Page:Joseph Story, Commentaries on the Constitution of the United States (1st ed, 1833, vol II).djvu/42

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34
CONSTITUTION OF THE U. STATES.
[BOOK III.
there is no remedy but in arms. Accordingly we find in all the Italian republics, the minority always were driven to arms in despair.[1]

§ 552. Another learned writer has ventured on the bold declaration, that "a single legislature is calculated to unite in it all the pernicious qualities of the different extremes of bad government. It produces general weakness, inactivity, and confusion; and these are intermixed with sudden and violent fits of despotism, injustice and cruelty."[2]

§ 553. Without conceding, that this language exhibits an unexaggerated picture of the results of the legislative power being vested in a single assembly, there is enough in it to satisfy the minds of considerate men, that there is great danger in such an exclusive deposit of it.[3] Some check ought to be provided, to maintain the real balance intended by the constitution; and this check will be most effectually obtained by a co-ordinate branch of equal authority, and different organization, which shall have the same legislative power, and possess an independent negative upon the doings of the other branch. The value of the check will, indeed, in a great measure depend upon this difference of organization. If the term of office, the qualifications, the mode of election, the persons and interests represented by each branch, are exactly the same, the check will be less powerful, and the guard less perfect, than if some, or all of these ingredients differ, so as to bring into play all the various interests and influences, which belong to a free, honest, and enlightened society.


  1. 3 Adams's Defence of American Constitution, 284 to 286.
  2. 1 Wilson's Law Lect. 393 to 405; The Federalist, No. 22.
  3. See Sidney on Government, ch. 3, § 45.