and tyranny have been everywhere introduced, unless
in Britain and Ireland; which by reason of their situation, having the sea for
frontier, and a powerful fleet to protect them, could afford no pretence for
such forces. And though any militia, however slightly constituted, be
sufficient for that reason to defend us; yet all improvements in the
constitution of militias, being further securities for the liberty of the
people, I think we ought to endeavour the amendment of them, and till that can
take place, to make the present militias useful in the former and ordinary
methods.
That the whole free people of any nation ought to be exercised to arms,
not only the example of our ancestors, as appears by the acts of parliament
made in both kingdoms to that purpose, and that of the wisest governments among
the ancients; but the advantage of choosing out of great numbers, seems clearly
to demonstrate. For in countries where husbandry, trade, manufactures, and
other mechanical arts are carried on, even in time of war, the impediments of
men are so many and so various, that unless the whole people be exercised, no
considerable numbers of men can be drawn out, without disturbing those
employments, which are the vitals of the political body. Besides, that upon
great defeats, and under extreme calamities, from which no government was ever
exempted, every nation stands in need of all the people, as the ancients
sometimes did of their slaves. And I cannot see why arms should be denied to
any man who is not a slave, since they are the only true badges of liberty; and
ought never, but in times of utmost necessity, to be put into the hands of
mercenaries or slaves: neither can I understand why any man that has arms
should not be taught the use of them.
By the constitution of the present militia in both nations, there is
but a small number of the men able to bear arms exercised; and men of quality
and estate are allowed to send any wretched servant in their place: so that
they themselves are become mean, by being disused to handle arms; and will not
learn the use of them, because they are ashamed of their ignorance: by which
means the militias being composed only of servants, these nations seem
altogether unfit to defend themselves, and standing forces to be necessary. Now
can it be supposed that a few servants will fight for the defence of their
masters' estates, if their masters only look on? Or that some inconsiderate
freeholders, as for the most part those who command the militia are, should, at
the head of those servants, expose their lives for men of more plentiful
estates, without being assisted by them? No bodies of military men can be of
any force or value, unless many persons of quality or education be among them;
and such men should blush to think of excusing themselves from serving their
country, at least for some years, in a military capacity, if they consider that
every Roman was obliged to spend fifteen years of his life in their armies. Is
it not a shame that any man who possesses an estate, and is at the same time
healthful and young, should not fit himself by all means for the defence of
that, and his country, rather than to pay taxes to maintain a mercenary, who though
he may defend Mm during a war, will be sure to insult and enslave him in time
of peace. Men must not think that any country can be in a constant posture of
defence, without some trouble and charge; but certainly it is better to undergo
this, and to preserve our liberty with honour, than to be subjected to heavy
taxes, and yet have it insolently ravished from us, to our present oppression,
and the lasting misery of our posterity. But it will be said, where are the men
to be found who shall exercise all this people in so many several places at
once? for the nobility and gentry know nothing of the matter; and to hire so
many soldiers of fortune, as they call them, will bechargeable, and may be
dangerous, these men being all mercenaries, and always the same men, in the
same trusts: besides that the employing such men would not be suitable to the
design of breeding the men of quality and estate to command, as well as the
others to obey.
To obviate these difficulties, and because the want of a good model of militia,
and a right method for training people in time of peace, so as they need not
apprehend any war, though never so sudden, is at this day the bane of the
liberty of Europe, I shall propose one, accommodated to the invincible
difficulty of bringing men of quality and estate, or men of any rank, who have
passed the time of youth, to the use of arms; and new, because though we have
many excellent models of militia, delivered to us by ancient authors, with
respect to the use of them in time of war, yet they give us but little
information concerning the methods by which they trained their whole people for
war in time of peace; so that if the model which I shall propose have not the
authority of the ancients to recommend it, yet perhaps by a severe discipline,
and a right method of disposing the minds of men, as well as forming their
bodies, for military and virtuous actions, it may have some resemblance of
their excellent institutions.
