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    Archives for July 2020

    Defending the American Founding

    July 7, 2020 by Will Morrisey

    Robert R. Reilly: America on Trial: A Defense of the Founding. San Francisco: Ignatius Press, 2020.

     

    America is indeed ‘on trial’ today, arraigned by the newest iteration of the American Left, which denounces the American founding, but especially (in their preferred mode of argumentum ad hominem) the Founders themselves as demeaners of women, enslavers of Africans, destroyers of innocent indigenes. It is the less conspicuous, but in a way more insidious arraignment of America by the American Right that Reilly addresses. He rightly ignores the nasty vaporings of neo-Nazis and dolts generally, defending his country instead against thoughtful ‘conservatives,’ very often fellow Catholics, who misread the philosophic and theological sources of the Founders’ thought, damning their efforts as fundamentally ill-founded, corrupt and misguided from the start. Many American Christians, Catholics and Protestants alike, now withdraw from public life into private enclaves (or more precisely conclaves), refusing to engage the supposedly irredeemable ‘culture of death’ all around them. In this they are less than Pauline, more like desert monks. Such writers as Catholics Rod Dreher, Patrick Deneen, and Michael Hanby, along with the Baptist Russell Moore, claim that the American Founders took the purpose of government to be the liberation of the autonomous individual, despite the plainly stated argument of the Declaration of Independence, which holds the purpose of government to securing the unalienable rights to life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness as defined by the laws of nature and of nature’s God, neither of which suggest ‘autonomy.’ [1]

    With vigorous, manly style, Reilly sets them straight. Although he’s been compared to the traditionalist conservative, Russell Kirk, Reilly argues quite differently. Rather than attempting to minimize the Founders’ appeals to natural right in the name of a quasi-Burkean traditionalism, Reilly affirms the rationalist core of the American founding. That core formed part of a tradition, to be sure, in the sense that divine revelation and philosophic reflection both enabled men to discover it over time. But it isn’t traditional in the sense of being a mere amalgam of long-standing customs, conventions. It can withstand the scrutiny of rational inquiry. America may be on trial, but in his role as her defense attorney Reilly partakes of the old way of arguing cases, reasoning not simply from law and precedent but from principles discovered and elaborated by human reasoning.

    “This book is about the lineage of the idea that made the United States possible. It traces the origin of certain truths without which the American Founding would have been inconceivable.” The Signers of the Declaration of Independence write, “We hold these truths to be self-evident….” Not everyone can so hold them; for example George III, his soul blinded by libido dominandi, might very well not. “The tension between the primacy of reason, as it was theologically, philosophically, and politically elaborated, versus the primacy of will, as it was expressed in these same areas, is the driving engine of this book,” and the distinction matters politically because “primacy of reason means that what is right flows from objective sources in nature and the transcendent, from what is, as Plato proposed. Primacy of will, on the other hand, means that what is right flows from power, that will is a law unto itself. It is a conflict of might makes right versus right makes might.” Whether in the hands of one, few, or many, this distinction spells the difference between justice and injustice.

    But more, since the Declaration is a syllogism, it cannot be conceived by persons who have little or no conception of reason, of thought guided by the principle of non-contradiction. To explain the pre-rational world, Reilly has recourse to the classic account by Numa Denis Fustel de Coulanges, The Ancient City. “In the ancient world,” the world prior to philosophy but without widespread understanding of divine revelation, “men could not conceive of themselves outside” the political order; that is, the ancient cities and empires “provid[ed] man with his only source of meaning,” making no distinction between the laws, conventions, customs of the city and nature. One sees this even today whenever human beings fall into the grip of tribalism. “To enslave or slaughter a member of another tribe fit perfectly within the order of the tribal view” because tribe or city had its own gods, rivals of the gods worshiped by all other tribes and cities. “If a city lost a war, the ancients assumed that its gods had been defeated and subjugated by the greater powers of the victors’ gods”; the losers deserved nothing better than “mass execution or enslavement,” there being no known “moral grounds on which to object to this,” no word for ‘human being’ or ‘mankind.’ In 1793, sometime Vermont senator and Vermont Supreme Court chief justice Nathaniel Chipman reported on how many of the Amerindian tribes would butcher and scalp “old men, women, and children,” not as “secret acts of violence” but as “public transactions, performed, under what is, to them, the law of nations.” Two centuries later, the Hutus killed Tutsis in Rwanda, under the same principle. And less than a decade before the publication of Reilly’s book, a tribal chieftain in Iraq’s Al Anbar province said of an enemy tribe, “There’s no way to let them live. I’m not going to leave any of them alive…. We’re going to destroy them all.”

    In the ancient world, the tribal religion was pantheist and indeed animist. “For the ancients, the divine order, far from transcending the world, was part of it.” If everything is a manifestation of God, then there are no substantial differences between men, animals, and things. This mindset encourages what we now call ‘magical thinking,’ whereby “questions were decided by divination, not reason.” Politically, “nothing is secular; there is no room for the notion of a secular state.” Those who assume humanity has put such thinking aside should consider the ‘Gaia hypothesis’ enunciated by some environmentalists, a divinization of Planet Earth that “will lead ineluctably to a redivinization of the state” in the form of a world government. This government will claim legitimacy on the grounds that the world is a giant organism crying out in need for a ruling brain, a brain that might well sacrifice large swathes of the human population ‘for the sake of the whole.’ That this will be called necessary only registers another belief of the pre-philosophic ‘ancients,’ that “everything is subject to fate, and fate [is] inscrutable,” that there is only the eternal cosmos, no “personal, providential God who values the individual person.” The individual person has no more value, in this mindset, than a single cell in a human body, subject to the impersonal functions of digestion and assimilation.

    “Greek philosophy overthrew the tribal view of man with the idea that the mind can know things, as distinct from merely having opinions about them, because reality exists objectively, independently of what anyone may think about it It is accessible to the intellect and can therefore be truly known as it is. Through reason, man can ascertain the truth of things.” Politically, this means that the source of ‘the good’ for human beings “exists outside and above the political order and is therefore not determined by it,” that human societies differ in kind from ant and ape societies. It may have been Heraclitus who said that “the universe is an intelligible whole,” understandable by human beings, and intelligible “because it is ruled by and is the product of ‘thought’ or wisdom,” by logos—speech or reason. “Therefore, “all human laws are nourished by this original divine law” which orders all things intelligibly, that is, by the principle of non-contradiction.

    Reilly cites Aristotle as the philosopher who best articulated this insight. “Aristotle taught that the essence, or nature, of a thing is what makes it what it is, and why it is not, and cannot be, something else.” Animistic shape-shifting and twenty-first-century ‘self-inventing’ cannot occur because they cannot be real. The purpose of any person or thing defines what is good for him, or it. Aristotle remarks that it isn’t good for an acorn to be prevented from developing into an oak. What is good or natural “is not imposed from the outside, and it cannot be altered.” Whereas “in plants or animals, this involves no self-conscious volition,” only physical laws or instinct, “Man is the only creature that has conscious knowledge of the end for which he was made. In classical Greek thought, a ‘freeman’ is one who is moved to act according to an understanding of the nature of things,” the one who “truly knows what he is doing.” “Since man freely chooses his behavior, he is the only one for whom the natural law is moral.” “Aristotle said man does not make himself to be man” through political or any other activity. “Man does not fabricate his end or telos. Human nature is a given,” a matter of ‘what is,’ of obligation. The end or purpose of man is happiness, which Aristotle defines as “the realization and perfection of virtue.” Philosophy perfects the person because philosophy is the highest and most comprehensive perfection of the distinctively human characteristic, the reason that enables persons to choose, to act freely instead of by physical laws or instinct alone. “Thanks to Greek philosophy… reason came to be the arbiter of right and wrong,” capable of seeing the distinction between what is good and what is bad for human beings and any other natural beings it can study with care. With philosophy, man “can discern natural causality and ascribe to things their true causes, rather than assigning magical properties to everything.” “To do what is unreasonable is wrong”—intellectually mistaken and morally misguided. The Catholic Church (Reilly reminds his fellow Catholics) regarded irrationality to be “the essential character of sin or vice,” doing so because Thomas Aquinas integrated Aristotelian philosophy with the teachings of the Gospel. “Sin is an offense against reason,” the Catechism of the Catholic Church declared in 1849.

    Philosophy also directs the mind to ‘abstraction,’ which is a very good thing if understood to have limits. Abstraction enables human beings to do one of the things God commanded Adam to do: name the creatures in the Garden according to their kinds. In so doing, God was telling Man to understand the general ‘in’ the particular. A non-philosopher does that as readily as a philosopher, but only a philosopher is likely to do it when considering abstractions or generalities themselves—characteristically, as Reilly recalls, when Socrates proposes to define justice by abstracting from all existing cities and describing a “city in speech,” a city that sets a standard by which all existing cities may be justly judged. Ardent citizens regard philosophers with suspicion precisely because philosophers think that there’s a city better than the existing city, that the existing city doesn’t set the standard of conduct. Christians fall under the same suspicion, when they speak of the City of God, preferring it to the City of Man. Without some standard, some set of principles beyond those upheld by the rulers of the British Empire, the argument of the Declaration of Independence would make no sense.

    That argument includes among its major premises the self-evident truth that all men equally share an unalienable right to pursue happiness. As Reilly puts it, “the higher standard that the Founders invoked against the depredations of the British Empire was what is right by nature. It is the objective standard to which they appealed against the arbitrary exercise of British power.” But, Reilly argues, for the classical philosophers true human happiness can be attained only by the very few, by the philosophers who seek and find the knowledge of the highest things, the grandest generalities, that all men desire but most men never really know. The Christian Thomas Aquinas counters that to strive for any end that cannot be secured is futile; “therefore,” Reilly remarks, “the happiness to which all men are naturally ordered as their final perfection cannot consist in the happiness of only a few.” The Founders invoke a principle enunciated by Aristotle, by ‘Athens,’ but satisfied only by Jesus, by ‘Rome,’ which Reilly understands to be the ‘capital’ of Christianity, no longer the capital of the old empire. The road to Rome passes through Athens, but by way of Jerusalem.

