Page:A discourse upon the origin and foundation of the inequality among mankind (IA discourseuponori00rous).pdf/242

 can expel him, they may do it without his having the leat Right to complain of their uing him ill. The Inurrection, which ends in the Death or Depoition of a Sultan, is as juridical an Act as any by which the Day before he dipoed of the Lives and Fortunes of his Subjects. Force alone upheld him, Force alone overturns him. Thus all things take place and ucceed in their natural Order; and whatever may be the uphot of thee haty and frequent Revolutions, no one Man has reaon to complain of another's Injutice, but only of his own Indicretion or bad Fortune.

By thus dicovering and following the lot and forgotten Tracks, by which Man from the natural mut have arrived at the civil State; by retoring, with the intermediate Poitions which I have been jut indicating, thoe which want of Leiure obliges me to uppres, or