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Front Page Titles (by Subject) ACKNOWLEDGMENTS - The Constitution of England; Or, an Account of the English Government
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS - Jean Louis De Lolme, The Constitution of England; Or, an Account of the English Government [1784]Edition used:The Constitution of England; Or, an Account of the English Government, edited and with an Introduction by David Lieberman (Indianapolis: Liberty Fund, 2007).
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- Introduction
- De Lolme’s Life and Early Writings
- The Constitution of England
- Later Writings
- Editions of the Constitution of England
- A Note On the Text
- Acknowledgments
- The Constitution of England
- To the King.
- Book I
- Chapter I: Causes of the Liberty of the English Nation.—reasons of the Difference Between the Government of England, and That of France.—in England, the Great Power of the Crown, Under the Norman Kings, Created an Union Between the Nobility and the People
- Chapter II: A Second Advantage England Had Over France:—it Formed One Undivided State.
- Chapter III: The Subject Continued.
- Chapter IV: Of the Legislative Power.
- Chapter V: Of the Executive Power.
- Chapter VI: The Boundaries Which the Constitution Has Set to the Royal Prerogative.
- Chapter VII: The Same Subject Continued.
- Chapter VIII: New Restrictions.
- Chapter IX: Of Private Liberty, Or the Liberty of Individuals.
- Chapter X 1: On the Law In Regard to Civil Matters, That Is Observed In England.
- Chapter Xi 1: The Subject Continued. the Courts of Equity.
- Chapter XII: Of Criminal Justice.
- Chapter XIII: The Subject Continued.
- Chapter XIV: The Subject Concluded.—laws Relative to Imprisonment.
- Book Ii
- Chapter I: Some Advantages Peculiar to the English Constitution. 1. The Unity of the Executive Power.
- Chapter II: The Subject Concluded.—the Executive Power Is More Easily Confined When It Is One.
- Chapter III: A Second Peculiarity.—the Division of the Legislative Power.
- Chapter IV: A Third Advantage Peculiar to the English Government. the Business of Proposing Laws, Lodged In the Hands of the People.
- Chapter V: In Which an Inquiry Is Made, Whether It Would Be an Advantage to Public Liberty, That the Laws Should Be Enacted By the Votes of the People At Large.
- Chapter VI: Advantages That Accrue to the People From Appointing Representatives.
- Chapter VII: The Subject Continued—the Advantages That Accrue to the People From Their Appointing Representatives, Are Very Inconsiderable, Unless They Also Entirely Trust Their Legislative Authority to Them.
- Chapter VIII: The Subject Concluded.—effects That Have Resulted, In the English Government, From the People’s Power Being Completely Delegated to Their Representatives.
- Chapter IX: A Farther Disadvantage of Republican Governments.—the People Are Necessarily Betrayed By Those In Whom They Trust.
- Chapter X: Fundamental Difference Between the English Government, and the Governments Just Described.—in England All Executive Authority Is Placed Out of the Hands of Those In Whom the People Trust. Usefulness of the Power of the Crown.
- Chapter XI: The Powers Which the People Themselves Exercise.—the Election of Members of Parliament.
- Chapter XII: The Subject Continued.—liberty of the Press.
- Chapter XIII: The Subject Continued.
- Chapter XIV: Right of Resistance.
- Chapter Xv 1: Proofs Drawn From Facts, of the Truth of the Principles Laid Down In the Present Work.—1. the Peculiar Manner In Which Revolutions Have Always Been Concluded In England.
- Chapter Xvi 1: Second Difference—the Manner After Which the Laws For the Liberty of the Subject Are Executed In England.
- Chapter Xvii 1: A More Inward View of the English Government Than Has Hitherto Been Offered to the Reader In the Course of This Work.—very Essential Differences Between the English Monarchy, As a Monarchy, and All Those With Which We Are Acquainted.
- Chapter XVIII: How Far the Examples of Nations Who Have Lost Their Liberty, Are Applicable to England.
- Chapter Xix 1: A Few Additional Thoughts On the Attempts That At Particular Times May Be Made to Abridge the Power of the Crown, and On Some of the Dangers By Which Such Attempts May Be Attended.
- Chapter Xx 1: A Few Additional Observations On the Right of Taxation Which Is Lodged In the Hands of the Representatives of the People. What Kind of Danger This Right May Be Exposed To.
- Chapter XXI: Conclusion.—a Few Words On the Nature of the Divisions That Take Place In England.
- Guide to Further Reading
- Bibliography
- De Lolme’s Principal Publications
- Works Cited By De Lolme
- Classical Sources
- Modern Sources
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
My greatest debt is to Knud Haakonssen, who first proposed that this volume be included in the series under his general editorship and who thereafter remained a frequent and much-needed source of guidance, patience, and support. Åsa Söderman’s detailed and exacting survey of the principal early editions of The Constitution of England, discussed more fully in the editorial introduction, provided the critical starting point for the preparation of this edition. Michael Sletcher showed fine generosity in sharing his discovery of a previously unreported publication by De Lolme, also detailed above.
I imposed on the expertise of many friends and scholars to elucidate particular references in De Lolme’s text and am delighted to acknowledge the help of Thomas Brady, Jan deVries, Eliga Gould, Lindsay Farmer, Richard Kagan, Ernest Metzger, Carlos Noreña, James Oldham, and Richard Whatmore. Several graduate students at the Boalt Hall School of Law provided skillful research assistance: Benjamin Bechstedt, Brad Bryan, Tucker Culbertson, and, above all, Pablo Rueda Saiz, whose dedication and contributions were invaluable. As on past occasions, I have benefited from the wonderful resources and staff of several libraries at the University of California at Berkeley: the Bancroft Library, the Robbins Collection, and the Garret W. McEnerney Law Library. I am especially grateful for the expertise and many kindnesses of the Law Library’s associate director, Marci Hoffman.
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