    Before following Reilly on the path to Jerusalem, one should pause and consider whether the Thomistic argument against the classical-philosophic understanding of happiness is sound. If all men desire to know, as Aristotle observes, that doesn’t mean that all men strive for the highest, the most general knowledge. Nor does it mean that it makes no sense to embark on a quest that is impossible to complete fully. Omniscience is humanly impossible, but that doesn’t make the quest for knowledge vain. This is true of any desire; hunger for the very finest food on all occasions is practically impossible to satisfy, but that doesn’t mean that the quest to satisfy our hunger for such food is vain. If few human beings can satisfy the human quest for knowledge, and especially for theoretical wisdom, to the extent philosophers can, and if indeed they cannot satisfy their quest for knowledge of ordinary things, and especially for practical wisdom, to the extend that (for example) a great statesman can, this is no reason not to try, no reason to consider the quest futile. Everyone can learn a few things, else no one would survive for long.

    In Jerusalem one finds the principle of transcendent monotheism. Defeated, and indeed exiled from Jerusalem itself, Israelites “did not consider their God defeated,” inasmuch as “there was no other god to defeat him.” “If the Hebrews were overcome by the Babylonians and taken as their captives, it was not because their God had failed them, but because they had failed their God,” who is “wholly transcendent, omniscient, omnipotent.” Such a god doesn’t ‘infuse’ the laws of His people into His people; he justly imposes them ‘from above,’ in the knowledge of what is good for them according to their character, which is innate. Because He is one, not many; because he is above and beyond, not within and bounded; because He is a person, not a principle; he can both command His people and dialogue with them, enter into a covenant with some or all of His rational creatures. His creatures are rational because He is rational and He has created one kind among them in His “image.” “The Genesis revelation that ‘God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him’ (1:27) formed the basis of Western civilization,” “the fount from which sprang the sanctity of the individual person as invested with the divine image in his reason, free will, and immortality.” Moreover, even if only one kind among the created things is a person, created in the divine image, all of God’s creation is good: “Matter is good”; “because it was made by God, creation is stable and reliable,” unthreatened “by some evil demiurge who is equal to him and with whom he is constant struggle for supremacy,” as in Manicheanism. “In Israel’s revelation of creation, God’s handiwork is so well made that man can come to know the Creator by studying his works,” as the Jewish Christian Paul argues. Evil comes not from God, nor from matter, but “from man’s free will.” ‘History’ comes about not by fate, by necessity, but by the interplay between a freely-willing God and his freely-willing creatures. In ruling, God provides; He does not simply determine. Human beings are not God’s wind-up toys. If they were, they could not have been made in God’s image.

    When Man does sin against his Creator, what can he do to pay his debt? Nothing: the penalty of sin is death. By their own efforts human beings cannot long avoid dying. “What would this created, finite being have to offer the infinite Being, whom he had offended?” Happily for him, the God he has offended is indeed providential, extending His grace to the creature He created in His image. God does not want to destroy the creature who made the wrong choice by means of the capacity for choice, for free will, which his Creator bestowed upon him. God promises Man a Messiah. In being told that by God, Man now sees the course of events not as cyclical but as linear. The course of events has a purpose—not to be sure, thanks to some intrinsic ‘law of history,’ some immanent force driving them to an inevitable ‘end,’ but rather as a providential intention formulated in response to man’s freely-chosen offense.

    What has any of this have to do with the American founding? “God’s transcendence also had a dramatic effect on the political character of man’s rule, which could no longer properly be theocratic.” Whether under a republican or a monarchic regime, Israelite government consisted of rulers who led the people in battle and judged cases in court, but left the sacred rites of the Israelite cultus to the priests, who in turn left ruling to the rulers. “When King Saul overstepped these boundaries and presumed to perform the sacred rites, the prophet Samuel upbraided him.” This “Judaic desacralization of the ruler, in contradistinction to the character of political rule surrounding the Hebrews, was an essential step in establishing the integrity of the secular sphere and in introducing the distinction between the religious and the civic, without which constitutional rule could not eventually develop.”

    ‘Rome’ or Christianity consists of “the nuptials of Jerusalem and Athens.” As in any good marriage, those united remain distinct within the terms of the union. The Gospel of John begins with the beginning: “In the beginning was the Logos, and the Logos was with God, and the Loos was God. He was in the beginning with God; all things were made through him.” Logos means speech, ‘word,’ and reason. Thus “Revelation confirmed Heraclitus’ intuition that logos makes the universe comprehensible because all things were made by and through Logos.” Unlike Heraclitean logos, however, this is Logos with a capital ‘L,’ a person not “an intelligible principle or a cosmic force,” a ‘who’ not an ‘it.’ “The face of Logos made visible is the transforming experience of a Hellenized Christianity or of a Christianized Hellenism,” which “moved the classical world from an impersonal Logos,” from the pure-thought-thinking-itself ‘god’ of the philosophers to the Creator-God. “The Christian view was thus comprehensive: it explained man’s origins in God’s creation, the existence of evil from Original sin, and the final triumph of salvation in Christ over evil and death.” Man doesn’t feel fully at home on earth, but he now has “the reassurance that he was meant for elsewhere,” somewhere “outside of history in personal union with a transcendent, loving God, something man could not dare to have hoped for, much less imagined, until God revealed himself in Christ as desiring nothing more than to share his inner life with his creatures, to impart to them his divinity.” In sum, “revelation involves Reason” as the supreme Person Who reasons and acts in accordance with His Reason, which is His ‘nature,’ the core of His being, His essence. God as the sender of Man’s Messiah, in the form of Man, offers all men the assurance that they can achieve the highest knowledge, the fullness of wisdom that many seek but none can find without that Messiah, the Son who alone has the power to unite them with their Father. No individual human being, tribe, no race, no nation is excluded from this assurance because all men are created equal, created in God’s Image. “Christianity contains an invitation to reason because God’s rationality guarantees reason’s integrity”; “if God is Logos, reason and revelation are not at an impasse.” This is the Christian solution to the problem of happiness raised by the classical philosophers.

    Both the consonance of faith and reason and the distinction between them may be seen in a simple illustration. If I say to you, ‘I am now holding in my closed hand a round object,’ you may believe me or disbelieve me; if you disbelieve me, you may deny my claim or you may simply suspend your belief until I offer evidence of it. If I say, ‘I am now holding in my closed hand a square object,’ the same choices apply. But if I say to you, ‘I am now holding in my closed hand an object that is a round square,’ you cannot have faith in my claim because it is self-contradictory, unreasonable, indeed inconceivable. You must assume that I am lying, delusional, or ignorant of the meaning of the words I am speaking. No one can have faith in any statement that is irrational, although one might have faith in an irrational statement he does not see to be irrational, having mistakenly interpreted that statement in rational terms. It is of course noteworthy that any rational claim very much depends for its validity upon the truth of its premises. I may ‘posit’ atheism as a premise and spin out a set of claims that follow logically from that premise, but the truth or fundamental rationality of my argument will depend on whether there really is no God. To affirm that there is a Creator-God and moreover that I shall obey Him are two choices, both acts of faith within the limits of reason in that they are not affirmations of self-contradictory premises. Whether those premises are themselves validated by the argument from design, the ontological proof, or other products of ‘unassisted’ human reason, or whether they are rather brought to me by the Holy Spirit, who is rational but not part of the human nature which is but an image of Him, is a separate issue, one beyond the ambitions of Reilly to address because he doesn’t need to address it in order to defend the American founding by tracing its philosophic and theological antecedents.

    Christianity’s “validation and elevation of the profoundest insights of Greek philosophy also confirmed the limits of the political, at which Socrates and Aristotle had hinted.” “Each person could participate in the divine order of salvation as an individual, not through his participation as a citizen of his state or the mediation of a semidivine ruler, but through union with Christ,” whose “identity as a personal Savior was totally incompatible with the ancient cosmological view of the universe and the political legitimacy it bestowed on the ancient city or empire.” Not surprisingly, “Just as Socrates was killed for his insistence on his citizenship in the city in speech, so too were the early Christians martyred for insisting on the primacy of their citizenship in the heavenly city.” In this sense, with Christianity “the primacy of the political is over,” and not only for philosophers. “Man is no longer subsumed by the polis; rather the polis exists to serve man.” In another sense, politics has been reoriented from the regimes of human beings to the regime of God. In both senses, God is not Caesar. This does not denigrate Caesar. It puts him in his rightful place. “The secular is not antithetical to Christianity; it is a product of it. Christianity created the secular. It insists on it,” forming “the ultimate basis for the constitutional principle of the separation of ecclesiastical and secular authority.” Human beings cannot and should not attempt to install God’s regime on earth any more than “Socrates expected the Athenians to instantiate his ‘city in speech’ on the Greek peninsula.” In teaching the Socratic lesson to humanity generally, not only to potential philosophers, “Christianity saved politics from itself, or rather from trying to be something other than itself” by enabling constitutionalism and condemning “man’s self-deification.” 

    When man understands himself as Man, made in the image of God but not himself a god, “Man’s self-rule now becomes conceivable, inimitably tied to his ability to discern a rational moral order in creation,” accountable to his Creator. Human beings are created equal before their Creator. The possibility of a good Samaritan—a good person who serves God but is not a member of God’s chosen people—can now be thought, and not only by philosophers but by the ordinary people Jesus addresses. “A tribal religion with a universal truth, Judaism now becomes transformed in Jesus to a universal religion without tribes.” God’s true chosen people henceforth are those who obey the commands of the Father, thus becoming brothers and sisters of His Son—not a slave but a son, and if a son then an heir, as Paul puts it in his letter to the Galatians (4:6-7). “The Our Father was a revolutionary prayer when Christ said it, and it remains so today,” and it underwrites the revolution effected by the American Founders, even as they invoked the blessings of God’s providence as they declared their choice to attempt it. “Without Christianity, slavery most likely would have remained the norm of mankind”; without Christianity (as Tocqueville saw) there would most likely be no democracy in America, or anywhere else.

