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mind to it, so they never do it till they have raised the price as high as
possible. And on the same account it is that the other kinds of cattle are so
dear, because many villages being pulled down, and all country labour being
much neglected, there are none who make it their business to breed them. The
rich do not breed cattle as they do sheep, but buy them lean and at low prices;
and, after they have fattened them on their grounds, sell them again at high
rates. And I do not think that all the inconveniences this will produce are yet
observed; for, as they sell the cattle dear, so, if they are consumed faster than
the breeding countries from which they are brought can afford them, then the
stock must decrease, and this must needs end in great scarcity; and by these
means, this your island, which seemed as to this particular the happiest in the
world, will suffer much by the cursed avarice of a few persons: besides this,
the rising of corn makes all people lessen their families as much as they can;
and what can those who are dismissed by them do but either beg or rob? And
to this last a man of a great mind is much sooner drawn than to the former.
Luxury likewise breaks in apace upon you to set forward your poverty and
misery; there is an excessive vanity in apparel, and great cost in diet, and that
not only in noblemen’s families, but even among tradesmen, among the
farmers themselves, and among all ranks of persons. You have also many
infamous houses, and, besides those that are known, the taverns and ale-
houses are no better; add to these dice, cards, tables, football, tennis, and
quoits, in which money runs fast away; and those that are initiated into them
must, in the conclusion, betake themselves to robbing for a supply. Banish
these plagues, and give orders that those who have dispeopled so much soil
may either rebuild the villages they have pulled down or let out their grounds
to such as will do it; restrain those engrossings of the rich, that are as bad
almost as monopolies; leave fewer occasions to idleness; let agriculture be set
up again, and the manufacture of the wool be regulated, that so there may be
work found for those companies of idle people whom want forces to be
thieves, or who now, being idle vagabonds or useless servants, will certainly
grow thieves at last. If you do not find a remedy to these evils it is a vain
thing to boast of your severity in punishing theft, which, though it may have
the appearance of justice, yet in itself is neither just nor convenient; for if you
suffer your people to be ill-educated, and their manners to be corrupted from
their infancy, and then punish them for those crimes to which their first
education disposed them, what else is to be concluded from this but that you
first make thieves and then punish them?’
“While I was talking thus, the Counsellor, who was present, had prepared
an answer, and had resolved to resume all I had said, according to the
formality of a debate, in which things are generally repeated more faithfully
than they are answered, as if the chief trial to be made were of men’s
15
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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