What I would offer is, that four camps be formed, one in Scotland, and
three in England; into which all the young men of the respective countries
should enter, on the first day of the two and twentieth year of their age; and
remain there the space of two years, if they be of fortunes sufficient to
maintain themselves; but if they are not, then to remain a year only, at the
expense of the public. In this camp they should be taught the use of all sorts
of arms, with the necessary evolutions; as also wrestling, leaping, swimming,
and the like exercises. He whose condition would permit him to buy and maintain
a horse, should be obliged so to do, and be taught to vault, to ride, and to
manage his own horse. This camp should seldom remain above eight days in one
place, but remove from heath to heath; not only upon the account of cleanliness
and health, but to teach the youth to fortify a camp, to march, and to accustom
them (respect being always had to those of a weak constitution) to carry as
much in their march as ever any Roman soldier did; that is to say, their tents,
provision, arms, armour, their utensils, and the palisades of their camp. They
should be taught to forage, and be obliged to use the countrymen with all
justice in their bargains, for that and all other things they stand in need of
from them. The food of every man within the camp should be the same; for bread
they should have only wheat, which they are to be obliged to grind with
hand-mills; they should have some salt, and a certain number of beeves allowed
them at certain times of the year. Their drink should be water, sometimes
tempered with a proportion of brandy, and at other times with vinegar. Their
clothes should be plain, coarse, and of a fashion fitted in everything for the
fatigue of a camp. For all these things those who could should pay; and those
who could not should be defrayed by the public, as has been said. The camp
should be sometimes divided into two parts, which should remove from each other
many miles, and should break up again at the same time, in order to meet upon
some mountainous, marshy, woody, or in a word, cross ground; that not only
their diligence, patience, and suffering in marches, but their skill in seizing
of grounds, posting bodies of horse and foot, and advancing towards each other;
their choosing a camp, and drawing out of it in order to a battle, might be
seen, as well as what orders of battle they would form upon the variety of
different grounds. The persons of quality or estate should likewise be
instructed in fortification, gunnery, and all things belonging to the duty of
an engineer: and forts should be sometimes built by the whole camp, where all
the arts of attacking and defending places should be practised. The youth
having been taught to read at schools, should be obliged to read at spare hours
some excellent histories, but chiefly those in which military actions are best
described; with the books that have been best written concerning the military
art. Speeches exhorting to military and virtuous actions should be often
composed, and pronounced publicly by such of the youth as were, by education
and natural talents, qualified for it. There being none but military men
allowed within the camp, and no churchmen being of that number, such of the
youth as may be fit to exhort the rest to all Christian and moral duties,
chiefly to humility, modesty, charity, and the pardoning of private injuries,
should be chosen to do it every Sunday, and the rest of that day spent in
reading books, and in conversation directed to the same end. And all this under
so severe and rigorous orders, attended with so exact an execution by reward
and punishment, that no officer within the camp should have the power of
pardoning the one, or withholding the other. The rewards should be all
honorary, and contrived to suit the nature of the different good qualities and
degrees in which any of the youth had shown, either his modesty, obedience,
patience in suffering, temperance, diligence, address, invention, judgment,
temper, or valour. The punishments should be much more rigorous than those
inflicted for the same crimes by the law of the land. And there should be
punishments for some things, not liable to any by the common law, immodest and
insolent words or actions, gaming, and the like. No woman should be suffered to
come within the camp, and the crimes of abusing their own bodies any manner of
way, punished with death. All these things to be judged by their own councils
of war; and those councils to have for rule, certain articles drawn up and
approved by the respective parliaments. The officers and masters, for instructing
and teaching the youth, in all the exercises above-mentioned, should upon the
first establishment of such a camp, be the most expert men in those
disciplines; and brought by encouragements from all places of Europe; due care
being taken that they should not indict the youth with foreign manners. But
afterwards they ought to consist of such men of quality or fortune as should be
chosen for that end, out of those who had formerly passed two years in the
camp, and since that time had improved themselves in the wars; who upon their
return should be obliged to serve two years in that station. As for the numbers
of those officers, or masters; their several duties; that of the
camp-master-general, and of the commissaries; the times and manner of exercise,
