James Harrington, eldest
son of Sir Sapcotes Harrington of Exton, in Rutlandshire,
was born in the reign of James I, in January, 1661,
five years before the death of Shakespeare. He
was two or three years younger than John Milton.
His great-grandfather was Sir James Harrington, who
married Lucy, daughter of Sir William Sidney, lived
with her to their golden wedding-day, and had eighteen
children, through whom he counted himself, before
his death, patriarch in a family that in his own time
produced eight dukes, three marquises, seventy earls,
twenty-seven viscounts, and thirty-six barons, sixteen
of them all being Knights of the Garter. James
Harrington’s ideal of a commonwealth was the
design, therefore, of a man in many ways connected
with the chief nobility of England.
Sir Sapcotes Harrington married twice,
and had by each of his wives two sons and two daughters.
James Harrington was eldest son by the first marriage,
which was to Jane, daughter of Sir William Samuel of
Upton, in Northamptonshire. James Harrington’s
brother became a merchant; of his half-brothers, one
went to sea, the other became a captain in the army.
As a child, James Harrington was studious,
and so sedate that it was said playfully of him he
rather kept his parents and teachers in awe than needed
correction; but in after-life his quick wit made him
full of playfulness in conversation. In 1629
he entered Trinity College, Oxford, as a gentleman
commoner. There he had for tutor William Chillingworth,
a Fellow of the college, who after conversion to the
Church of Rome had reasoned his way back into Protestant
opinions. Chillingworth became a famous champion
of Protestantism in the question between the Churches,
although many Protestants attacked him as unsound because
he would not accept the Athanasian Creed and had some
other reservations.
Harrington prepared himself for foreign
travel by study of modern languages, but before he
went abroad, and while he was still under age, his
father died and he succeeded to his patrimony.
The socage tenure of his estate gave him free choice
of his own guardian, and he chose his mother’s
mother, Lady Samuel.
He then began the season of travel
which usually followed studies at the university,
a part of his training to which he had looked forward
with especial interest. He went first to Holland,
which had been in Queen Elizabeth’s time the
battle-ground of civil and religious liberty.
Before he left England he used to say he knew of monarchy,
anarchy, aristocracy, democracy, oligarchy, only as
hard words to be looked for in a dictionary.
But his interest in problems of government began to
be awakened while he was among the Dutch. He
served in the regiment of Lord Craven, and afterward
in that of Sir Robert Stone; was much at The Hague;
became familiar with the Court of the Prince of Orange,
and with King James’s daughter, the Queen of
Bohemia, who, with her husband the Prince Elector,
was then a fugitive to Holland. Lord Harrington,
who had once acted as governor to the princess, and
won her affection, was James Harrington’s uncle,
and she now cordially welcomed the young student of
life for his uncle’s sake, and for his own pleasantness
of outward wit and inward gravity of thought.
Harrington was taken with him by the exiled and plundered
Prince Elector, when he paid a visit to the Court
of Denmark, and he was intrusted afterward with the
chief care of the prince’s affairs in England.
From Holland, James Harrington passed
through Flanders into France, and thence to Italy.
When he came hack to England, some courtiers who were
with him in Rome told Charles I that Harrington had
been too squeamish at the Pope’s consecration
of wax lights, in refusing to obtain a light, as others
did, by kissing his Holiness’s toe. The
King told Harrington that he might have complied with
a custom which only signified respect to a temporal
prince. But his Majesty was satisfied with the
reply, that having had the honor to kiss his Majesty’s
hand, he thought it beneath him to kiss any other
prince’s foot.
Of all places in Italy, Venice pleased
Harrington best. He was deeply interested ill
the Venetian form of government, and his observations
bore fruit in many suggestions for the administration
of the Commonwealth of Oceana.
After his return to England, being
of age, James Harrington cared actively for the interests
of his younger brothers and sisters. It was he
who made his brother William a merchant. William
Harrington throve, and for his ingenuity in matters
of construction he was afterward made one of the Fellows
of the newly formed Royal Society. He took pains
over the training of his sisters, making 110 difference
between sisters and half-sisters, and treating his
step-mother as a mother. He filled his home with
loving-kindness, and was most liberal in giving help
to friends. When he was told that he often threw
away his bounty on ungrateful persons, he playfully
told his advisers they were mercenary and that he
saw they sold their gifts, since they expected so great
a return as gratitude.
