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when public judicatories are swayed, either by avarice or partial affections,
there must follow a dissolution of justice, the chief sinew of society.
“The Utopians call those nations that come and ask magistrates from them
Neighbours; but those to whom they have been of more particular service,
Friends; and as all other nations are perpetually either making leagues or
breaking them, they never enter into an alliance with any state. They think
leagues are useless things, and believe that if the common ties of humanity do
not knit men together, the faith of promises will have no great effect; and they
are the more confirmed in this by what they see among the nations round
about them, who are no strict observers of leagues and treaties. We know how
religiously they are observed in Europe, more particularly where the Christian
doctrine is received, among whom they are sacred and inviolable! which is
partly owing to the justice and goodness of the princes themselves, and partly
to the reverence they pay to the popes, who, as they are the most religious
observers of their own promises, so they exhort all other princes to perform
theirs, and, when fainter methods do not prevail, they compel them to it by the
severity of the pastoral censure, and think that it would be the most indecent
thing possible if men who are particularly distinguished by the title of ‘The
Faithful’ should not religiously keep the faith of their treaties. But in that new-
found world, which is not more distant from us in situation than the people
are in their manners and course of life, there is no trusting to leagues, even
though they were made with all the pomp of the most sacred ceremonies; on
the contrary, they are on this account the sooner broken, some slight pretence
being found in the words of the treaties, which are purposely couched in such
ambiguous terms that they can never be so strictly bound but they will always
find some loophole to escape at, and thus they break both their leagues and
their faith; and this is done with such impudence, that those very men who
value themselves on having suggested these expedients to their princes would,
with a haughty scorn, declaim against such craft; or, to speak plainer, such
fraud and deceit, if they found private men make use of it in their bargains,
and would readily say that they deserved to be hanged.
“By this means it is that all sort of justice passes in the world for a low-
spirited and vulgar virtue, far below the dignity of royal greatness—or at least
there are set up two sorts of justice; the one is mean and creeps on the ground,
and, therefore, becomes none but the lower part of mankind, and so must be
kept in severely by many restraints, that it may not break out beyond the
bounds that are set to it; the other is the peculiar virtue of princes, which, as it
is more majestic than that which becomes the rabble, so takes a freer
compass, and thus lawful and unlawful are only measured by pleasure and
interest. These practices of the princes that lie about Utopia, who make so
little account of their faith, seem to be the reasons that determine them to
65
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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