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which I lived among them, and during which time I was so delighted with
them that indeed I should never have left them if it had not been to make the
discovery of that new world to the Europeans, you would then confess that
you had never seen a people so well constituted as they.â âYou will not easily
persuade me,â said Peter, âthat any nation in that new world is better
governed than those among us; for as our understandings are not worse than
theirs, so our government (if I mistake not) being more ancient, a long
practice has helped us to find out many conveniences of life, and some happy
chances have discovered other things to us which no manâs understanding
could ever have invented.â âAs for the antiquity either of their government or
of ours,â said he, âyou cannot pass a true judgment of it unless you had read
their histories; for, if they are to be believed, they had towns among them
before these parts were so much as inhabited; and as for those discoveries that
have been either hit on by chance or made by ingenious men, these might
have happened there as well as here. I do not deny but we are more ingenious
than they are, but they exceed us much in industry and application. They
knew little concerning us before our arrival among them. They call us all by a
general name of âThe nations that lie beyond the equinoctial line;â for their
chronicle mentions a shipwreck that was made on their coast twelve hundred
years ago, and that some Romans and Egyptians that were in the ship, getting
safe ashore, spent the rest of their days amongst them; and such was their
ingenuity that from this single opportunity they drew the advantage of
learning from those unlooked-for guests, and acquired all the useful arts that
were then among the Romans, and which were known to these shipwrecked
men; and by the hints that they gave them they themselves found out even
some of those arts which they could not fully explain, so happily did they
improve that accident of having some of our people cast upon their shore. But
if such an accident has at any time brought any from thence into Europe, we
have been so far from improving it that we do not so much as remember it, as,
in aftertimes perhaps, it will be forgot by our people that I was ever there; for
though they, from one such accident, made themselves masters of all the good
inventions that were among us, yet I believe it would be long before we
should learn or put in practice any of the good institutions that are among
them. And this is the true cause of their being better governed and living
happier than we, though we come not short of them in point of understanding
or outward advantages.â Upon this I said to him, âI earnestly beg you would
describe that island very particularly to us; be not too short, but set out in
order all things relating to their soil, their rivers, their towns, their people,
their manners, constitution, laws, and, in a word, all that you imagine we
desire to know; and you may well imagine that we desire to know everything
concerning them of which we are hitherto ignorant.â âI will do it very
willingly,â said he, âfor I have digested the whole matter carefully, but it will
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zurĂŒck 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