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a finer thread; for, how fine soever that thread may be, it was once no better
than the fleece of a sheep, and that sheep, was a sheep still, for all its wearing
it. They wonder much to hear that gold, which in itself is so useless a thing,
should be everywhere so much esteemed that even man, for whom it was
made, and by whom it has its value, should yet be thought of less value than
this metal; that a man of lead, who has no more sense than a log of wood, and
is as bad as he is foolish, should have many wise and good men to serve him,
only because he has a great heap of that metal; and that if it should happen
that by some accident or trick of law (which, sometimes produces as great
changes as chance itself) all this wealth should pass from the master to the
meanest varlet of his whole family, he himself would very soon become one
of his servants, as if he were a thing that belonged to his wealth, and so were
bound to follow its fortune! But they much more admire and detest the folly
of those who, when they see a rich man, though they neither owe him
anything, nor are in any sort dependent on his bounty, yet, merely because he
is rich, give him little less than divine honours, even though they know him to
be so covetous and base-minded that, notwithstanding all his wealth, he will
not part with one farthing of it to them as long as he lives!
“These and such like notions have that people imbibed, partly from their
education, being bred in a country whose customs and laws are opposite to all
such foolish maxims, and partly from their learning and studies—for though
there are but few in any town that are so wholly excused from labour as to
give themselves entirely up to their studies (these being only such persons as
discover from their childhood an extraordinary capacity and disposition for
letters), yet their children and a great part of the nation, both men and women,
are taught to spend those hours in which they are not obliged to work in
reading; and this they do through the whole progress of life. They have all
their learning in their own tongue, which is both a copious and pleasant
language, and in which a man can fully express his mind; it runs over a great
tract of many countries, but it is not equally pure in all places. They had never
so much as heard of the names of any of those philosophers that are so
famous in these parts of the world, before we went among them; and yet they
had made the same discoveries as the Greeks, both in music, logic, arithmetic,
and geometry. But as they are almost in everything equal to the ancient
philosophers, so they far exceed our modern logicians for they have never yet
fallen upon the barbarous niceties that our youth are forced to learn in those
trifling logical schools that are among us. They are so far from minding
chimeras and fantastical images made in the mind that none of them could
comprehend what we meant when we talked to them of a man in the abstract
as common to all men in particular (so that though we spoke of him as a thing
that we could point at with our fingers, yet none of them could perceive him)
49
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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