    As noted, there would also be no constitutionalism as we know it, not only because God enters into a covenantal relationship with His people but because Christianity distinguishes two parallel sovereignties, respected in the Roman Empire after Emperor Constantine’s conversion. Because Roman imperial subjects enjoyed “dual citizenship under both sovereigns,” those sovereigns needed to negotiate limits on one another. “The fundamentals essential to constitutional order grew out of this dual perspective.” Both sovereigns owned property, thus possessing the means to defend themselves against one another and against foreign attack, as Tocqueville emphasizes in The Old Regime and the Revolution. Both sovereigns ruled by what one of Charlemagne’s advisers called “the common agreement and consent of the subjects.” The balance of these powers was at times deranged, especially after the collapse of the Roman Empire, when monarchs scrambled for power against one another, running over Church property in the struggle. (In 1067, for example, William the Conqueror “asserted royal power over the making of canon law and any ecclesiastical disciplinary actions concerning his barons and officials.”) The Church struck back in the person of Pope Gregory VII, who “forcefully rearticulated the two-swords teaching in both word and deed,” desacralizing feudal princes by divesting them of the ecclesiastical authority they had usurped.

    In England, Bishop Anselm of Canterbury pushed King Henry I into a compromise, the Concordat of London, in 1107, whereby the king gave up his right to invest bishops and abbots but also “made the bishop a baron, with all the attendant duties to the king.” The conflicts between Henry II and Thomas à Becket, followed by King John’s conflict with Pope Innocent III, ended in the Magna Carta, co-written by Stephen Langton, the pope’s candidate for archbishop of Canterbury. The Magna Carta established Church freedom from rule by the monarch and the feudal barons along with the familiar rights of due process, trial by jury, and taxation by the consent of those taxed. When Magna Carta “received its definitive form” in 1225, Langton, now the archbishop, “pronounced that violators of the charter of any rank would automatically be excommunicated.” 

    It was the great English common lawyer Sir Edward Coke who brought the principles of Magna Carta to Virginia in the form of its first charter, drafted in 1606; similar language was integrated into the charters of six other colonies by the middle of the century, and in the decades before American independence Congregationalist minister and Yale rector Elisha Williams argued on the basis of its principles, which he understood to be not merely the legal rights of Englishmen but “the inherent natural rights of Englishmen,” secured and confirmed by Parliament “but not derived from nor dependent on their will.” The Massachusetts patriot Samuel Adams made a similar argument, four years before the Declaration of Independence.  After independence, five states introduced Magna Carta language and principles into their constitutions. 

    More generally, Catholic Christianity justified the right not only for the Church to excommunicate but for the people to overthrow a ruler or rulers who violated the contract, formal or implied, between ruler(s) and subjects. Manegold of Lautenbach, later the bishop of Chartres, insisted that “King is not a name of nature but a title of office,” a title and an office rightly revoked “as soon as he begins to act the tyrant,” failing to “govern and rule [the people] according to the principle of righteous government.” Similarly, John of Salisbury’s Politicratus, published in 1159, assigns to the king the role of ruling equitably—that is, judging cases “rationally” by “seek[ing] to apply like rules of right and wrong to like cases, being impartially disposed toward all persons, and allotting to each that which belongs to him.” John “defended tyrannicide against any prince who usurps the law.” A bishop of Grubbio, Peter Damian, wrote, “All political authority derives from God, but resides essentially in the people”; Reilly calls this “the foundation of popular sovereignty” as later instantiated in the American founding. 

    Even ecclesiastical or canon law contributed to constitutional thinking in the secular orders, as it too was “based on Christian presuppositions of both natural and divine law” derived from the idea of the imago Dei. In his A Concordance of Discordant Canons—usually called simply the Decretum—Gratian sorted out the many existing canon laws by means of Thomas’s Aristotelian dialectic; “reason is the basis of the law,” that is, not only the secular law but the law of the Church. Divine law, from Scripture, and natural law, from reason as embedded in conscience, did not contradict one another, “as they ultimately came from the same source.” Human law should be aligned with divine and natural law as closely as the circumstances of a given people allow, in accordance with the procedures of both deductive and practical or prudential reasoning. Custom too is “subject to natural law,” having “no standing if it did not conform to reason and conscience.” As time went on and cases under the canon law accumulated, the decretists further harmonized human law with the two higher laws. Although partly derived from Justinian’s code, which had been rediscovered late in the eleventh century, canon law was never subject to imperial approval when it came to establishing new church associations. These “were constituted by the voluntary consent of their members,” Reilly emphasizes, and were likely the first entities to be called “corporations,” entities legally “independent from emperors, kings, and feudal lords.” “Medieval society became honeycombed with many such voluntary, self-governing associations,” a development unique to Christendom. Even the pope’s authority over the church “was to be exercised only within the law that established it—including divine and natural law.”

    Perhaps the most important principle taken directly from the Code of Justinian was Quod omnes tangit ab omnibus approbari— What touches all must be approved by all. Although its application under the Code was quite limited, for the canonists it came “to underpin the practice of self-government within religious orders, dioceses, abbeys, and the entire Church, especially as it applied to taxation and legislation.” It was “gradually elevated to the status of a constitutional principle” for secular governments, cited by John Dickinson in his The Letters of a Pennsylvania Farmer, an influential tract in the years prior to the Declaration of Independence. The principle animates government by consent, and specifically the right to vote, a right exercised in the selection of the pope by the cardinals. Medieval family law, too, also “developed to reflect the requirement of consent, especially on the mutual consent of both spouses for the validity of a marriage”—a theme in more than one Shakespearean comedy. As for political representation in secular government, it too came out of Church canon law, beginning in the twelfth century. It was Thomas’s order of priests, the Dominicans, who emphasized the principle of consent and brought it with them to England when they arrived in 1221. From the Catholic Church in England this principle circulated into the secular realm. Thomas himself, following Aristotle, advocated a mixed-regime with a strong monarchic branch and, sure enough, by 1295 the Model Parliament was formed under King Edward I. Parliaments became common on the European continent by the beginning of the fourteenth century. 

    So did a degree of religious toleration. Because, as Pope Innocent IV wrote, “by nature all men are free,” and infidels are men, they may not be deprived of their property, as “these things were made not only for the faithful but every rational creature”—a teaching, it might be added, consistent with the Noachide commandments. University of Paris chancellor Jean Gerson “reaffirm[ed] the case that infidels enjoyed certain rights by natural law.” King Louis X of France (1289-1316) concurred, adding that the term “Franks” means “free men,” and therefore France has a particular interest in counteracting servitude within its borders. “France signifies freedom,” Louis proclaimed; serfdom should be abolished.

    It is true that the Christian-Catholic marriage of reason and revelation was attacked from within the Church early, as seen in Tertullian’s well-known rhetorical question, “What has Athens to do with Jerusalem?” The more portentous assault came centuries later in the doctrine of nominalism, whose “corrosive effects fatally fractured medieval Christendom, though the formal break within the Church did not come until Luther in the sixteenth century.” Nominalists contend that “natures or essences do not exist in reality but are only ‘names’ or contrivances inhabiting the mind, with no correlation to what exists outside of it.” Adam was merely making things up as he went along. “Nominalism undermined the metaphysical and epistemological foundations of medieval constitutionalism and the very concept of law as based on natural law and reason and replaced it with will (voluntas).” Whereas for Aristotle and Aquinas, “reality exists in individual things, but those individual things are defined by their natures or essences,” and while “reason abstracts the idea of human nature from existing human persons,” human nature “is actually—in the exact metaphysical sense—present in individual men,” the nominalist William of Ockham’s via moderna denies “any intrinsic connection between words and reality, denies any human sharing of God’s knowledge via the act of naming, and claims that ideas are ‘subjective,’ existing only in our minds.” According to nominalists, there are no species by nature; “the creation of each dog is… an individual act of God’s will unrelated to any other act of his will”; and as for human ‘knowing,’ “nothing in reality seems intelligible in itself” but is rather “given its intelligibility by man’s mind.” “Naming becomes an exercise of the will.”

    “Nominalism ineluctably leads to voluntarism, the view that God’s will is the first and only cause of things”; God’s will “is unbound by anything, including reason.” There are no real laws of nature. If Aquinas argues that “God is Logos or Reason itself” and His will “follows upon intellect,” Ockham “flips the relationship between intellect and will”: “God’s will becomes primary, and his intellect subordinate to it as a mere instrument.” Thus Ockham does for Christianity what Mohammed al-Ghazali did for Islam. As al-Ghazali puts it “Fire does not burn cotton; God does.” Morally this means that “intrinsically, acts are neither good nor bad, except insofar as god makes them so. God does not command certain behavior because it is good; it is good because he commands it.” When God pronounced his Creation good at the end of creation week, he meant that Creation had ‘turned out’ in accordance with his will, his commands, not that it conformed to his rational plan. With this, “classical natural law was displaced by political theology drawn from Scripture.”

    Nominalism produced two main lines of thought, one atheistic and the other theistic. Niccolò Machiavelli saw that “if nature no longer defines what is good for man (and there is no certain God to define it either), then man can.” “Man’s will fills the vacuum left by nature; he can define his own end.” Martin Luther adopts a God-centered nominalism, believing that “man’s actions are irrelevant to this salvation because there is no necessary connection between moral goodness and redemption.” Only faith, not nature, provides moral guidance, since “once one is rid of essences, there is not an ‘ought’ in sight” and “moral truth is relocated to the will”—very often the will of a human ruler or set of rulers.

    In the Machiavellian way, “Reason is no longer a legislator. Law becomes law not because it is a work of reason but because it is the will of the stronger.” If reason and nature no longer provide any guide, man is entitled (in the phrase coined by Machiavelli’s follower, Francis Bacon) “to conquer nature.” “The modern project of making man autonomous, or even remaking him, by gaining power over the world begins here.” This clearly opposes both the American Founders’ standard, the laws of Nature and of nature’s God, and their constitutionalism, which secures the unalienable rights ordained by those laws. Machiavelli’s lo stato—the modern, centralized state that replaces the ancient polis, the ancient empire, and the feudal societies—has no theoretical limits, only those imposed by chance and necessity, both manipulable by men of vulpine cleverness and leonine will.