James Harrington’s bent was
for the study of life, and he made no active suit
for court employment. But he went to court, where
Charles I liked him, and admitted him as one of his
privy chamber extraordinary, in which character he
went with the King in his first expedition against
the Scots.
Because Charles I knew him and liked
him, and because he had shown himself no partisan
of either side in the civil war, though he was known
to be inclined, in the way of abstract opinion, toward
a form of government that was not monarchy, the commissioners
appointed in 1646 to bring Charles from Newcastle
named Harrington as one of the King’s attendants.
The King was pleased, and Harrington was appointed
a groom of the bedchamber at Holmby. He followed
faithfully the fortunes of the fallen King, never
saying even to the King himself a word in contradiction
of his own principles of liberty, and finding nothing
in his principles or in his temper that should prevent
him from paying honor to his sovereign, and seeking
to secure for him a happy issue out of his afflictions.
Antony a Wood says that, “His Majesty loved
Harrington’s company, and, finding him to be
an ingenious man, chose rather to converse with him
than with others of his chamber: they had often
discourses concerning government; but when they happened
to talk of a commonwealth the King seemed not to endure
it.”
Harrington used all the influence
he had with those in whose power the King was, to
prevent the urging of avoid-able questions that would
stand in the way of such a treaty as they professed
to seek during the King’s imprisonment at Carisbrooke.
Harrington’s friendly interventions on the King’s
behalf before the Parliament commissioners at New-port
caused him, indeed, to be suspected; and when the
King was removed from Carisbrooke to Hurst Castle,
Harrington was not allowed to remain in his service.
But afterward, when King Charles was being taken to
Windsor, Harrington got leave to bid him farewell
at the door of his carriage. As he was about
to kneel, the King took him by the hand and pulled
him in. For a few days lie was left with the
King, but an oath was required of him that he would
not assist in, or conceal knowledge of any attempt
to procure, the King’s escape. He would
not take the oath; and was this time not only dismissed
from the King’s service but himself imprisoned,
until Ireton obtained his release. Before the
King’s death, Harrington found his way to him
again, and he was among those who were with Charles
I upon the scaffold.
After the King’s execution,
Harrington was for some time secluded in his study.
Monarchy was gone; some form of commonwealth was to
be established; and he set to work upon the writing
of “Oceana,” calmly to show what form
of government, since men were free to choose, to him
seemed best.
He based his work on an opinion he
had formed that the troubles of the time were not
due wholly to the intemperance of faction, the misgovernment
of a king, or the stubbornness of a people, but to
change in the balance of property; and he laid the
foundations of his commonwealth in the opinion that
empire follows the balance of property. Then
he showed the commonwealth of Oceana in action, with
safeguards against future shiftings of that balance,
and with a popular government in which all offices
were filled by men chosen by ballot, who should hold
office for a limited term. Thus there was to be
a constant flow of new blood through the political
system, and the representative was to be kept true
as a reflection of the public mind.
The Commonwealth of Oceana was England.
Harrington called Scotland Marpesia; and Ireland,
Panopea. London he called Emporium; the Thames,
Halcionia; Westminster, Hiera; Westminster Hall, Pantheon.
The Palace of St. James was Alma; Hampton Court, Convallium;
Windsor, Mount Celia. By Hemisna, Harrington
meant the river Trent. Past sovereigns of England
he renamed for Oceana: William the Conqueror became
Turbo; King John, Adoxus; Richard II, Dicotome; Henry
VII, Panurgus; Henry VIII, Coraunus; Elizabeth, Parthenia;
James I, Morpheus. He referred to Hobbes as Leviathan;
and to Francis Bacon, as Verulamius. Oliver Cromwell
he renamed Olphaus Megaletor.
Harrington’s book was seized
while printing, and carried to Whitehall. Harrington
went to Cromwell’s daughter, Lady Claypole, played
with her three-year-old child while waiting for her,
and said to her, when she came and found him with
her little girl upon his lap, “Madam, you have
come in the nick of time, for I was just about to steal
this pretty lady.” “Why should you?”
“Why shouldn’t I, unless you cause your
father to restore a child of mine that lie has stolen?”
It was only, he said, a kind of political romance;
so far from any treason against her father that he
hoped she would let him know it was to be dedicated
to him. So the book was restored; and it was
published in the time of Cromwell’s Commonwealth,
in the year 1656.
