Seite - 6 - in Utopia
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was sent into Flanders with Cuthbert Tunstal, “whom the king’s majesty of
late, to the great rejoicing of all men, did prefer to the office of Master of the
Rolls;” how the commissioners of Charles met them at Bruges, and presently
returned to Brussels for instructions; and how More then went to Antwerp,
where he found a pleasure in the society of Peter Giles which soothed his
desire to see again his wife and children, from whom he had been four months
away. Then fact slides into fiction with the finding of Raphael Hythloday
(whose name, made of two Greek words [Greek text] and [Greek text], means
“knowing in trifles”), a man who had been with Amerigo Vespucci in the
three last of the voyages to the new world lately discovered, of which the
account had been first printed in 1507, only nine years before Utopia was
written.
Designedly fantastic in suggestion of details, “Utopia” is the work of a
scholar who had read Plato’s “Republic,” and had his fancy quickened after
reading Plutarch’s account of Spartan life under Lycurgus. Beneath the veil of
an ideal communism, into which there has been worked some witty
extravagance, there lies a noble English argument. Sometimes More puts the
case as of France when he means England. Sometimes there is ironical praise
of the good faith of Christian kings, saving the book from censure as a
political attack on the policy of Henry VIII. Erasmus wrote to a friend in 1517
that he should send for More’s “Utopia,” if he had not read it, and “wished to
see the true source of all political evils.” And to More Erasmus wrote of his
book, “A burgomaster of Antwerp is so pleased with it that he knows it all by
heart.”
H. M.
6
zurĂĽck zum
Buch Utopia"
Utopia
- Titel
- Utopia
- Autor
- Thomas Morus
- Datum
- 1516
- Sprache
- englisch
- Lizenz
- PD
- Abmessungen
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Seiten
- 86
- Schlagwörter
- Utopia, State, Religion, English
- Kategorien
- International
- Weiteres Belletristik