NO. 15. SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1720 [February 15, 1721].
Of Freedom of Speech: That the same is inseparable from publick Liberty.
SIR,
Without freedom of thought, there can be no such thing as wisdom; and no
such thing as publick liberty, without freedom of speech: Which is the right
of every man, as far as by it he does not hurt and control the right of another;
and this is the only check which it ought to suffer, the only bounds which
it ought to know.
This sacred privilege is so essential to free government, that the security
of property; and the freedom of speech, always go together; and in those
wretched countries where a man can not call his tongue his own, he can scarce
call any thing else his own. Whoever would overthrow the liberty of the nation,
must begin by subduing the freedom of speech; a thing terrible to publick
traitors.
This secret was so well known to the court of King Charles I that his wicked
ministry procured a proclamation to forbid the people to talk of Parliaments,
which those traitors had laid aside. To assert the undoubted right of the
subject, and defend his Majesty's legal prerogative, was called disaffection,
and punished as sedition. Nay, people were forbid to talk of religion in
their families: For the priests had combined with the ministers to cook up
tyranny, and suppress truth and the law. While the late King James, when
Duke of York, went avowedly to mass; men were fined, imprisoned, and undone,
for saying that he was a papist: And, that King Charles II might live more
securely a papist, there was an act of Parliament made, declaring it treason
to say that he was one.
That men ought to speak well of their governors, is true, while their governors
deserve to be well spoken of; but to do publick mischief, without hearing
of it, is only the prerogative and felicity of tyranny: A free people will
be shewing that they are so, by their freedom of speech.
The administration of government is nothing else, but the attendance of the
trustees of the people upon the interest and affairs of the people. And as
it is the part and business of the people, for whose sake alone all publick
matters are, or ought to be, transacted, to see whether they be well or ill
transacted; so it is the interest, and ought to be the ambition, of all honest
magistrates, to have their deeds openly examined, and publickly scanned:
Only the wicked governors of men dread what is said of them; Audivit Tiberius
probra queis lacerabitur, atque perculsus est. 1 The publick censure was
true, else he had not felt it bitter.
Freedom of speech is ever the symptom, as well as the effect, of good government.
In old Rome, all was left to the judgment and pleasure of the people; who
examined the publick proceedings with such discretion, and censured those
who administered them with such equity and mildness, that in the space of
three hundred years, not five publick ministers suffered unjustly. Indeed,
whenever the commons proceeded to violence, the great ones had been the aggressors.
Guilt only dreads liberty of speech, which drags it out of its lurking holes,
and exposes its deformity and horror to day-light. Horatius, Valerius, Cincinnatus,
and other virtuous and undesigning magistrates of the Roman commonwealth,
had nothing to fear from liberty of speech. Their virtuous administration,
the more it was examined, the more it brightened and gained by enquiry. When
Valerius, in particular, was accused, upon some slight grounds, of affecting
the diadem; he, who was the first minister of Rome, did not accuse the people
for examining his conduct, but approved his innocence in a speech to them;
he gave such satisfaction to them, and gained such popularity to himself,
that they gave him a new name; inde cognomen factum Publicolae est; 2 to
denote that he was their favourite and their friend. Latae deinde leges.
Ante omnes de provocatione, adversus magistratus ad populum, 3 Livii lib.
ii. cap. 8.
But things afterwards took another turn: Rome, with the loss of its liberty,
lost also its freedom of speech; then men's words began to be feared and
watched; then first began the poisonous race of informers, banished indeed
under the righteous administration of Titus, Nerva, Trajan, Aurelius, &c.
but encouraged and enriched under the vile ministry of Sejanus, Tigellinus,
Pallas, and Cleander: Querilibet, quod in secreta nostra non inquirant principes,
nisi quos odimus, 4 says Pliny to Trajan.
The best princes have ever encouraged and promoted freedom of speech; they
knew that upright measures would defend themselves, and that all upright
men would defend them. Tacitus, speaking of the reigns of some of the princes
above-mention'd, says with ecstasy, Rara temporum felicitate, ubi sentire
quae velis, & quae sentias dicere liceat: 5 A blessed time, when you
might think what you would, and speak what you thought!
