author, statesman, and scholar. More was bom in London, probably
in 1477 or 1478. He studied at Oxford. More began his career as
a lawyer in 1494, and became an undersheriff of London in 1510,
and then field various high positions. He served as Lord Chancellor,
the highest judicial official
in England, from 1529 to 1532. But
More resigned because he opposed King Henry VlII’s plan to
divorce h is queen. He was beheaded in 1535 for refusing to accept
the king as the head o f the English church. More has since become
an example ofthe individual who
places conscience above the
claims of authority. The Roman Catholic Church declared him a
saint in 1935.
More published his famous work “Utopia” at the age of thirty-
eight. It was written in Latin. “Utopia” is an account of an ideal
society, with justice and equality for all citizens. This masterpiece
gave the word “utopia” to many languages of the world. “Utopia”
is dividec. into two books.
Book I contains a conversation between More himself, the
Flemish
humanist Petrus Aegidius, and a philosophical sailor
Raphael Hythloday. Their conversation
deals with social and
economic conditions in Europe and in England.
Book li is dedicated to Hythloday’s description of the island of
Utopia (meaning Nowhere), which he visited during one of his
journeys. It is a state that has achieved absolute social and
economic harmony.
In “Ulopia” the author criticizes the social system of England.
He advances the proposal that education should be provided for
everybody, men and women. He advocates tolerance for every
form of religion. Wars and Warriors are abolished in Utopia. Kings
are also attacked in this book. More writes “The people choose
the king for their own sakes and not for his”. Many of More’s
reforms have been built into the modern world.
The book is interesting because it reflects the Renaissance, its
learning, its enthusiasm for new ideas. “Utopia” was read in Latin
by every humanist in Europe all over the continent. More became
the most shining example of the New Learning in England. He
brought the Renaissance, the modern way of thinking into English
literature. “Utopia” was famous in its contemporary days but it
still remains as a most suggestive discussion of the ailments of the
human society.
Thomas More is also well-known
in world literature for his
prose and poetry, written in English and Latin. He wrote his fine
English work “A Dialogue of Comfort Against Tribulation” while
he was in prison. His other works include “The History o f King
Richard III”, written in English in 1513 and a series of writings in
Latin in which he defended the church against Protestant attacks.
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