    Luther’s way is God-centered, and therefore has a substantial moral content beyond the human will, namely, divine revelation. Nonetheless, the “spiritual upheaval” induced by his Christian nominalism and voluntarism “led to political upheaval” and then to the statism intended to quell such upheaval. Castigating Aquinas (whom he may not have read) because he was “responsible for the reign of Aristotle”—whom he called a “muddy-minded pagan”—”the destroyer of godly doctrine.” Luther reduced natural law to conscience. To put it in terms of classical philosophy (which of course Luther would never do), Luther wants noēsis or the apprehension of the truth to occur without any reasoning. In Luther’s words, “God is He for Whose will no cause or ground may be laid down as its rule and standard…. What God wills is not right because He ought, or was bound, so to will; on the contrary, what takes place must be right, because He so wills it.” God’s reasons being inscrutable, inaccessible to human reason and known only by faith in His revealed Word, there is no point to human reasoning, especially since the human nature which includes the capacity to reason has been thoroughly corrupted by sin. “The child sins in his mother’s womb,” and he doesn’t improve thereafter; “sin is his nature; he cannot help committing it.” Politically, this means that “absent strong government, ‘men would devour one another.'” This is an unusual teaching. If government is exercised by men, why is it not equally corrupt and, given its superior power, an even worse devourer? 

    “Luther’s extraordinary polemics against reason must be understood in light of his intention to discredit it so thoroughly that no alternative but faith remained. Luther did not abandon the use of practical reason in the secular sphere but left secular reason out of the sacred sphere.” To philosophize about Scripture is akin to practicing witchcraft, and Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics, esteemed by Aquinas, is especially evil, given its commendation of moral strengthening through habituation or good works. In translating Romans 3:28 to read “man becomes justified by faith alone,” Luther adds the word “alone.” The world is no longer a field in which man prepares himself for the next world. And indeed faith itself involves no free choice, only divine predestination. “This new doctrine was in contravention of the long-standing Church teaching that the reception of the gift of faith was indeed an intrinsically free and rational act of the will in cooperation with grace,” inasmuch as “grace can be refused.” Not so: God’s grace acts like the lightning with which He knocked Saul off his horse in preparation for transforming him into Paul. “Here is a thunderbolt,” Luther wrote, “by which free choice is completely prostrated and shattered.” Human beings lack ‘agency’; they are agents of God, Who acts through them. If so, then evil thoughts, sentiments, and actions are, as Luther writes, “incomprehensible”—”secrets of his Majesty,” “inaccessible to human reason” but nonetheless just because, as Reilly summarizes, “will, not reason, is the source of right.”

    Politically, Lutheranism “spelled the end of Christendom, which fell apart from the centrifugal forces Lutheranism unleashed.” Canonical law went up in smoke—quite literally, as Luther burned a copy of it in December 1520. With that symbolic act, “up in flames went the ecclesiastical corporation that had hemmed in secular authority” because “the Church as a corporation disappeared,” and the metaphor of the ‘two swords’ no longer governed. “It was the institutional structures of the Church that had given teeth to its oversight of temporal power. The demolition of these structures left it toothless. A single sovereignty could now monopolize man,” and the “Lutheran churches became state churches.” As Luther’s ally Philip Melanchthon put it, “the prince is God’s chief bishop (summum episcopus) in the church.” Theocracy took on either of the two regimes described by Machiavelli: monarchy or republicanism, James I or Oliver Cromwell. Either way, there was no right to revolution, inasmuch as God ordains the regime you have, although a people may resist passively if commanded “to do something against the will of God.” In this, the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King was indeed a good ‘Lutheran.’

    It is easy to see how this dispensation leaves Christian states vulnerable to Machiavellian atheism. “If God is a positivist, so too is the ruler in his name.” Further, “once the state reabsorbs religion and no longer has a moral reference point beyond itself”—beyond Scripture as interpreted by the State’s established church—”it becomes pure power.” As a Christian, Luther himself would have decried such a result, and he tried to prevent it by substituting his “two kingdoms” doctrine for the “two swords” doctrine. He wrote, “Where the temporal authority presumes to prescribe laws for the soul, it encroaches upon God’s government and only misleads souls and destroys them.” Indeed so, “but the two-kingdoms teaching was not an effective substitution for the two-swords teaching” because “it existed only as an idea,” with “no institutional structure to replace the one [Luther] had destroyed.” As a founder, Luther understood what a regime is in terms of its politeuma, its rulers (God-ordained princes), in terms of its purposes (salvation effected by God, peace effected by princes), and in terms of its Bios ti, its way of life (as laid down in Scripture) but not in terms of its politeia, its ruling institutions. He left them to the ‘secular’ rulers. “It is not hard to see the great attraction of this teaching to German princes,” Reilly comments, drily. [2] “Luther inadvertently opened the door to the politicization of religion. Machiavelli walked through that door” in the persons of such monarchs as the Tudors in England, Louis XIV in France, Frederick the Great in Luther’s Prussia. This was surely an unintended consequence. “Ockham and Luther were not aiming at absolutism; if anything, they were trying to counter what they saw as absolutism in the Church.” But “they did not seem to consider that their undermining of the Church’s authority and the abandonment of natural law would ultimately clear the path to political absolutism,” opening politics “not only to Luther’s Christian prince but to Machiavelli’s amoral one.”

    The American Founders were neither Catholics nor Lutherans, for the most part. How then did they establish “a natural law foundation for the American republic”? Reilly suggests that Calvinism and Anglicanism both inclined to unify the lex naturae and the lex spiritualis, even if sometimes too closely. Nonetheless, the theoretical distinction lent itself to church disestablishment with the assertion of religious freedom as a natural as well as a civil right. Both Calvinism and Anglicanism esteem reason, even as they (like Catholicism) acknowledge the Christian doctrine of original sin. “Luther did not foresee the consequences of his teaching of sola fide in a world sine fide. He could only envisage Christian princes.” Calvinists and Anglicans were well aware of un-Christian princes, as indeed were the Catholics and Anabaptists who had confronted the Roman Empire. Because he writes primarily for Catholics, Reilly relegates his discussion of Calvinism to a footnote, but he provides a good discussion of the greatest Anglican writer, Richard Hooker.

    To restore a Protestant understanding of popular sovereignty, social contract, and consent, all of them erased by Luther’s voluntarist conception of God, Hooker “first had to reaffirm a God in whom intellect preceded will in the notion of the Divine Logos.” This enabled him to “reconnect with medieval natural law and the doctrine of free will,” “return[ing] to things their essences.” In this he opposed “the extremes of sixteenth-century English Puritanism” (rather as his younger contemporary, William Shakespeare, would do), “endeavor[ing] to save the Reformation from itself by restoring essential aspects of pre-Reformation thought.” He did so by arguing that reason is necessary because only it can settle disputes, theological or secular. “Reason is man’s participation in the Divine Logos.” Law’s essence is reason, not will; “God is a teleologist,” endowing His creatures with purposes inherent in their natures; rulers must rule reasonably, in accordance with limitations placed upon them by constitutions to which their subjects have lent their consent. Consent is natural because human beings are naturally social; accordingly, there is a “voluntary compact at the foundation of government” and rulers rule on a foundation of popular sovereignty, itself under the laws of nature ordained by God. [3] Reilly finds the influence of Hooker’s restoration-Reformation in the political thought of John Locke, Algernon Sidney, and the American statesman James Wilson.

    Between Hooker and the American Founders, however, stands the great Machiavellian defender of princely absolutism, Thomas Hobbes. His secular absolutism should never be confused with the divine-right absolutism advanced by Luther, although they share common ground in nominalism. Reilly cites his teacher, Father James Schall, who writes that “the divine will, presupposed to nothing but itself, presupposed to no divine reason in Ockham…. becomes the political will in Hobbes, again a will presupposed to nothing but itself.” Hobbes saw that divine-right absolutism led to uncompromising civil and international war on the basis of rival claims concerning Scripture—Catholic against Protestant, Protestant sect against Protestant sect. He hoped that ‘secularizing’ absolutism would end such conflicts, at least within the secular nation-states if not among them. If “Hooker opposed Puritan extremism on the basis of traditional Christianity and classical philosophy,” Hobbes “opposed Puritanism on the basis of his denial of both.” Unlike Hooker, Hobbes happily accepted the Lutheran claim that human nature is no good, that nature itself is “only an enemy to be overcome and mastered.” (Indeed, the young Hobbes had conversed with Francis Bacon.) 

    Hobbes opposes Hooker at every turn. To Hooker’s affirmation of laws of nature instantiating the rights to life and liberty, Hobbes “derive[s] the law of nature from self-preservation, as he found it imperiled in the state of nature.” Hooker regarded civil law as “legitimate only insofar as it reflects natural law,” but Hobbes regards civil law as natural law, “constitut[ing] its own authority,” with “nothing higher than it.” Indeed, insofar as civil bespeaks man’s conquest of the natural state of things, “it is completely conventional,” not really natural at all. For Hobbes, unlike Hooker, there is “no rational common good” except for “the necessity of self-preservation,” and to secure that necessity not merely governments but absolute governments must be instituted among men. Man is not social, not a-social, but anti-social; hence men live in a constant state of war with one another, unless an absolute monarch masters their nature. “For both Aristotle and the Scholastics,” and Hooker, “the summum bonum is happiness. For Hobbes, it was not, because there is no longer any way to tell what happiness is, other than the absence of strife,” and assertions about what constitutes happiness in fact only contribute to human strife. There is no telos, no purpose, in nature, only a summum malum, namely, violent death, the fear of which supports the rule of the monarch and indeed the monarch’s centralized State, all-powerful “Leviathan”—”that Mortal God,” as Hobbes famously describes it. 

    Consistent with this, Hobbes rejects both the two-swords doctrine and the two-kingdoms doctrine. The claim that there is temporal government and spiritual government, he writes, depends upon “two words brought into the world to make men see double and mistake their lawful sovereign,” Leviathan. Leviathan’s word, and Leviathan’s sword, are the only ones Hobbesian man recognizes as real. “In fact,” Reilly writes, according to Hobbes “the power of the sword constitutes the truth and, therefore, also the law”: “authority, not truth” in the sense of truth ‘above’ the sovereign will, “decides the law.” In the striking frontispiece illustration of Leviathan in Hobbes’s Leviathan, the giant figure of the monarch consists of an amalgamation of human atoms, gazing up at the head of the monarch who wields the symbols of temporal and spiritual authority. In that illustration “we see only people’s backs,” not their faces: “they possess no individuality” as persons, only as bodies organized as subjects of their ruler. In this way “Hobbes’s radical moral skepticism,” his denial of any moral authority independent of the human sovereign’s will, “serves, and ineluctably eventuates in, tyranny,” although of course in his own terms Hobbes calls tyranny nothing more than “monarchy misliked.” “Good and evil,” Hobbes writes, “are names that signify our appetites and aversions; which in different tempers, customs, and doctrines of men, are different”; there is no such thing as a shared “distinction of good and evil.” Even individual men’s desires change constantly throughout life in a constant grasping for power after power, “which ceaseth only in death.” Such mutable beings need a strong monarch to rule them, to impose names on recalcitrant men, lest they devour one another, as nominalist Luther says they must do. Hobbes finds no ground for original sin, and indeed despises the doctrine as one that blames men merely for being men; he nonetheless finds ample ground for human willfulness, and moves to bridle it in accordance with the supreme effectual will—the human absolute sovereign, not the biblical God. 

