The Commonwealth of Oceana

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The Commonwealth of Oceana (1656) is a seventeenth-century political tract by the English theorist of classical republicanism, James Harrington (1611-1677). It was originally banned by then Lord Protector Oliver Cromwell (1599-1658), but was eventually published with a dedication to Cromwell.[1]

Oceana is now considered a verbosely difficult and otherwise overly imposing exposition of an ideal constitution: "Oceana" being England, and the lawgiver Olphaus Megaletor, representing Cromwell. The details are carefully elaborated, right down to the salaries of officials, but there are only two main ideas, each with a practical corollary. The first is that the determining element of power in a state is property, particularly property in land; the second is that the executive power ought not to be vested for any considerable time in the same men or class of men. In accordance with the first of these, Harrington recommends an agrarian law, limiting holdings of land to the amount yielding a revenue of £3000, and consequently insisting on particular modes of distributing landed property. As a practical issue of the second he lays down the rule of rotation by ballot. A third part of the executive or senate are voted out by ballot every year, and may not be elected again for three years. Harrington explains very carefully how the state and its governing parts are to be constituted by his scheme.

[edit] Publication

The Commonwealth of Oceana was published in two first editions, the "Pakeman" and the "Chapman" (first names Daniel and Livewell, respectively) by the London printer John Streater,[2]between September and November, 1656. Their contents are nearly identical. The Chapman edition was listed in the Stationers' Register of Sept. 19, and was first advertised during the week of Nov. 6 in the serial Mercurius Politicus, a "quasi-official" organ of the commonwealth.

Harrington's first editor was John Toland (1670-1722), who in 1700 published The Oceana and other Works of James Harrington, with an Account of his Life. It was first reprinted in Dublin in 1737 and 1758 in a super-edition (as it were), containing a version of Henry Neville's Plato Redivivus and an appendix of miscellaneous Harrington works compiled by the Rev. Thomas Birch (1705-1766). This same appeared in London in 1747 and again in 1771.[3]

Oceana was reprinted in [Henry] Morley's Universal Library in 1883; S.B. Liljegren reissued a fastidiously prepared Pakeman edition in 1924. Much of the remaining Harrington canon consists of papers, pamphlets, aphorisms, even treatises, in steadfast defence of the controversial tract.

If today's reader encounters difficulty ingesting Oceana, it is immediately understandable. Harrington's prose is marred by what his modern editor, J.G.A. Pocock described as an undisciplined work habit and a conspicuous "lack of sophistication." He "wrote hastily, in a baroque and periodic style in which he more than once lost his way," thereby becoming "...productive of confusion." He certainly never attained the level of "a great literary stylist."[4]

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ "...to his highnes the Lord Protector of the Comonwealth of England, Scotland, and Ireland." (sic); Pocock, "Intro," p. 6. on Harrington as a classical republican, he was "England's premier civic humanist and Machiavellian. He was not the first to think about English politics in these terms..., but he was the first to achieve a paradigmatic restatement of English political understanding in the language and world-view inherited through Machiavelli." Pocock, "Intro," p. 15.
  2. ^ Streater was a former New Model Army officer stationed in Ireland who returned to England in 1653 to protest the dissolutions of the Rump and Little parliaments. He was subsequently arrested for seditious libel, apparently acquitted, and by April 1654 had set up his print shop.
  3. ^ (London: T. Becket, Thomas Cadell, T. Evans, 1771). until Pocock's, more than two centuries later in 1977, the only complete edition of political Harringtoniana.
  4. ^ this and the preceding two paragraphs are adapted from Pocock, "Intro," p. xv.

[edit] References

  • J.G.A. Pocock, "Editorial and Historical Introductions," The Political Works of James Harrington (Cambridge: 1977), xi-xviii; 1-152. cited as 'Pocock, "Intro"'.

[edit] Further Reading

[edit] External links