The same was the opinion and practice of the wise and virtuous Timoleon,
the deliverer of the great city of Syracuse from slavery. He being accused
by Demoenetus, a popular orator, in a full assembly of the people, of several
misdemeanors committed by him while he was general, gave no other answer,
than that he was highly obliged to the gods for granting him a request that
he had often made to them; namely, that he might live to see the Syracusians
enjoy that liberty of speech which they now seemed to be masters of.
And that great commander, M. Marcellus, who won more battles than any Roman
captain of his age, being accused by the Syracusians, while he was now a
fourth time consul, of having done them indignities and hostile wrongs, contrary
to the League, rose from his seat in the Senate, as soon as the charge against
him was opened, and passing (as a private man) into the place where the accused
were wont to make their defence, gave free liberty to the Syracusians to
impeach him: Which, when they had done, he and they went out of the court
together to attend the issue of the cause: Nor did he express the least ill-will
or resentment towards these his accusers; but being acquitted, received their
city into his protection. Had he been guilty, he would neither have strewn
such temper nor courage.
I doubt not but old Spencer and his son, who were the chief ministers and
betrayers of Edward II would have been very glad to have stopped the mouths
of all honest men in England. They dreaded to be called traitors, because
they were traitors. And I dare say, Queen Elizabeth's Walsingham, who deserved
no reproaches, feared none. Misrepresentation of publick measures is easily
overthrown, by representing publick measures truly: When they are honest,
they ought to be publickly known, that they may be publickly commended; but
if they be knavish or pernicious, they ought to be publickly exposed, in
order to be publickly detested.
To assert, that King James was a papist and a tyrant, was only so far hurtful
to him, as it was true of him; and if the Earl of Strafford had not deserved
to be impeached, he need not have feared a bill of attainder. If our directors
and their confederates be not such knaves as the world thinks them, let them
prove to all the world, that the world thinks wrong, and that they are guilty
of none of those villainies which all the world lays to their charge. Others
too, who would be thought to have no part of their guilt, must, before they
are thought innocent, shew that they did all that was in their power to prevent
that guilt, and to check their proceedings.
Freedom of speech is the great bulwark of liberty; they prosper and die together:
And it is the terror of traitors and oppressors, and a barrier against them.
It produces excellent writers, and encourages men of fine genius. Tacitus
tells us, that the Roman commonwealth bred great and numerous authors, who
writ with equal boldness and eloquence: But when it was enslaved, those great
wits were no more. Postquam bellatum apud Actium; atque omnem potestatem
ad unum conferri pacts interfuit, magna illa ingenia cessere. 6 Tyranny had
usurped the place of equality, which is the soul of liberty, and destroyed
publick courage. The minds of men, terrified by unjust power, degenerated
into all the vileness and methods of servitude: Abject sycophancy and blind
submission grew the only means of preferment, and indeed of safety; men durst
not open their mouths, but to flatter.
Pliny the Younger observes, that this dread of tyranny had such effect, that
the Senate, the great Roman Senate, became at last stupid and dumb: Mutam
ac sedentariam assentiendi necessitatem. 7 Hence, says he, our spirit and
genius are stupified, broken, and sunk for ever. And in one of his epistles,
speaking of the works of his uncle, he makes an apology for eight of them,
as not written with the same vigour which was to be found in the rest; for
that these eight were written in the reign of Nero, when the spirit of writing
was cramped by fear; Dubii sermonis octo scripset sub Nerone — cum omne studiorum
genus paulo liberius & erectius periculosum servitus fecisset. 8
All ministers, therefore, who were oppressors, or intended to be oppressors,
have been loud in their complaints against freedom of speech, and the licence
of the press; and always restrained, or endeavoured to restrain, both. In
consequence of this, they have brow-beaten writers, punished them violently,
and against law, and burnt their works. By all which they shewed how much
truth alarmed them, and how much they were at enmity with truth.