    Even as “Saint Paul spoke of ‘one body and one Spirit” in Ephesians 4:4, “Leviathan’s one body seems a grotesque parody or profane substitute for the Mystical Body of Christ that Paul described,” subjugating “all things to himself and incorporat[ing] all the bodies of his subjects, not to glorify them,” as in the Church, “but to conform them to, and glorify, the ‘Mortal God'”. For Hobbes, “divine will and material causality are the same thing,” as man, “like everything else in the universe, [is] amoral matter in motion.” Therefore, political science is “a kind of physics” in which material and efficient causes prevail, formal and especially teleological causes being imaginary. Hobbes, following Bacon and Machiavelli, aims at undoing “the achievements of Jerusalem, Athens, and Rome,” “subvert[ing] Greek philosophy by erasing the distinction between nature and convention,” “materializing the transcendent” God of Judaism, and “sabotage[ing] the Christian distinction between the sacred and the secular with a redeification of the state”—a “redeification,” however, that denies spirituality and asserts materialism.

    Hobbes book, Leviathan, “pleased almost no one.” Against it, Robert Filmer and James I reasserted the divine right of kings; Robert Cardinal Bellarmine and Francisco Suárez upheld Catholic natural law and natural right; Algernon Sidney carried on Hooker’s legacy.

    For Filmer, “kingship is the immediate and unmediated result of the Creator’s will. It is miraculous. No acts of rational free will or consent by the members of the political community are required for its institution or justification.” On the contrary, consent to monarchic rule is the subjects’ obligation. The monarch is free “from constitutional limitations and the natural law’s rational constraints.” This was music to the ears of James I, who “in a way” returned to “the era of sacred kingship” sans any suggestion of papal authority, since James was a Puritan. Throughout modern Europe, “as churches became national”—that is, statist—”kings became absolute.” Reilly correctly notices that Catholic monarchs “were only too happy to join in.” 

    The Filmer-James assertion of monarchic divine right to rule found its first important philosophic opponents in the Jesuits Bellarmine and Suárez, and the two pairs exchanged polemics. In England itself, James’s vigorous defense of his alleged prerogatives provoked Parliamentary indignation, “sowing the seeds of the English Civil War.” As for Filmer, he saw that “Scripture citations could be quoted by both sides of the argument ad infinitum without a decisive outcome,” and so “moved the argument onto the grounds of natural right.” But this natural right derived not from the consent of the governed but from the supposed absolute right of fathers to rule their children, a right Filmer then extended to kings, conceived as the ‘fathers’ of their people. Bellarmine countered that (in his words) “the authority of the king descends, not immediately from God nor by divine right, but only from the law of nations”—that is, by common consent. The people’s consent, in turn, “was founded upon the principle of equality,” as “there is no reason why amongst equals”—members of the same species—”one should rule rather than another.” No king is so far superior to his fellow human beings as to rightly claim absolute authority over them. “In a commonwealth all men are born naturally free and equal.” Following Aristotle’s understanding of the family, Bellarmine writes, “the servant is ruled for the benefit of the master; the citizen for his own benefit. A political head seeks not his own but the people’s good; otherwise, he is a tyrant.” Aristotle would not describe fatherly rule as political, reserving that form of rule to the relation of husband and wife, but he does consider fatherly rule as serving the good of the children, not the good of the father, and therefore not “absolute.” For Bellarmine as for Aristotle, revolution against tyrants is rightful. Any regime is “valid so long as [it] serve[s] the common good.” Suárez concurred, point for point, as did the vast majority of Catholic theologians who wrote on politics from the thirteenth to the nineteenth century. Indeed, the English Jesuit John Floyd condemned slavery on the basis of natural rights in 1620, rights slaves “may defend by force against even their owne Maisters.” 

    Does this make the American Founders closet Catholics? Surely not, as Reilly is quick to say. True, the Maryland Catholic Charles Carroll, educated by French Jesuits, “would have been thoroughly familiar with Bellarmine and Suárez,” but Thomas Jefferson was no stranger to their writings, having read Filmer’s attacks on them in his book, Patriarchia. Reilly points instead to “the common world of discourse” the Founders shared with the Catholic critics of nominalism, Hobbesianism, and divine right. “It was a common patrimony that Bellarmine and Suárez helped to restore for everyone’s benefit—because its source was in natural law, accessible to all by right reason.” This is what Jefferson meant when he wrote that the Declaration of Independence reflected “the harmonizing sentiments of the day,” sentiments registered by Aristotle, Cicero, Locke, and Sidney—who explicitly praises the two Jesuits. As Reilly demonstrates, all “Catholic and Protestant opponents to absolutism called upon the same constitutional traditions to defend representative government.” Contra latter-day critics such as Deneen and Dreher, “the fundamental principles of constitutional rule are not somehow fatally dependent on Enlightenment notions that are alien to them,” since those principles “preceded the Enlightenment.” 

    It is hard to deny that the predominant influence on Jefferson as he wrote the draft of the Declaration of Independence was John Locke. Locke is central to the Deneen-Dreher argument, and they classify him as a proto-Enlightenment Hobbesian, albeit one who leans toward republican regimes, away from monarchy—a kinder, gentler Hobbes, as it were. In this, Deneen and Dreher follow the interpretation of Locke advanced by Leo Strauss, who understands Locke as a covert Hobbesian. Was Locke a Hobbesian nominalist who endorsed a paradoxically material form of voluntarism? Or was he a natural-law man? 

    “What matters” for the discussion at hand is not so much what Locke’s covert teaching was but “how the Founders understood him and to what purpose they applied their understanding.” Locke explicitly endorses the right to liberty from arbitrary power, theism, the law of nature, natural human equality, government by consent, and the right to revolution. In resisting the rule of the British monarch, “the American Founders clearly saw Locke in the tradition we have been delineating. Jefferson and Adams explicitly placed him there,” citing him along with the classical philosophers as a proponent of what Adams called “the principles of nature and eternal reason.” Reilly readily agrees with those who see that Locke’s epistemological theory, published in his Essay concerning Human Understanding, and his empiricism generally do not comport with classical or Christian teleology. James Wilson saw this at the time of the American founding. But, following the argument of the redoubtable Harry V. Jaffa, Reilly refers not to the Essay but to Locke’s more political works, including the Second Treatise and the two essays on religious toleration. In these writings Locke did indeed distance himself from Hobbes, advocating representative government, the right to revolution, the capacity of human beings to govern themselves, and the natural sociality of human beings. In his Questions concerning the Law of Nature Locke derives right from natural law, and surely not from the will of the sovereign; whether Lockean natural law is the same as Ciceronian or Thomistic natural law is an arguable point; to answer it, a reader must walk the long and winding road of the philosopher’s exotericism. As Jaffa and others have observed, the Founders for the most part did no such thing, readily taking Locke to be anti-Hobbes ‘all the way down.’

    “The Founders not only declared the inherited principles of human equality, popular sovereignty, the requirement of consent, and the moral right to revolution that we have been following since the Middle Ages but, for the first time in history, instantiated them, put them into practice, producing a constitutional republic that was the product of deliberation and free choice.” They could do so (as Tocqueville insisted) because unlike the French revolutionaries who followed them the Americans had substantial experience in self-government, exercising both the constitutional rights of Englishmen and claiming title to “all the rights of nature,” as Massachusetts lawyer and pamphleteer James Otis put it, as early as 1764. Tellingly for Reilly’s argument, Otis went on to base his claim on the distinction “between the primacy of reason and the primacy of will,” writing that “Parliaments are in all cases to declare what is for the good of the whole; but it is not the declaration of Parliament that makes it so. There must be in every instance a higher authority, viz., GOD”; “should an act of Parliament be against any of his natural laws, which are immutably true, their declaration would be contrary to eternal truth, equity, and justice, and consequently void.” Reilly adds (again following Tocqueville) that it was the Christian endorsement of natural law that gave it widespread credibility. Belief in a despotic God is unlikely to conduce to regimes of democratic and commercial republicanism. A God who prefers to rule by the consent of His people affords men what might be termed the conceptual space needed to think of themselves as citizens, not slaves or subjects.

    “The Constitution does not declare principles; it provides for their implementation.” This explains why, “while there are no Christian principles per se embedded in the Constitution,” the Constitution nonetheless can be said to have been “embedded in Christianity”—perhaps especially in those forms of Christianity that recall the republicanism enjoyed for a time by ancient Israel. The United States Constitution would have been difficult, perhaps impossible, to conceive had its Framers not lived within a Bible-saturated religious culture, whether or not each and every one of them endorsed Christian principles in the solitude of his own mind.  

    By contrast, the founders of the First Republic of France often attacked the Bible. Reilly quotes Abbé Sieyès, who proclaimed that in the new regime “the nation is prior to everything”; “its will is always legal.” For the French revolutionaries, Rousseau’s “general will” is “the all in all.” The young John Quincy Adams criticized the revolution for that affirmation, at the time. The French revolutionaries supposed human nature to be malleable, thus perfectible. The means for human perfectibility turned out to be, in part, the mass murder not only of traitors to the republic but even “all people who are not enthusiastic” in their support of the new regime, as Saint-Just insisted, on his way to earning his title, the “Angel of Death.” John Adams and Alexander Hamilton both criticized the revolutionaries for their atheism, predicting that it would lead to more deaths than seen in the Inquisition—as it did. 

