| 1. |
| 2. |
| 3. |
| 4. |
| 5. |
| 6. |
| 7. |
| 8. |
| 9. |
| 10. |
| 11. |
| 12. |
| 13. |
| 14. |
| 15. |
| 16. |
| 17. |
| 18. |
| 19. |
| 20. |
| 21. |
| 22. |
| 23. |
| 24. |
| 25. |
| 26. |
| 27. |
| 28. |
| 28.1. |
| 28.2. |
| 28.3. |
| 28.4. |
| 28.5. |
| 28.6. |
| 28.7. |
| 28.8. |
| 28.9. |
| 28.10. |
| 28.11. |
| 28.12. |
| 28.13. |
| 28.14. |
| 28.15. |
| 28.16. |
| 28.17. |
| 28.18. |
| 28.19. |
| 28.20. |
| 28.21. |
| 28.22. |
| 28.23. |
| 28.24. |
| 28.25. |
| 28.26. |
| 28.27. |
| 28.28. |
| 28.29. |
| 28.30. |
| 28.31. |
| 28.32. |
| 28.33. |
| 28.34. |
| 28.35. |
| 28.36. |
| 28.37. |
| 28.38. |
| 28.39. |
| 28.40. |
| 28.41. |
| 28.42. |
| 28.43. |
| 28.44. |
| 28.45. |
| 29. |
| 30. |
| 31. |
| 26. That in a Monarchy the Prince ought to be of easy Access. The Spirit of the Laws | ||
The utility of this maxim will appear from the inconvenience attending the contrary practice. "The Czar Peter I," says the Sieur Perry, [75] "has published a new edict, by which he forbids any of his subjects to offer him a petition till after having presented it to two of his officers. In case of refusal of justice they may present him a third, but upon pain of death if they are in the wrong. After this no one ever presumed to offer a petition to the Czar."
| 26. That in a Monarchy the Prince ought to be of easy Access. The Spirit of the Laws | ||