15.2. 2. Origin of the Right of Slavery among the Roman Civilians.
One would never have imagined that slavery should owe its birth to pity, and
that this should have been excited in three different ways.
[1]
The law of nations to prevent prisoners from being put to death has
allowed them to be made slaves. The civil law of the Romans empowered
debtors, who were subject to be ill-used by their creditors, to sell
themselves. And the law of nature requires that children whom a father
in a state of servitude is no longer able to maintain should be reduced
to the same state as the father.
These reasons of the civilians are all false. It is false that
killing in war is lawful, unless in a case of absolute necessity: but
when a man has made another his slave, he cannot be said to have been
under a necessity of taking away his life, since he actually did not
take it away. War gives no other right over prisoners than to disable
them from doing any further harm by securing their persons. All
nations
[2]
concur in detesting the murdering of prisoners in cold blood.
Neither is it true that a freeman can sell himself. Sale implies a
price; now when a person sells himself, his whole substance immediately
devolves to his master; the master, therefore, in that case, gives
nothing, and the slave receives nothing. You will say he has a peculium.
But this peculium goes along with his person. If it is not lawful for a
man to kill himself because he robs his country of his person, for the
same reason he is not allowed to barter his freedom. The freedom of
every citizen constitutes a part of the public liberty, and in a
democratic state is even a part of the sovereignty. To sell one's
freedom
[3]
is so repugnant to all reason as can scarcely be supposed in
any man. If liberty may be rated with respect to the buyer, it is beyond
all price to the seller. The civil law, which authorises a division of
goods among men, cannot be thought to rank among such goods a part of
the men who were to make this division. The same law annuls all
iniquitous contracts; surely then it affords redress in a contract where
the grievance is most enormous.
The third way is birth, which falls with the two former; for if a
man could not sell himself, much less could he sell an unborn infant. If
a prisoner of war is not to be reduced to slavery, much less are his
children.
The lawfulness of putting a malefactor to death arises from this
circumstance: the law by which he is punished was made for his security.
A murderer, for instance, has enjoyed the benefit of the very law which
condemns him; it has been a continual protection to him; he cannot,
therefore, object to it. But it is not so with the slave. The law of
slavery can never be beneficial to him; it is in all cases against him,
without ever being for his advantage; and therefore this law is contrary
to the fundamental principle of all societies.
If it be pretended that it has been beneficial to him, as his master
has provided for his subsistence, slavery, at this rate, should be
limited to those who are incapable of earning their livelihood. But who
will take up with such slaves? As to infants, nature, who has supplied
their mothers with milk, had provided for their sustenance; and the
remainder of their childhood approaches so near the age in which they
are most capable of being of service that he who supports them cannot be
said to give them an equivalent which can entitle him to be their
master.
Nor is slavery less opposed to the civil law than to that of nature.
What civil law can restrain a slave from running away, since he is not a
member of society, and consequently has no interest in any civil
institutions? He can be retained only by a family law, that is, by the
master's authority.
Footnotes
[1]
Justinian, "Institutes," Book i.
[2]
Excepting a few cannibals.
[3]
I mean slavery in a strict sense, as formerly among the Romans,
and at present in our colonies.