Appendix I.
The Constitution of 1791.
Title I.
Fundamental Provisions Guaranteed by the Constitution.
The Constitution guarantees as natural and civil rights:
1.That all citizens are admissible to public office and employment without any other distinction than that of virtue and talent.
2.That taxation shall be equally divided between all citizens in proportion to their means.
3.That the same crime shall be punished by the same penalty, without distinction of persons.
The Constitution guarantees, in like manner, as natural and civil rights:
The liberty of all men to move about, to remain, or to depart, only being subject to detention or arrest under the forms determined by the Constitution.
The liberty of all men to speak, to write, to print, and to publish their thoughts, without first submitting their writings to any censorship or inspection before their publication, and to exercise the religious worship to which they may be attached.
The liberty of citizens peaceably and without arms to assemble, under the police regulations.
The liberty to address individually signed petitions to the constituted authorities.
The legislative power shall not pass any law which shall prejudice, or place any obstacle in the way of the full exercise of the natural and civil rights set forth in this title, and guaranteed by the Constitution. But as liberty consists only in doing that which shall injure neither the rights of others, nor the public security, the law may establish penal-