with divers other particulars of less consideration, and yet necessary to be
determined, in order to put such a design in execution, for brevity's sake I
omit them, as easy to be resolved. But certainly it were no hard matter, for
men that had passed through such a discipline as that of the camp I have
described, to retain it after they should return to their several homes; if the
people of every town and village, together with those of the adjacent
habitations, were obliged to meet fifty times in the year, on such days as
should be found most convenient; and exercise four hours every time: for all
men being instructed in what they are to do; and the men of quality and estate
most knowing, and expert of all others, the exercise might be performed in
great perfection. There might also be yearly in the summer time, a camp of some
thousands of the nearest neighbours brought and kept together for a week to do
those exercises, which cannot be performed in any other place: every man of a
certain estate being obliged to keep a horse fit for the war. By this means it
would be easy upon any occasion, though never so small (as for example, the
keeping of the peace, and putting the laws in execution where force is
necessary) or never so great and sudden (as upon account of invasions and
conspiracies) to bring together such numbers of officers and soldiers as the
exigence required, according to the practice of ancient Rome; which in this
particular might be imitated by us without difficulty: and if such a method
were once established, there would be no necessity of keeping up a militia
formed into regiments of foot and horse in time of peace. Now if this militia
should stand in need of any farther improvement (because no militias seem
comparable to those exercised in actual war; as that of the barons by their
constant feuds; and that of Rome, and some other ancient commonwealths, by
their perpetual wars) a certain small number of forces might be employed in any
foreign country where there should be action; a fourth part of which might be
changed every year; that all those who had in this manner acquired experience,
might be dispersed among the several regiments of any army, that the defence of
these countries should at any time call for; which would serve to confirm and
give assurance to the rest. Such a militia would be of no great expense to
these nations; for the mean clothing and provisions for those who could not
maintain themselves, being given only for one year, would amount to little; and
no other expense would be needful, except for their arms, a small train of
artillery for each camp, and what is to be given for the encouragement of the
first officers and masters.
A militia upon such a foot would have none of the infinite and
insuperable difficulties there are, to bring a few men who live at a great
distance from one another, frequently together to exercise; at which
consequently they must be from home every time several days: of finding such a
number of masters, as are necessary to train so many thousands of people
ignorant of all exercise, in so many different places, and for the most part at
the same time: it would have none of those innumerable encumbrances, and unnecessary
expenses, with which a militia formed into regiments of foot and horse in time
of peace is attended. in such a camp the youth would not only be taught the
exercise of a musket with a few evolutions, which is all that men in ordinary
militias pretend to, and is the least part of the duty of a soldier; but
besides a great many exercises to strengthen and dispose the body for fight,
they would learn to fence, to ride, and manage a horse for the war; to forage
and live in a camp; to fortify, attack, and defend any place; and what is no
less necessary, to undergo the greatest toils, and to give obedience to the
severest orders. Such a militia, by sending beyond seas certain proportions of
it, and relieving them from time to time, would enable us to assist our allies
more powerfully than by standing armies we could ever do. Such a camp would
take away the great difficulty of bringing men of all conditions, who have
passed the time of their youth, to apply themselves to the use and exercise of
arms; and beginning with them early, when like wax they may be moulded into any
shape, would dispose them to place their greatest honour in the performance of
those exercises, and inspire them with the fires of military glory, to which
that age is so inclined; which impression being made upon their youth, would
last as long as life. Such a camp would be as great a school of virtue as of
military discipline: in which the youth would learn to stand in need of few
things; to be content with that small allowance which nature requires; to
suffer, as well as to act; to be modest, as well as brave; to be as much
ashamed of doing anything insolent or injurious, as of turning their back upon
an enemy; they would learn to forgive injuries done to themselves, but to
embrace with joy the occasions of dying to revenge those done to their country:
and virtue imbibed in younger years would cast a flavour to the utmost periods
of life. In a word, they would learn greater and better things than the
military art, and more necessary too, if anything can be more necessary than
the defence of our country. Such a militia might not only defend a people
living in an island, but even such as are placed in the midst of the most
warlike nations of the world.