This treatise, which had its origin
in the most direct pressure of the problem of government
upon the minds of men continues the course of thought
on which Machiavelli’s “Prince” had
formed one famous station, and Hobbes’s “Leviathan,”
another.
“Oceana,” when published,
was widely read and actively attacked. One opponent
of its doctrines was Dr. Henry Ferne, afterward Bishop
of Chester. Another was Matthew Wren, eldest
son to the Bishop of Ely. He was one of those
who met for scientific research at the house of Dr.
Wilkins, and had, said Harrington, “an excellent
faculty of magnifying a louse and diminishing a commonwealth.”
In 1659, Harrington published an abridgment
of his Oceana as “The Art of Lawgiving,”
in three books. Other pieces followed, in which
he defended or developed his opinions. He again
urged them when Cromwell’s Commonwealth was
in its death-throes. Then he fell back upon argument
at nightly meetings of a Rota Club which met in the
New Palace Yard, Westminster. Milton’s
old pupil, Cyriac Skinner, was one of its members;
and its elections were by ballot, with rotation in
the tenure of all offices. The club was put an
end to at the Restoration, when Harrington retired
to his study and amused himself by putting his “System
of Politics” into the form of “Aphorisms.”
On December 28, 1661, James Harrington,
then fifty years old, was arrested and carried to
the Tower as a traitor. His Aphorisms were on
his desk, and as they also were to be carried off,
he asked only that they might first be stitched together
in their proper order. Why he was arrested, he
was not told. One of his sisters pleaded in vain
to the King. He was falsely accused of complicity
in an imaginary plot, of which nothing could be made
by its investigators. No heed was paid to the
frank denials of a man of the sincerest nature, who
never had concealed his thoughts or actions.
“Why,” he was asked, at his first examination
by Lord Lauderdale, who was one of his kinsmen, “why
did he, as a private man, meddle with politics?
What had a private man to do with government?”
His answer was: “My lord, there is not any
public person, nor any magistrate, that has written
on politics, worth a button. All they that have
been excellent in this way have been private men,
as private men, my lord, as myself. There is Plato,
there is Aristotle, there is Livy, there is Machiavel.
My lord, I can sum up Aristotle’s ‘Politics’
in a very few words: he says, there is the Barbarous
Monarchy such a one where the people have
110 votes in making the laws; he says, there is the
Heroic Monarchy such a one where the people
have their votes in making the laws; and then, he says,
there is Democracy, and affirms that a man cannot
be said to have liberty but in a democracy only.”
Lord Lauderdale here showing impatience, Harrington
added: “I say Aristotle says so. I
have not said so much. And under what prince
was it? Was it not under Alexander, the greatest
prince then in the world? I beseech you, my lord,
did Alexander hang up Aristotle? did he molest him?
Livy, for a commonwealth, is one of the fullest authors;
did not he write under Augustus Cæsar? Did Cæsar
hang up Livy? did he molest him? Machiavel,
what a commonwealthsman was he! but he wrote under
the Medici when they were princes in Florence:
did they hang up Machiavel, or did they molest
him? I have done no otherwise than as the greatest
politicians: the King will do no otherwise than
as the greatest princes.”
That was too much to hope, even in
a dream, of the low-minded Charles II. Harrington
could not obtain even the show of justice in a public
trial. He was kept five months an untried prisoner
in the Tower, only sheltered from daily brutalities
by bribe to the lieutenant. When his habeas corpus
had been moved for, it was at first flatly refused;
and when it had been granted, Harrington was smuggled
away from the Tower between one and two o’clock
in the morning, and carried on board a ship that took
him to closer imprisonment on St. Nicholas Island,
opposite Plymouth. There his health suffered
seriously, and his family obtained his removal to
imprisonment in Plymouth by giving a bond of L5,000
as sureties against his escape. In Plymouth, Harrington
suffered from scurvy, and at last he became insane.
When he had been made a complete wreck
in body and in mind, his gracious Majesty restored
Harrington to his family. He never recovered health,
but still occupied himself much with his pen, writing,
among other things, a serious argument to prove that
they were themselves mad who thought him so.
In those last days of his shattered
life James Harrington married an old friend of the
family, a witty lady, daughter of Sir Marmaduke Dorrell,
of Buckinghamshire. Gout was added to his troubles;
then he was palsied; and he died at Westminster, at
the age of sixty-six, on September 11, 1677.
He was buried in St. Margaret’s Church, by the
grave of Sir Walter Raleigh, on the south side of
the altar.
H. M.