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profitable employments, and if all they that languish out their lives in sloth
and idleness (every one of whom consumes as much as any two of the men
that are at work) were forced to labour, you may easily imagine that a small
proportion of time would serve for doing all that is either necessary,
profitable, or pleasant to mankind, especially while pleasure is kept within its
due bounds: this appears very plainly in Utopia; for there, in a great city, and
in all the territory that lies round it, you can scarce find five hundred, either
men or women, by their age and strength capable of labour, that are not
engaged in it. Even the Syphogrants, though excused by the law, yet do not
excuse themselves, but work, that by their examples they may excite the
industry of the rest of the people; the like exemption is allowed to those who,
being recommended to the people by the priests, are, by the secret suffrages
of the Syphogrants, privileged from labour, that they may apply themselves
wholly to study; and if any of these fall short of those hopes that they seemed
at first to give, they are obliged to return to work; and sometimes a mechanic
that so employs his leisure hours as to make a considerable advancement in
learning is eased from being a tradesman and ranked among their learned
men. Out of these they choose their ambassadors, their priests, their
Tranibors, and the Prince himself, anciently called their Barzenes, but is
called of late their Ademus.
โAnd thus from the great numbers among them that are neither suffered to
be idle nor to be employed in any fruitless labour, you may easily make the
estimate how much may be done in those few hours in which they are obliged
to labour. But, besides all that has been already said, it is to be considered that
the needful arts among them are managed with less labour than anywhere
else. The building or the repairing of houses among us employ many hands,
because often a thriftless heir suffers a house that his father built to fall into
decay, so that his successor must, at a great cost, repair that which he might
have kept up with a small charge; it frequently happens that the same house
which one person built at a vast expense is neglected by another, who thinks
he has a more delicate sense of the beauties of architecture, and he, suffering
it to fall to ruin, builds another at no less charge. But among the Utopians all
things are so regulated that men very seldom build upon a new piece of
ground, and are not only very quick in repairing their houses, but show their
foresight in preventing their decay, so that their buildings are preserved very
long with but very little labour, and thus the builders, to whom that care
belongs, are often without employment, except the hewing of timber and the
squaring of stones, that the materials may be in readiness for raising a
building very suddenly when there is any occasion for it. As to their clothes,
observe how little work is spent in them; while they are at labour they are
clothed with leather and skins, cut carelessly about them, which will last
39
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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