    With this impressive account of American principles firmly in hand, Reilly can finally turn to its latter-day Catholic critics. Patrick Deneen’s “views recall William Lloyd Garrison, the abolitionist who believed that the U.S. Constitution was a ‘covenant with Death, an Agreement in Hell.” Even the sternest critics of Philadelphia will find the image somewhat overwrought, however much the City of Brotherly Love fails to live up to its stated principle, especially as it contemplates its sports teams. “Both Garrison and Deneen fail to understand that the Founding principles are themselves the strongest case against public moral corruptions such as slavery and abortion.” But even Garrison didn’t distort the words of the Founders as Deneen does Madison’s argument in the tenth Federalist. There, Madison writes that “the diversity in the faculties of men, from which the rights of property originate, is… an insuperable obstacle to a uniformity of interests” in any society. This hardly constitutes an endorsement of, or even a logical opening for, the arguments in behalf of ‘diversity’ in hiring practices and in government which have become staples of the contemporary egalitarian ‘Left.’ Madison “never says that diversity is something government should positively encourage,” only that “a multiplicity of interests (not of factions) can be useful in helping to prevent the formation of a tyrannical majority” in a political union constituted “out of diversity.” Madison is arguing for government protection of “the free exercise of an individual’s abilities,” abilities that differ from person to person but which are uniformly held as the property of each person. In the decades following the Founding, the American politician who most ardently advocated diversity in the social rather than moral sense of the term was Stephen Douglas, and he did so against Lincoln, and in opposition to the principle of equal natural rights. To say, as Deneen does, that Madison, following Locke, urges Americans to “pursue their appetites” is to make nonsense of both.

    “The key, as the Founding Fathers knew, is virtue,” and not in Machiavelli’s sense of the term. “They taught that freedom is not divorced from nature; it is rooted in and limited by nature,” “conformity with what is naturally good,” not “license or licentiousness.” “Only a virtuous person is capable of rational consent,” and only consent defined as rational assent can consent to the kind of government advocated by the Declaration of Independence, a government that secures unalienable rights. “People who are enslaved to their passions inevitably become slaves to tyrants.” Deneen’s claims are “the opposite of the Founders’ logic.” As a result, Deneen finds the conclusion of the syllogism “a bit mysterious and incomprehensible,” as indeed it must be for anyone who fails to understand its premises. 

    “It should be noted that current Catholic discomfort with the Founding was not shared by Catholics at the time of its establishment. Father John Carroll, a cousin of Charles Carroll, who signed both the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, celebrated the new regime as the home of religious toleration, a regime in which Catholics “are members of Congress, assemblies, and hold civil and military posts, as well as others.” In this regime, “free toleration is allowed to Christian of every denomination,” a “blessing and advantage, which it is our duty to preserve and improve with the utmost prudence by demeaning ourselves on all occasions as subjects zealously attached to our government.” Carroll attributed this toleration to “the genuine spirit of Christianity” in the United States.

    The deformation of principle seen in the United States in recent decades finds no source in the Founding. Rather, Reilly maintains, it derives from the doctrine of the primacy of the human will, advanced in America by the Progressives, who took their bearings not from natural right, not from the laws of Nature and of nature’s God, but from German historicism. Although different from Ockham, Machiavelli, Hobbes, and other nominalists in many ways, historicism shares with them the denial of natural right. In its latter-day form, historicism secularizes Christianity, aiming at “an intra-historical perfectibility” that would transform politics “into an engine of salvation with man as his own savior.” “In modern ideology, equality does not yet exist; it is at the end, not the beginning. It is man who will metaphysically transform reality in order to establish equality, which then leads to total freedom.” This ‘project’ will fail because it depends upon the very Christian natural law sensibility it seeks to erase and supersede. There is no guarantee that the attempt to transform reality in order to establish equality will lead to anything better than the mass murder and prison camps the regimes of modern tyranny conjured in the last century. “Yet we can avoid the cataclysm anytime we choose to, by returning to reality, to reason, to ‘the Laws of Nature and of Nature’s God.’ Reality is resilient because, as Plato said, it is what is—not whatever one fancies. Logos wins in the end.”

     

     

    Notes

    1. For a discussion of the Founders’ understanding of self-government, as distinguished from ‘autonomy,’ see Will Morrisey: Self-Government, The American Theme: Presidents of the Founding and Civil War (Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield, 2003)
    2.  “One should note that Luther modified his position” on the right to revolution “sometime after 1530,” and indeed one might further note that Luther’s stances on this and several other matters (for example, the value of a liberal arts education) could change with his mood of the moment. In his clearly-written introduction to Reilly’s book, Larry P. Arnn observes that even Luther’s nominalist and voluntarist views conflict with statements he makes elsewhere. 
    3. For a fuller discussion of Hooker, see “Reason within the Limits of Religion Alone: The Achievement of Richard Hooker,” on this website; for a book-length discussion, see Robert K. Faulkner’s excellent Richard Hooker and the Politics of a Christian England (Los Angeles: University of California Press, 1981).

    Filed Under: American Politics

    Royal Dreaming

    July 1, 2020 by Will Morrisey

    William Shakespeare: A Midsummer Night’s Dream.

     

    At the palace of Theseus in Athens, Duke Theseus speaks with his betrothed, the Amazon queen Hippolyta, whom he will marry four days hence. According to the ancient Greek story, Hippolyta was the daughter of the war god, Ares, who gave her a magical belt which was supposed to protect her in battle. Theseus captured her, anyway, and she became the only Amazon ever to marry. “I woo’d thee with my sword,” Theseus tells her, “And won thy love doing thee injuries; / But I will wed thee in another key, / With pomp, with triumph, and with reveling” (I.i.16-19). If love is akin to war, marriage provides the foundation of civil peace. Though a god, and a warrior-god at that, her father couldn’t or at least wouldn’t defend Hippolyta from the love-suit of the Athenian statesman. The god evidently knows that war’s purpose is the re-establishment of civil peace.

    Civil peace also brings disputes under the law. Egeus arrives before the duke with his daughter, Hermia, and her two suitors, Lysander and Demetrius. Egeus, whose name means ‘shield,’ ‘protection,’ wants to shield his daughter from Lysander, whose name means ‘free man,’ ‘liberator.’ Hermia, whose name is the feminine form of Hermes, the messenger-god, has been giving her father a message he doesn’t want to hear, namely, that she loves Lysander and wants him to be the one who liberates her from fatherly edicts. Egeus prefers Demetrius, whose name means ‘devoted to Demeter,’ the goddess of agriculture and harvest, Demeter ‘Law-Giver,’ bringer of civilization. Egeus would rather marry his daughter to a man devoted to the household instead of a man devoted to the city, to citizenship. But in fact he depends upon the city to enforce his parental authority. Invoking “the ancient privilege of Athens” (I.i.41), whereby the city can require his daughter to marry the suitor the father chooses, upon pain of death “according to our law” (I.i.44), Egeus would overrule the love his daughter feels for Lysander. While there is a glance here at the ‘Old Law’ of the Bible as distinguished from the ‘New Law’ of love enunciated by Jesus as the sum and substance of the old, the primary distinction is the one between family and city, both liable to disruption by nature in the form of love. Egeus, the ‘old man’ of the law, and Demetrius, the young man of immature and flighty love, turn out to be allies in an attempt to subvert the natural love that is the right foundation of families that form the right foundation of cities.

    “What say you, Hermia?” Duke Theseus asks (I.i.46). Your father “should be as a god” to you, being “one to whom you are but as a form in wax, / By him imprinted, and within his power / To leave the figure or disfigure it” (I.i.50-52). Hermia admits that Demetrius is a worthy gentleman, but Lysander is no less so; she wishes her father “look’d but with my eyes” (I.i.56). Theseus sides with her father: “Rather your eyes with his judgment must look” (I.i.57); as Athens’ ruler, he will enforce the law, finding her guilty of having neglected her father’s mature judgment as well as his patriarchal authority. At this, spirited Hermia wants to know the penalty for disobedience; Theseus cites the death penalty her father had mentioned, adding that the alternative is a life of virginity in service at the temple of Diana, the virgin goddess of the pale moon. Since “my soul consents not to give sovereignty” to either her father or her father’s choice of her husband, she chooses the temple over the household (I.i.82). Temporizing, the duke gives her four days to deliberate—to “examine well your blood,” your nature (I.i.68)—ending on the day of his own nuptials, when Diana’s new moon will appear. 

    Demetrius appeals to Hermia to relent and implores Lysander to yield “thy crazed title”—love—”to my certain right”—paternal authority, as recognized by the law of the city in which Lysander is a free man, a citizen (I.i.92). Lysander jibes, “You have her father’s love, Demetrius; / Let me have Hermia’s; do you marry him” (I.i.94). Egeus intervenes to grant that yes, Demetrius does have my love, “and what is mine my love shall render him”; since Hermia “is mine,” I lovingly give my daughter to him, not to you (I.i.96-97). Against this, Lysander charges that his rival previously had courted another lady, Helena, “and won her soul”; even now she “dotes in idolatry, / Upon this spotted and inconstant man” (I.i. 109-110). The nature of the man to whom you give your daughter is defective, whatever his social condition may be. 

    The duke halts the dispute. Conceding that before this he had been “over-full of self-affairs” to speak with Demetrius about this matter (I.i.113)—concerned more with the foreign war to win his bride, establish his family, than tending to his city—he summons Egeus and Demetrius for “some private schooling” (I.i.116). But whatever this private conference may entail, he doesn’t change his ruling. “For you, fair Hermia, look you arm yourself / To fit your fancies to your father’s will, / Or else the law of Athens yields you up” (I.i.117-19). It appears that he intends to reprimand father and intended son-in-law ‘in chambers,’ as a modern judge would say, without openly breaking the law of the city which, as judge, he must uphold. His bride-to-be is a foreign queen, whose father, being the god of war, evidently had no objection to the winning of his daughter in a display of military prowess. But Hermia is a child of peace, of civil society, and unless some equitable out-of-court settlement can be reached, not the law of love but the rule of law must govern her.

    Or must it? Only if the lovers remain in the city. Hermia faces two unnatural choices: marriage to a man she does not love or a life of virgin austerity in service of a goddess. After the others depart, Lysander and Hermia remain to formulate a plot. Since “the course of true love never did run smooth,” as Lysander famously puts it (I.i.134)—nature faces conventional roadblocks laid down by men—and since it is “hell” “to choose love by another’s eyes,” as Hermia says (I.i.140), let us flee the city, Lysander proposes, go to the home of his “widow aunt” who has no natural children and so regards him as her own; there “may I marry thee; / And to that place the sharp Athenian law / Cannot pursue us” (I.i.156-163). Hermia agrees to the plan, which requires them to leave the city and plunge into the woods surrounding Athens, into the nature their love bespeaks, away from the city that denies nature. The free man, the citizen, faced with laws and rulers that are contra natura, has no choice but to retreat to the pre-political life of the bridegroom’s family, outside the city.

