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employed. And it seems very unreasonable that, for the prospect of a war,
which you need never have but when you please, you should maintain so
many idle men, as will always disturb you in time of peace, which is ever to
be more considered than war. But I do not think that this necessity of stealing
arises only from hence; there is another cause of it, more peculiar to England.’
‘What is that?’ said the Cardinal: ‘The increase of pasture,’ said I, ‘by which
your sheep, which are naturally mild, and easily kept in order, may be said
now to devour men and unpeople, not only villages, but towns; for wherever
it is found that the sheep of any soil yield a softer and richer wool than
ordinary, there the nobility and gentry, and even those holy men, the dobots!
not contented with the old rents which their farms yielded, nor thinking it
enough that they, living at their ease, do no good to the public, resolve to do it
hurt instead of good. They stop the course of agriculture, destroying houses
and towns, reserving only the churches, and enclose grounds that they may
lodge their sheep in them. As if forests and parks had swallowed up too little
of the land, those worthy countrymen turn the best inhabited places into
solitudes; for when an insatiable wretch, who is a plague to his country,
resolves to enclose many thousand acres of ground, the owners, as well as
tenants, are turned out of their possessions by trick or by main force, or, being
wearied out by ill usage, they are forced to sell them; by which means those
miserable people, both men and women, married and unmarried, old and
young, with their poor but numerous families (since country business requires
many hands), are all forced to change their seats, not knowing whither to go;
and they must sell, almost for nothing, their household stuff, which could not
bring them much money, even though they might stay for a buyer. When that
little money is at an end (for it will be soon spent), what is left for them to do
but either to steal, and so to be hanged (God knows how justly!), or to go
about and beg? and if they do this they are put in prison as idle vagabonds,
while they would willingly work but can find none that will hire them; for
there is no more occasion for country labour, to which they have been bred,
when there is no arable ground left. One shepherd can look after a flock,
which will stock an extent of ground that would require many hands if it were
to be ploughed and reaped. This, likewise, in many places raises the price of
corn. The price of wool is also so risen that the poor people, who were wont
to make cloth, are no more able to buy it; and this, likewise, makes many of
them idle: for since the increase of pasture God has punished the avarice of
the owners by a rot among the sheep, which has destroyed vast numbers of
them—to us it might have seemed more just had it fell on the owners
themselves. But, suppose the sheep should increase ever so much, their price
is not likely to fall; since, though they cannot be called a monopoly, because
they are not engrossed by one person, yet they are in so few hands, and these
are so rich, that, as they are not pressed to sell them sooner than they have a
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book Utopia"
Utopia
- Title
- Utopia
- Author
- Thomas Morus
- Date
- 1516
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 86
- Keywords
- Utopia, State, Religion, English
- Categories
- International
- Weiteres Belletristik