SYLLABUS OF THE FEDERALIST.[1]
A. I. A republic, a word used in various senses, has been applied to aristocracies and monarchies.
II. Again, great confusion about words democracy, aristocracy, monarchy.
I. Democracy defined by some, Rousseau, etc., a government exercised by the collective body of the people.
2. Aristocracy has been used to designate governments,
b. Where the representatives of the
people possessed it.3. Monarchy, where sovereignty is in the hands of a single man.
4. Democracy in my sense, where the whole power of the government is in the people,
B. I. Consequence, the proposed government a representative democracy.
3. President indirectly chosen by them for four years.
5. All officers indirect choice of the people.
C. I. This representative democracy, as far as is consistent with its genius, has all the features of good government. These features:
II. b. A separation of the essential powers of government.
Ascertain the sense of the maxim.
1. One department must not wholly possess the powers of another.
III. Departments of power must be separated, yet so as to check each other.
4. Legislative judicial.
☞ All this is done in the proposed constitution.
D. I. Can such a government apply to so extensive a territory?
Exaggerated ideas of extent.
| N. | 45 | 52 | |||
| S. | 31 | 31 | |||
| 14 | 11 | 434 | |||
| 973 | 764½ | mean | 868¾ | by | |
| 750 | |||||
REVIEW.
| I. | Full House of Representatives chosen every second year, etc. |
| II. | Senate for six years by Legislatures. Rotation every two years. |
| III. | Executive. Manner of appointment. Compensation. |
| IV. | Judicial power. Constitution of judges. Extent of powers. |
POWERS.
| I. | To provide revenue for the Common defense. |
| II. | To regulate commerce. |
| III. | To declare war. |
| V. | Admission of new states. |
| VI. | Disposal of property. |
MISCELLANEOUS ADVANTAGES.
| I. | To prohibit importation of slaves after 1808. |
| II. | Account to be rendered of expenditure of moneys. |
| III. | No state shall emit bills of credit [pass no bill of at]tainder, ex-post facto law, or law impairing the obligation of contracts, or grant title of nobility. |
| IV. | Definition of treason. |
| V. | Guarantee of Republican government. |
- ↑ This paper has been printed in both editions of the writings of Hamilton as a "Brief Argument on the Constitution of the United States." Study of it, however, indicates that it is a preliminary outline of The Federalist, from No. 39 to the end. As already mentioned in the Introduction, the beginning of the term of the New York Supreme Court compelled Hamilton to cease temporarily his work on The Federalist with No. 36, and he probably drew np this guide for Madison, who at that point assumed the task, and who closely followed in the succeeding essays the sequence here outlined. By merely transposing the last portions headed "Powers" and "Miscellaneous Advantages" so that they precede that headed "Review," we have the arrangement of ideas adopted in The Federalist. The syllabns is especially valuable in view of the dispnte over the authorship, for it shows how sharp a line Hamilton drew between the "Powers" and the "Revew" of the three departments, the latter being evidently considered by him as one synthetic whole. A comparison of No. 39 with "A" and "B" reveals how thoroughly Madison absorbed the syllabus in this number, and as that has been most quoted of all those from Madison's pen, the source of his ideas possesses much interest.