as was the state in public affairs. A feature
eminently characteristic was the system of credit.
There did not exist any credit on landed security,
but instead of a debt on mortgage the step which constitutes
at present the final stage in mortgage-procedure —the
delivery of the property from the debtor to the creditor—took
place at once. On the other hand personal credit
was guaranteed in the most summary, not to say extravagant
fashion; for the lawgiver entitled the creditor to
treat his insolvent debtor like a thief, and granted
to him in entire legislative earnest what Shylock,
half in jest, stipulated for from his mortal enemy,
guarding indeed by special clauses the point as to
the cutting off too much more carefully than did the
Jew. The law could not have more clearly expressed
its design, which was to establish at once an independent
agriculture free of debt and a mercantile credit,
and to suppress with stringent energy all merely nominal
ownership and all breaches of fidelity. If we
further take into consideration the right of settlement
recognized at an early date as belonging to all the
Latins,(8) and the validity which was likewise early
pronounced to belong to civil marriage,(9) we shall
perceive that this state, which made the highest demands
on its burgesses and carried the idea of subordinating
the individual to the interest of the whole further
than any state before or since has done, only did
and only could do so by itself removing the barriers
to intercourse and unshackling liberty quite as much
as it subjected it to restriction. In permission
or in prohibition the law was always absolute.
As the foreigner who had none to intercede for him
was like the hunted deer, so the guest was on a footing
of equality with the burgess. A contract did
not ordinarily furnish a ground of action, but where
the right of the creditor was acknowledged, it was
so all-powerful that there was no deliverance for the
poor debtor, and no humane or equitable consideration
was shown towards him. It seemed as if the law
found a pleasure in presenting on all sides its sharpest
spikes, in drawing the most extreme consequences,
in forcibly obtruding on the bluntest understanding
the tyrannic nature of the idea of right. The
poetical form and the genial symbolism, which so pleasingly
prevail in the Germanic legal ordinances, were foreign
to the Roman; in his law all was clear and precise;
no symbol was employed, no institution was superfluous.
It was not cruel; everything necessary was performed
without much ceremony, even the punishment of death;
that a free man could not be tortured was a primitive
maxim of Roman law, to obtain which other peoples
have had to struggle for thousands of years.
Yet this law was frightful in its inexorable severity,
which we cannot suppose to have been very greatly
mitigated by humanity in practice, for it was really
the law of the people; more terrible than Venetian
-piombi- and chambers of torture was that series of
living entombments which the poor man saw yawning
before him in the debtors’ towers of the rich.
But the greatness of Rome was involved in, and was
based upon, the fact that the Roman people ordained
for itself and endured a system of law, in which the
eternal principles of freedom and of subordination,
of property and of legal redress, reigned and still
at the present day reign unadulterated and unmodified.