REVIEWS
Patriarcha and other political writings of Sir Robert Filmer. Edited by
Peter Laslett. Blackwell, Oxford, 1949, pp. 326, 12s. 6d.
Sm ROBERT FILM.ER, the eldest son of Sir Edward Filmer, was born
in or about the year 1588 at East Sutton Park, where he spent the
greater part of his life, succeeding to his father's estate in 1629, and
dying there in 1653. To Kent people the name Filmer is well known,
and the family connection with East Sutton lasted until the twentieth
century. To others the name, if known at all, is known as that of
the author against whom Locke wrote his First Treatise on Government,
wherein "the false principles and foundation of Sir Robert Filmer and
his followers are detected and overthrown." The number of people
who have read Locke's or Sidney's refutation of Filmerism vastly
exceeds the number of those who have any first-hand acquaintance
with Filmer's own work. Patriarcha, his major work, was published
posthumously in 1680 and republished in 1685, but not again until
1884, and then in an unsatisfactory edition. This new edition, which
Mr. Laslett has prepared with careful but by no means laboured
scholarship is from a previously unknown manuscript which he
discovered at East Sutton Park in 1939. Its publication was certainly
needed to fill a lacuna in seventeenth century English political writing.
Filmer, like other country gentlemen of the first half of the seventeenth
century-including his friend Sir Roger Twysden-was exercised
about problems of government. He was a Royalist, although not
active in the Civil War. His treatise, Patria1·cha, which was designed
to show the absolute nature of monarchy, based on the proposition of
descent from Adam, the first King, was written in 1630, but it was not
until 1680, at the time of the Exclusion Bill debate, that the new Tory
party, being in need of a statement of political philosophy, revived
Filmer's work, and it a-ppeared for the first time in print. Locke, in
his answer, had little difficulty in disposing of the positive part of
Filmer's doctrine, but he failed to meet Filmer's criticisms of the
"social contract" theory, and indeed Locke's account "Of the
Beginning of Political Societies " contains matter that is scarcely less
fantastic than the views for which Filmer argued. His argument is
utterly strange to twentieth century ways of thought, but Filmer does
not deserve the reputation for stupidity that has been put upon him
by subsequent refuters, of whom, as Mr. Laslett says," none, or almost
none . . . have known exactly who Sir Robert Filmer was, when he
lived, what he did, and what he wrote." At last he has been fixed in
his historical context.
153
REVIEWS
This volume contains also several other of Sir Robert Filmer's
writings, including his Observations on Aristotle's Politics, on Hobbes'
Leviathan, and on Grotius' De Jure Belli et Pacis. Mr. Laslett's
Introduction is well worth the attention of anyone_ interested in
seventeenth century Kent, whether or not he is particularly concerned
with contemporary political argument. Filmer was not a great thinker,
nor perhaps a particularly attractive character, but we are indebted
to Mr. Laslett for rescuing him from the unjust contempt and obscurity
beneath which he has been buried for nearly three centuries.
FRANK JESSUP.
Survey and Policy of Field Re.search in tlie Arch
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