We proceed now to inquire what form
of government and what manner of life is best for
communities in general, not adapting it to that superior
virtue which is above the reach of the vulgar, or that
education which every advantage of nature and fortune
only can furnish, nor to those imaginary plans which
may be formed at pleasure; but to that mode of life
which the greater part of mankind can attain to, and
that government which most cities may establish:
for as to those aristocracies which we have now
mentioned, they are either too perfect for a state
to support, or one so nearly alike to that state we
now going to inquire into, that we shall treat of them
both as one.
The opinions which we form upon these
subjects must depend upon one common principle:
for if what I have said in my treatise on Morals
is true, a happy life must arise from an uninterrupted
course of virtue; and if virtue consists in a certain
medium, the middle life must certainly be the happiest;
which medium is attainable [1295b] by every one.
The boundaries of virtue and vice in the state must
also necessarily be the same as in a private person;
for the form of government is the life of the city.
In every city the people are divided into three sorts;
the very rich, the very poor, and those who are between
them. If this is universally admitted, that the
mean is best, it is evident that even in point of
fortune mediocrity is to be preferred; for that state
is most submissive to reason; for those who are very
handsome, or very strong, or very noble, or very rich;
or, on the contrary; those who are very poor, or very
weak, or very mean, with difficulty obey it; for the
one are capricious and greatly flagitious, the other
rascally and mean, the crimes of each arising from
their different excesses: nor will they go through
the different offices of the state; which is detrimental
to it: besides, those who excel in strength,
in riches, or friends, or the like, neither know how
nor are willing to submit to command: and this
begins at home when they are boys; for there they
are brought up too delicately to be accustomed to
obey their preceptors: as for the very poor, their
general and excessive want of what the rich enjoy reduces
them to a state too mean: so that the one know
not how to command, but to be commanded as slaves,
the others know not how to submit to any command,
nor to command themselves but with despotic power.
A city composed of such men must therefore
consist of slaves and masters, not freemen; where
one party must hate, and the other despise, where
there could be no possibility of friendship or political
community: for community supposes affection; for
we do not even on the road associate with our enemies.
It is also the genius of a city to be composed as
much as possible of equals; which will be most so
when the inhabitants are in the middle state:
from whence it follows, that that city must be best
framed which is composed of those whom we say are
naturally its proper members. It is men of this
station also who will be best assured of safety and
protection; for they will neither covet what belongs
to others, as the poor do; nor will others covet what
is theirs, as the poor do what belongs to the rich;
and thus, without plotting against any one, or having
any one plot against them, they will live free from
danger: for which reason Phocylides wisely wishes
for the middle state, as being most productive of
happiness. It is plain, then, that the most perfect
political community must be amongst those who are in
the middle rank, and those states are best instituted
wherein these are a larger and more respectable part,
if possible, than both the other; or, if that cannot
be, at least than either of them separate; so that
being thrown into the balance it may prevent either
scale from preponderating.
It is therefore the greatest happiness
which the citizens can enjoy to possess a moderate
and convenient fortune; for when some possess too
much, and others nothing at [1296a] all, the government
must either be in the hands of the meanest rabble
or else a pure oligarchy; or, from the excesses of
both, a tyranny; for this arises from a headstrong
democracy or an oligarchy, but very seldom when the
members of the community are nearly on an equality
with each other. We will assign a reason for
this when we come to treat of the alterations which
different states are likely to undergo. The middle
state is therefore best, as being least liable to
those seditions and insurrections which disturb the
community; and for the same reason extensive governments
are least liable to these inconveniences; for there
those in a middle state are very numerous, whereas
in small ones it is easy to pass to the two extremes,
so as hardly to have any in a medium remaining, but
the one half rich, the other poor: and from the
same principle it is that democracies are more firmly
established and of longer continuance than oligarchies;
but even in those when there is a want of a proper
number of men of middling fortune, the poor extend
their power too far, abuses arise, and the government
is soon at an end.
We ought to consider as a proof of
what I now advance, that the best lawgivers themselves
were those in the middle rank of life, amongst whom
was Solon, as is evident from his poems, and Lycurgus,
for he was not a king, and Charondas, and indeed most
others. What has been said will show us why of
so many free states some have changed to democracies,
others to oligarchies: for whenever the number
of those in the middle state has been too small, those
who were the more numerous, whether the rich or the
poor, always overpowered them and assumed to themselves
the administration of public affairs; from hence arose
either a democracy or an oligarchy. Moreover,
when in consequence of their disputes and quarrels
with each other, either the rich get the better of
the poor, or the poor of the rich, neither of them
will establish a free state; but, as the record of
their victory, one which inclines to their own principles,
and form either a democracy or an oligarchy.
Those who made conquests in Greece,
having all of them an eye to the respective forms
of government in their own cities, established either
democracies or oligarchies, not considering what was
serviceable to the state, but what was similar to
their own; for which reason a government has never
been established where the supreme power has been
placed amongst those of the middling rank, or very
seldom; and, amongst a few, one man only of those
who have yet been conquerors has been persuaded to
give the preference to this order of [1296b] men:
it is indeed an established custom with the inhabitants
of most cities not to desire an equality, but either
to aspire to govern, or when they are conquered, to
submit.
Thus we have shown what the best state
is, and why. It will not be difficult to perceive
of the many states which there are, for we have seen
that there are various forms both of democracies and
oligarchies, to which we should give the first place,
to which the second, and in the same manner the next
also; and to observe what are the particular excellences
and defects of each, after we have first described
the best possible; for that must be the best which
is nearest to this, that worst which is most distant
from the medium, without any one has a particular
plan of his own which he judges by. I mean by
this, that it may happen, that although one form of
government may be better than another, yet there is
no reason to prevent another from being preferable
thereunto in particular circumstances and for particular
purposes.