    Helena arrives, looking for Demetrius. The two ladies are friends from childhood, and she understands that Hermia has in no way encouraged his suit except by being beautiful, by her nature (“would that fault were mine!”) (I.i.201). That fault will no longer be on display to Demetrius, Hermia explains, telling her of their impending self-exile and trusting that their lifelong friendship will ensure that Helena will respect the confidence. This proves a false expectation. When the lovers leave to their separate homes, Helena stays, telling herself and the audience that she will inform Demetrius of their plot. She explains that, like fickle Cupid himself, a mere child, a frivolous game-player, Demetrius first vowed “that he was only mine” and then ran off in pursuit of beautiful Hermia (I.i.243). Demetrius, she predicts, will pursue the lovers into the woods, but her pain at his departure out of her sight, she hopes, will be recompensed by his gratitude upon returning to the city with the deserving informant who will follow him, still hoping to convince him to repent of his unfaithful love. This seems a desperate plot because Helena cannot know what will happen in the woods, what will result from Demetrius’ pursuit. But it’s the only one she can devise, betraying her friendship to regain her beloved.

    Still another plot must coincide with these: preparations for the duke’s nuptials. Some local tradesmen intend to perform a play to entertain the Court on the wedding day. A weaver, Nick Bottom, joins a carpenter, a joiner, a bellows-mender, a tinker, and a tailor to discuss a play with a self-contradictory title, “The most Lamentable Comedy and Most Cruel Death of Pyramus and Thisbe.” Ovid tells the story of Pyramus and Thisbe in the Metamorphoses. As scholars have noticed, those two lovers resemble Romeo and Juliet more than Lysander and Hermia, as the barrier to their marriage is the hatred of their two rival families; they do share with the Athenian couple a plan to elope, which ends tragically when Pyramus commits suicide after mistakenly thinking Thisbe has been killed by a lion. Ovid’s story is thus lamentable without being comic, but it’s sure to become so in the hands of these players. It transpires that Bottom’s theatrical ambitions know no bounds and want none, as he wants to play several parts—a changeling, a metamorphosis-man, indeed. Shakespeare will leave him, and his colleagues, to their own devices until the third Act of his own comedy, which as always is far from lamentable.

    Other than beasts of prey, what else lives in the woods outside Athens? Fairies do. One of them, who “wander[s] every where” in the service of the Fairy Queen (II.i.6), derides Puck as the lout among the spirits, “that shrewd and knavish sprite” also known as Robin Goodfellow, a trickster-spirit who delights in petty annoyance of rustic households—curdling cream, chipping dishes (II.i.34-35). Puck serves not the queen of the fairies but their king, which makes him no good fellow at all to the queen’s attendant. Worse, the royal couple are estranged. Queen Titania has angered King Oberon by taking into her entourage “a lovely boy, stolen from an Indian king” (II.i.22), whom he covets for himself. This makes the queen’s attendant doubly dubious of the spirit who plays court jester to Oberon, and does his bidding.

    Oberon and Titania enter and quarrel, jealous of each other’s lover, real or imagined. Titania accuses Oberon of having caused climate change; the seasons themselves are mixed up, as Midsummer’s Eve (the late-June night when fairy tricksters roam freely, tormenting honest human households) is coming in May, the month of lovers. She denies any love for the Indian boy, who is the orphan of a mortal friend of hers and now under her protection. In revenge, jealous and unbelieving Oberon plots with Puck to use an herbal potion which will cause Titania to fall in love with the first creature she sees, upon awakening from her next sleep. The fairies live outside the city, in all the woods of the world, but they delight in pranking households in city and countryside; they also exercise some control over the nature in which they reside, a control that depends not on magic so much as knowledge of nature and a consequent ability to rule the minds of humans and fairies alike. 

    When the fairies depart, the humans wander in. Demetrius searches for Hermia and Lysander but can’t shake Helena. “I love thee not, therefore pursue me not,” he tells her, rather in contradiction of his own conduct toward Hermia (II.i.188). “Where is Lysander and fair Hermia? / The one I’ll slay, the other slayeth me” (II.i.189-90). Helena is no less self-contradictory, in her own way, telling him her heart is “true as steel” (II.i.197) but then averring, “I am your spaniel,” and “the more you beat me, I will fawn on you” (II.i.203-04)—completing the mixture of images by comparing herself to a deer pursuing a tiger and a dove pursuing a griffin. Demetrius’ infidelity has caused this couple to be the one unnatural being in nature.

    Oberon intends to fix that. He’s listened in on their quarrel and decides to treat Demetrius with the same nature-cure he has in mind for Titania. He tells Puck to apply the herbal potion to Demetrius’ eyes, even as he, Oberon, will apply it to hers. Since Puck has never seen Demetrius and Oberon doesn’t know that there are any other Athenians in the woods, Oberon commands him to dose the next sleeping man he sees who wears “Athenian garments” (II.i.264). Puck mistakenly treats sleeping Lysander, who awakens, sees Helena, falls in love with her, and now determines to kill Demetrius, who had betrayed and insulted his new beloved. Completing the delusion, he announces that “the will of man is by his reason sway’d; / And reason says you,” Helena, “are the worthier maid” (II.ii.115-16). When I was young, he continues, he was “ripe not to reason,” but now “reason becomes marshal to my will” (II.ii.119-20). Lysander’s bizarre change, and his even more bizarre explanation of it, make sense to Helena only as mockery, an unjust attempt to “flout my insufficiency” (II.ii.128). She runs off; when Hermia awakens, she cries out, “What a dream was here! / Lysander, look how I do quake with fear. / Methought a serpent eat my heart away, / And you sat smiling at his cruel prey” (II.ii.147-50). But Lysander has already left, chasing after Helena.

    The would-be players have also entered the woods, perhaps in a prudent effort to spare civilization from their rehearsing. This enables Puck to transform Bottom’s head into an ass’s head (thus revealing Bottom’s true nature), and to ensure that he will be the one Titania first sees in the morning. When she declares her love for him, the ass nonetheless speaks truer of reason than Lysander had done: “Methinks, mistress you should have little reason for that. And yet, to say the truth, reason and love keep little company together now-a-days” (III.i.131-132). “Thou art as wise as thou art beautiful,” Titania sighs—true enough (III.i. 135). Like a mortal woman, she would take the one she loves and transform him into what she wants, promising to “purge thy mortal grossness” and to turn him into a spirit (III.i.146). 

    Oberon has accomplished his mission, with Puck’s help, but Puck’s mistake now comes to his master’s attention: “Of thy misprision must perforce ensue / Some true love turned, and not a false turn’d true” (III.ii.90-91). Puck can only appeal to the underlying rule of fate. No fatalist, Oberon acts to right matters, quickly, ordering Puck to find Helena and bring her here, then to apply the potion—compacted of a flower of “purple die,” the royal color—to sleeping Demetrius (III.ii.102). Puck reconnoiters and returns, announcing the lady’s imminent arrival, pursued by Lysander. He proposes more fairy sport: “Shall we their fond pageant see? / Lord, what fools these mortals be!” (II.ii.114-15). Oberon evidently doesn’t mind toying with the mortal fools a bit, allowing the mad show to proceed. It will be a comedy of errors, with the fairies behaving like merry wives of Windsor.

    Demetrius awakens at the noise, falls in love with Helena, who once again assumes that she’s being mocked by both, who have conspired against her. “If you were civil and knew courtesy, / You would not do me thus much injury…. You both are rivals, and love Hermia; / And now both rivals, to mock Helena.” (III.ii.147-48, 155-56) When Hermia catches up with them and Lysander rejects her for Helena, Helena simply assumes that even her former friend is in on “this confederacy” (III.ii.192), much to Hermia’s bewilderment. But it is precisely the impossibility of civility in this woods that renders Helena’s indignation vain. The moonlit woods are nature’s darker side. The woods are ruled by the fairies, who include trickster Puck, a trickster even when he faithfully follows the benevolent if imprecise commands of the Fairy King. Misdirected, the natural love potion brings out the worst nature of the human lovers. Helena’s timid and suspicious side, Demetrius’ fickleness, Lysander’s sharp temper, and Hermia’s equally sharp temper, coupled with insecurity (when Helena calls her a puppet, she takes it as a jibe at her shortness of stature, despite her acknowledged beauty): all these bring the two men to the edge of violence against each other, urged on by the women. Whether ginned up by herbal medicine or not, the passion of love itself matters less than who or what it’s aimed at. [1]

    Unlike his court jester, Puck, Lord Oberon has a fundamentally just nature, and now moves to intervene, Theseus-like, lest the comedy turn tragic. [2] “This is thy negligence,” he tells Puck, unless you arranged this out of willful knavery (III.ii.345). Puck truthfully protests that he was only following a too-vague command, while admitting he’s enjoyed the results. Very well, then, what I can see clearly, Oberon replies, is the brewing fight, and you shall put a stop to it by calling forth a black fog, which “will lead these testy rivals so astray / As one come not within another’s way” (III.ii.358-59). You will then dose Lysander with the herb, the “virtuous property” of which will remove from his eyes “all error” and “make his eyeballs roll with wonted sight” for his real love, Hermia (III.ii.367-69). “When they next wake, all this derision / Shall seem a dream and fruitless vision; / And back to Athens shall the lovers wend / With league whose date till death shall never end” (III.ii.370-73). Their natural loves restored, the lovers will be fit to re-enter civil society and marry. As for already-married Lord Oberon, “I’ll to my queen, and beg her Indian boy; / And then I will her charmed eye release / From monster’s view, and all things shall be peace” (III.ii.375-77). Knowing better than to disobey his lord’s command, and now knowing the man who is its object, Puck applies the juice to the eyes of sleeping Lysander, incanting a precept of natural right, “the country proverb known”: “That every man should take his own, / In your waking shall be shown: / Jack shall have Jill; / Nought shall go ill” (III.ii.458-462). At his lord’s direction, the trickster does the right thing, bridling his preference for misrule.

