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1820 Octr. 19 Spanish liberticide measures 17 Letter 2. Public Discussion 17
Mr Goreli makes no distinctions: at one crush he suppresses and for ever all
free meetings of the people howsoever modified. Mr Goreli acts consistently –
the government his endeavours are employed to organize and support is a despotic
one: he will have no eventual faculty of resistance no possibility of resistance
to misrule be it ever so consummate no relief to misery from misrule be it ever
so excruciating: he will have no free communication of ideas on political
subjects he will have no instruction no excitation no concert between man and
man any where for any such purpose.
Mr Goreli acts consistently; consistently with his principles in regard to
government: whether with any that he avows I know not: assuredly with the
principles he acts upon: assuredly consistently with the attainment of the
object towards which this measure of his tends, the establishment of despotism:
principles directly the reverse /the direct reverse/ of those which the
Constitutional Code has set up, and to the giving effect to which the system of
representation ordained by it is directed.
Mr Goreli has not yet proposed a law abolishing the whole system of Election
meetings. He need not: should this proposed law of his be established and be
productive of its declaredly intended effect, they will be of no use to the
people of whom those meetings if held will be composed, and whose interests they
were intended to support and serve: in those meetings there will be neither
excitation nor instruction: and to the production of any good effect both are
necessary: at the meeting itself there will be no time for any thing like
adequate instruction: indeed by the Constitutional Code itself (Article | |) all
such use of the time appointed for Election is prohibited: at the time of such
meeting there can not be any such instruction: and it is Mr Goreli’s care that
there shall not be any at any other time.
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Title: [1820. Octr 19 Spanish liberticide measures]Description: 1820. Octr 19 Spanish liberticide measures 15 Letter 2. Public Discussion 15 To the keeping up this disposition to eventual resistance partly by instruction partly by excitation, the unrestrained communication of all ideas belonging to the field of government is necessary. It is therefore the characteristic of an undespotic government to give not only toleration but favour to such unrestrained communication: and this with a view not only to instruction but excitation: for without correspondent excitation all the instruction imaginable would not be productive of any effect. Instruction applies to the understanding; excitation to the will: both must be in a suitable state or no effect can be produced. In /Of/ popular meetings various sorts or modifications might in this view be distinguished: instruction and excitation can not in any case be altogether separated: of every such meeting it is the tendency to be in some degree or other conducive /contributory/ to both those effects: some however are in a greater degree /more particularly/ conducive to the one of these two instruments of political security, others to the other. A meeting in an open space /and unlimited space such as an unenclosed field/ is more particularly conducive /suitable/ to excitation than to instruction: a meeting within a limited space such as a room public or private is more conducive /suitable/ to instruction than to excitation. A meeting open to all /once for all/ without distinction, or even to all who at each time pay a small sum for admittance, is more suitable to the purpose of excitation than to that of instruction: a meeting held as one of a fixt and permanent series of meetings is more suitable to the purpose of instruction than excitation. A select meeting or meeting of a Society with which in addition to those by whom it was first formed none are admitted but by election is more suitable to the purpose of instruction than of excitation: in regard to excitation it is more suitable to the purpose of maintaining a constant and ordinary degree, than any such extraordinary degree as on extraordinary occasions may become necessary to the proposed end.
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Title: [1820. Octr 18 Spanish liberticide measures]Description: 1820. Octr 18 Spanish liberticide measures 11 Letter 2. Public Discussion 11 Mr Gorelli makes no distinction. He will neither have excitation nor instruction: wherever he sees free discussion there he sees an enemy. Had the provision /his means of safety/ been temporary, some excuse might have made of it: but so far as words go it is everlasting. In one single town A danger whatever may have been amount of it had place for a few days: no actual mischief, as far I can understand, was the result of it. If so The mischief was after all but ideal. For remedy against a danger thus blown over – for this it is that Mr Goreli organizes a danger designed to last as long as the Constitution lasts, and designed for I can not see what less is designed to destroy it. A guard – a military guard – under the command of the President of the Cortes for the time being – had this been his means of safety – necessary or not necessary – I should have seen no danger in it. On the particular occasion in question, one regiment, the regiment of | | offered (I see it said) its services. Let these services be accepted and as above perpetual. I have no fear from them. Neither the Nation /people/, nor the King with all the remaining /other/ regiments, regulars and militia likewise, could have much to fear from this one regiment under such command, nor from many such regiments put together. Here then would be certain and everlasting force, provided against imagined and apprehended force, and that but contingent and should it have place, but momentary. Would not be sufficient.
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Title: [1820. Octr. 19 Spanish liberticide measures]Description: 1820. Octr. 19 Spanish liberticide measures 16 Letter 2. Public discussion 16 Confined to a single spot or to a small number spots in the whole territory of the state – confined to a single portion of time – to a single day in the year or to a small number of days – confined to days of casually occurrence and not capable of being fixt to the purpose of ensuring preparation and attendance such meetings would be contributory in no better than but a precarious and inadequate degree to the conjunct purpose of instruction and excitation. For the same cause /reason that/ this state of preparation for eventual resistance is necessary in /on the part of/ any one /place/ portion of the population it is necessary in /on the part of/ every other, for the same cause /reason/ that it is necessary at any one portion of time it is necessary at every other. To the exclusion of despotism a perpetual state of preparation for eventual resistance is therefore necessary; and to this perpetual state of preparation for eventual resistance not only a state of general appropriate instruction and excitation, but a universal and perpetual faculty of concert on the part of the people is necessary. {In a word To this state of preparation jealousy – perpetual and unrelenting jealousy – is necessary: a jealousy by the absence of which one of two things – either an absolute ignorance of the nature of man, or a desire that the government should be despotic, and the real happiness of the subject many made a compleat sacrifice of to the real or imaginary happiness of the ruling few is conclusively evidenced.
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