There is a famous instance of this in Tacitus: He tells us, that Cremutius
Cordus, having in his Annals praised Brutus and Cassius, gave offence to
Sejanus, first minister, and to some inferior sycophants in the court of
Tiberius; who, conscious of their own characters, took the praise bestowed
on every worthy Roman, to be so many reproaches pointed at themselves: They
therefore complained of the book to the Senate; which, being now only the
machine of tyranny, condemned it to be burnt. But this did not prevent its
spreading. Libros cremandos censuere patres; sed manserunt occultati &
editi: 9 Being censured, it was the more sought after. "From hence," says
Tacitus, "we may wonder at the stupidity of those statesmen, who hope to
extinguish, by the terror of their power, the memory of their actions; for
quite otherwise, the punishment of good writers gains credit to their writings:"
Nam contra, punitis ingeniis, gliscit auctoritas. 10 Nor did ever any government,
who practiced impolitick severity, get any thing by it, but infamy to themselves,
and renown to those who suffered under it. This also is an observation of
Tacitus: Neque aliud [externi] reges, [aut] qui ea[dem] saevitiae usi sunt,
nisi dedecus sibi, atque gloriam illis peperere. 11
Freedom of speech, therefore, being of such infinite importance to the preservation
of liberty, every one who loves liberty ought to encourage freedom of speech.
Hence it is that I, living in a country of liberty, and under the best prince
upon earth, shall take this very favourable opportunity of serving mankind,
by warning them of the hideous mischiefs that they will suffer, if ever corrupt
and wicked men shall hereafter get possession of any state, and the power
of betraying their master: And, in order to do this, I will shew them by
what steps they will probably proceed to accomplish their traitorous ends.
This may be the subject of my next.
Valerius Maximus tells us, that Lentulus Marcellinus, the Roman consul, having
complained, in a popular assembly, of the overgrown power of Pompey; the
whole people answered him with a shout of approbation: Upon which the consul
told them, "Shout on, gentlemen, shout on, and use those bold signs of liberty
while you may; for I do not know how long they will be allowed you."
God be thanked, we Englishmen have neither lost our liberties, nor are in
danger of losing them. Let us always cherish this matchless blessing, almost
peculiar to ourselves; that our posterity may, many ages hence, ascribe their
freedom to our zeal. The defence of liberty is a noble, a heavenly office;
which can only be performed where liberty is: For, as the same Valerius Maximus
observes, Quid ergo libertas sine Catone? non magis quam Cato sine libertate.
12
G
I am, &c.
1. The correct quote is: ... audivit Tiberius probra, quis per occultum lacerabatur,
adeoque perculsus est... ("Tiberius heard reproaches that wounded him deeply,
and he was disquieted.") Tacitus, Annales, 4.42.
2. "Then he was named Publicola." Livy, 2.8.2. The word Publicola means one
who lives among the people.
3. "Then laws were proposed, the first of them a law concerning appeal against
the magistrates to the people." Livy, 2.8.1-2.
4. "We may well complain that only those leaders who inquire into our secrets
are those we hate." Pliny the Younger, Panegyricus, 68.6.
5. "The rare good fortune of an age where one is allowed to feel what one
wishes and to say what one feels." Tacitus, Historiae, 1.1.
6. "After the battle of Actium, when the interests of peace required that
all power should be conferred on one man, great geniuses ceased work." Tacitus,
Historiae, 1.1.
7. "Unspoken and fixed necessity to assent." Pliny the Younger, Panegyricus,
76.3.
8. "Under Nero he wrote eight books concerning linguistic problems — when
tyranny made all free and elevated study dangerous." Pliny the Younger, Epistulae,
3.5.
9. "The Senate ordered the books burned, but some, having been hidden, remained
and were afterward published." Tacitus, Annales, 4.35.
10. "On the contrary, the authority of genius, once punished, grows." Tacitus,
Annales, 4.35.
11. "Nor have foreign kings and those who imitated their cruelty achieved
anything except shame for themselves and glory for their victims." Tacitus,
Annales, 4.35.
12. "What liberty without Cato? No more than Cato without liberty." Valerius
Maximus, 4.2.4.