Now till such a militia may be brought to some perfection, our present
militia is not only sufficient to defend us; but considering the circumstances
of the French affairs, especially with relation to Spain, Britain cannot justly
apprehend an invasion, if the fleet of England, to which Scotland furnished
during the late war seven or eight thousand seamen, were in such order as it
ought to be. And it can never be the interest of these nations to take any
other share in preserving the balance of Europe, than what may be performed by
our fleet. By which means our money will be spent amongst ourselves; our trade
preserved to support the charge of the navy; our enemies totally driven out of
the sea, and great numbers of their forces diverted from opposing the armies of
our allies abroad, to the defence of their own coasts.
If this method had been taken in the late war, I presume it would have
proved not only more advantageous to us, but also more serviceable to our
allies than that which was followed. And it is in vain to say, that at this
rate we shall have no allies at all: for the weaker party on the Continent must
be contented to accept our assistance in the manner we think fit to give it, or
inevitably perish. But if we send any forces beyond the seas to join those of
our allies, they ought to be part of our militia, as has been said, and not
standing forces; otherwise, at the end of every war, the present struggle will
recur, and at one time or other these nations will be betrayed, and a standing
army established: so that nothing can save us from following the fate of all
the other kingdoms in Europe, but putting our trust altogether in our fleet and
militias, and having no other forces than these. The sea is the only empire
which can naturally belong to us. Conquest is not our interest, much less to
consume our people and treasure in conquering for others.
To conclude; if we seriously consider the happy condition of these
nations, who have lived so long under the blessings of liberty, we cannot but
be affected with the most tender compassion to think that the Scots, who have
for so many ages, with such resolution, defended their liberty against the
Picts, Britons, Romans, Saxons, Danes, Irish, Normans, and English, as well as
against the violence and tyranny of so many of their own princes; that the
English, who, whatever revolutions their country has been subject to, have
still maintained their rights and liberties against all attempts; who possess a
country, everywhere cultivated and improved by the industry of rich husbandman;
her rivers and harbours filled with ships; her cities, towns, and villages
enriched with manufactures; where men of vast estates live in secure possession
of them, and whose merchants live in as great splendour as the nobility of
other nations: that Scotland which has a gentry born to excel in arts and arms:
that England which has a commonalty, not only surpassing all those of that
degree which the world can now boast of, but also those of all former ages, in
courage, honesty, good sense, industry, and generosity of temper; in whose very
looks there are such visible marks of a free and liberal education; which
advantages cannot be imputed to the climate, or to any other cause, but the
freedom of the government under which they live: I say, it cannot but make the
hearts of all honest men bleed to think, that in their days the felicity and
liberties of such countries must come to a period, if the parliaments do not
prevent it, and his majesty be not prevailed upon to lay aside the thoughts of
mercenary armies, which, if once established, will inevitably produce those
fatal consequences that have always attended such forces in the other kingdoms
of Europe; violation of property, decay of trade, oppression of the country by
heavy taxes and quarters, the utmost misery and slavery of the poorer sort, the
ruin of the nobility by their expenses in court and army, deceit and treachery
in all ranks of men, occasioned by want and necessity. Then shall we see the
gentry of Scotland, ignorant through want of education, and cowardly by being
oppressed; then shall we see the once happy commonalty of England become base
and abject, by being continually exposed to the brutal insolence of the
soldiers; the women debauched by their lust; ugly and nasty through poverty,
and the want of things necessary to preserve their natural beauty. Then shall
we see that great city, the pride and glory, not only of our island, but of the
world, subjected to the excessive impositions Paris now lies under, and reduced
to a peddling trade, serving only to foment the luxury of a court. Then will
Britain know what obligations she has to those who are for mercenary armies.