that. But he preached those principles and measures
which he wished to see adopted; and so great was the
reverence for him that the people listened to his
instructions, and afterward deliberated and acted
among themselves. He did not write out a code,
but he told the people what they should put into it.
He was the animating genius of the city; his voice
was obeyed. He unfolded the theory that the
government of one man, in their circumstances, would
become tyrannical; and he taught the doctrine, then
new, that the people were the only source of power,—that
they alone had the right to elect their magistrates.
He therefore recommended a general government, which
should include all citizens who had intelligence,
experience, and position,—not all the people,
but such as had been magistrates, or their fathers
before them. Accordingly, a grand council was
formed of three thousand citizens, out of a population
of ninety thousand who had reached the age of twenty-nine.
These three thousand citizens were divided into three
equal bodies, each of which should constitute a council
for six months and no meeting was legal unless two-thirds
of the members were present. This grand council
appointed the magistrates. But another council
was also recommended and adopted, of only eighty citizens
not under forty years of age,—picked men,
to be changed every six months, whom the magistrates
were bound to consult weekly, and to whom was confided
the appointment of some of the higher officers of
the State, like ambassadors to neighboring States.
All laws proposed by the magistrates, or seigniory,
had to be ratified by this higher and selecter council.
The higher council was a sort of Senate, the lower
council were more like Representatives. But
there was no universal suffrage. The clerical
legislator knew well enough that only the better and
more intelligent part of the people were fit to vote,
even in the election of magistrates. He seems
to have foreseen the fatal rock on which all popular
institutions are in danger of being wrecked,—
that no government is safe and respected when the people
who make it are ignorant and lawless. So the
constitution which Savonarola gave was neither aristocratic
nor democratic. It resembled that of Venice
more than that of Athens, that of England more than
that of the United States. Strictly universal
suffrage is a Utopian dream wherever a majority of
the people are wicked and degraded. Sooner or
later it threatens to plunge any nation, as nations
now are, into a whirlpool of dangers, even if Divine
Providence may not permit a nation to be stranded
and wrecked altogether. In the politics of Savonarola
we see great wisdom, and yet great sympathy for freedom.
He would give the people all that they were fit for.
He would make all offices elective, but only by the
suffrages of the better part of the people.