    As the ruler of the night, Oberon tempers his justice with mercy. Considering his Fairy Queen as she sleeps, he “begin[s] to pity” her “dotage” on the human ass (IV.i.44). Having already confronted her with her with the act of infidelity he had caused her to commit, having exacted from her the Indian boy with whom he suspected of having committed real infidelity, and with the boy now transported to his own “bower in fairy land,” he will release her from the delusive spell (IV.i.58). He chants: “Be as thou wast wont to be; / See as thou was wont to see. / Dian’s bud o’er Cupid’s flower / Hath such force and blessed power” (IV.i.68-71). Invoking the chastity of Diana, which to follow would have given Hermia an unnatural life, restores the married queen of Fairy Land to her rightful place at the side of its king. And it does so by restoring her natural sight, so that she will again recognize a human ass for a human ass. In symbolic terms, he restores her capacity for noesis, for intellectual insight and, with it, the right classification of natural beings. Upon awakening, Titania believes that the reality she experienced under the spell was only a vexatious dream, but Oberon immediately points to the sleeping Bottom. She wonders, questions—the beginning of wisdom, as a philosopher might say. Oberon, the one who can answer her question, has won the battle Theseus has already won over the Amazon queen, establishing his authority. He intends to “dance in Duke Theseus’ house triumphantly” tomorrow night, “and bless it with all prosperity,” as it will now see the weddings of “faithful lovers,” lovers brought together then divided by Cupid, corrected by reason not law, and now prepared for a lifetime of Diana-like chastity under the bond of marriage, the bond of lawful love, the love that’s right for civil society.

    Daybreak impends. The night-rule of the fairies evanesces; the day-rule of Theseus returns. Theseus, Hippolyta, and Egeus have pursued the lovers into the woods, and now discover them. The youths have some explaining to do, and Lysander honestly relates what he and Hermia intended to do—much to the outrage of Egeus, who demands capital punishment under the law. But Demetrius comes to his friend’s defense. Oberon’s royal potion has corrected his passion, restoring it to fidelity. By “some power” he does not know, “my love to Hermia, / Melted as the snow”: “All the faith, the virtue of my heart, / The object and the pleasure of mine eye, / Is only Helena. To her, my lord, / Was I betroth’d ere I saw Hermia. / But, like a sickness, did I loathe this food; / But, as in health, come to my natural taste.” (IV.i.162-171). Oberon’s herbal potion, his nature cure, acted as a poison when Puck dosed the wrong person with it, but acted as a restorative, an agent returning the young man to his true nature, when applied to the right person, according to the reason of the just monarch-physician. 

    This is enough for Theseus. “Egeus, I will overbear your will,” return to Athens, and bring the two couples, with himself and Hippolyta, to wed (IV.i.176). “Our purpos’d hunting,” an act of what had seemed a just war, “shall be set aside” (IV.i.180). On what grounds? Does Egeus not still have Athenian law on his side, the law that enforces fatherly authority over daughters? 

    Yes, but the duke had won his own beloved by overcoming the power of the Amazon queen’s father’s chastity belt. A wise and just ruler will enforce the laws of the city; but the initial sin, the one that deranged the civil order, was Demetrius’ betrayal of his vow of betrothal. Egeus is attempting to enforce a law that did not justly apply to the circumstance, inasmuch as a violation of the suitor’s legal oath invalidates the betrothal the father would impose. Theseus’ ruling parallels that of Oberon. Just as Oberon corrected Puck’s misapplication of the nature-cure, which works rightly only when given according to the circumstance, so Theseus applies his law-cure rightly by adjusting it to the circumstances at hand Bot  natural and civil law require the reasoned, prudential rule of the statesman-judge who is there to see things for himself.

    All are now awake, poor Bottom the last. “I have had a most rare vision,” he tells himself. “I have had a dream, past the wit of man to say what dream it was. Methought I was—there is no man can tell what. Methought I was, and methought I had, but man is but a patch’d fool, if he will offer to say what methought I had.” (IV.i.203-08). His friend and fellow-player Peter Quince will write “a ballad of this dream. It shall be call’d ‘Bottom’s Dream,’ because it hath no bottom” (IV.i.212-213). Wrong on all counts, Ass Bottom. The vision was no dream; the wit of man can explain it quite readily; the ‘dream’ has a bottom, and it is himself, his nature as a fool. He intends to sing the ballad over the dead body of Thisbe, at the end of his play at the wedding. In that one thing he’s right, in his own goofy way, inasmuch as the song is a fitting coda for a lamentable comedy. He returns to Athens and to his worried friends, back in his right place, in his right role.

    The next day, at the palace, Theseus and Hippolyta discuss the lovers’ story. Theseus dismisses it. “I never may believe / These antique fables, nor these fairy toys. / Lovers and madmen have such seething brains, / Such shaping fantasies, that apprehend / More than cool reason ever comprehends” (V.i.3-7). Lunatics (‘luna’ means moon, the light of the woods), lovers, and poets “are of imagination compact,” making ‘somethings’ that are really ‘nothings’ out of nothing but their joys and fears (V.i.8). For her part, Hippolyta isn’t so sure that the lovers’ tale must be some midsummer night’s dream. She considers the unanimity of the testimony, the unlikelihood that “all their minds transfigur’d so together” (V.i.24). Reason, thought governed by the principle of non-contradiction, lends support to their story, however implausible its perceptual premises may be. Less dogmatically ‘rationalistic’ than Theseus, she attends to the preponderance of the evidence, and in terms of the play she is right. After all, has the play’s audience not witnessed the players? Have the onlookers not been transfigured together?

    The governing irony, of course, is that this is Theseus deliberating with an Amazon queen—both figures in an antique fable, lately translated to a London stage by a poet. Theseus, the mythological Athenian statesman, here echoes Socrates’ critique of poetry in the Ion. But he is no Socrates. Acting together as the ruling couple of Athens, Hippolyta’s socially-oriented practical wisdom will supplement the practical wisdom of Theseus, which leans toward hasty generalization. Theseus draws his practical wisdom from observation of human types; Hippolyta draws her practical wisdom from attending to opinion. Both kinds are needed to rule well, and it is the playgoing audience that sees the whole truth, with Shakespeare.

    As Oberon answers Puck, so Theseus answers Hippolyta, by directing attention away from the dubious and towards what’s in front of their eyes—in this case, the righted lovers, “full of joy and mirth” (V.i.28), after the marriage ceremony. The wedding revelers have three hours until bedtime, and in reviewing the several entertainments proffered, Theseus chooses what’s described as “A tedious brief scene of young Pyramus / And his love Thisby; very tragical mirth” (V.i.56-57). Rationalist as he is, he expects diversion from such a self-contradictory show. When he learns that men who have “never labor’d in their minds till now” will be the players (V.i.73), this confirms his choice—not, however, because he wants to laugh at the men who work with their hands but because “never anything can be amiss / When simpleness and duty tender it” (V.i.83-84). He may not be a man of theoretical wisdom, but he has a statesman’s practical wisdom, earned by observing men. “The kinder we, to give them thanks for nothing. / Our sport shall be to take what they mistake; / And what poor duty they cannot do, noble respect / Takes it in might, not merit”—that is, the intention of the deed. (V.i.89-92) This magnanimity is the opposite of Helena’s and Hermia’s small-souled mindset, which makes mortal insults out of trifles. Sure enough, in the prologue to the play-within-the-play, Quince announces, “If we offend, it is with our good will” (V.i.108). 

    The workers’ play parodies the regime of the woods, with the players as fairies without power. Lamentably comic Pyramus and Thisbe duly dispatch themselves, completing the laughable tragedy wherein no fairies rule the night by (in the end) wisely exerting the powers of nature. With kind irony, Theseus excuses Bottom from speaking an epilogue (“for your play needs no excuse”) and thanks the players for their “notably discharged” effort (V.i.345, 350). He then bids the members of the wedding party to retire to their marriage beds—the end of comedy, even as graves are the end of tragedy. Without knowing it, the players have reminded the lovers of the bad turn their once-disordered love might have taken.

    Theseus doesn’t have the last word, however. That is left to the rulers of the night, who re-emerge when the married couples retire. Oberon and Titania chant blessings on them—”ever true in loving be” (V.i.397), their families nature perfected. Puck speaks the epilogue/apologia Bottom did not need to offer, asking the audience’s pardon for any offense “we shadows” may have given (V.i.412), and reminding them of the greater pardon all Christians enjoy: our “unearned luck / Now to scape the serpent’s tongue,” the same serpent that had threatened Hermia in her true dream about Lysander’s infidelity (V.i.421-22) but more immediately the hissing disapproval of an audience at the end of a bad play. As human beings depend on God’s grace, so do the ruled depend upon the grace of their rulers, whether they are subjects of monarchs or players in front of play-goers who sit in  judgment. 

    Although routinely regarded as a well-wrought farce, A Midsummer Night’s Dream is as politic a comedy as Shakespeare ever wrote. A charming play about charms, it also shows how the loves of young lovers can and should be directed away from impassioned fickleness of Demetrius while protected from the soul-deadening legalism of Egeus. That young love needs sound direction is easy to show, although not so easy to show to the young, who are the ones who need it, and sometimes difficult to show the old, who try. This can be done by Shakespeare, whose comedies are love-potions applied to sleeping eyes, which he opens and directs to love the right kinds of persons.

     

    Notes

    1. C. L. Barber isn’t quite right in calling love, as understood in this play, an “impersonal force beyond the persons concerned” (Barber: Shakespeare’s Festive Comedies, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1959, 130). The young are likely subject to it, but the mature (Theseus, Hippolyta, Oberon, Titania) can directly it rightly, even if one of them (Egeus) would misdirect it.
    2. C. L. Barber cites Shakespeare’s Puritan contemporary, Philip Stubbes, who regards Oberon as a Satan-figure [Ibid. 119]. As a Puritan, Stubbes inclines to regard all spirit-beings other than angels as devilish; in our own time, many Christians in the Puritan tradition similarly frown over the antics of A. J. Rowling’s Harry Potter, although C. S. Lewis and J. R. R. Tolkien usually get a pass. Shakespeare’s woods, even in the moonlight, are still nature, not Hell. Oberon keeps Puck in check there.

     

     

    Filed Under: Manners & Morals

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