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    About Sir Thomas More

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    There are some writers who are chiefly interesting in themselves, and
    some whom chance and the agreement of men have picked out as symbols and
    convenient indications of some particular group or temperament of
    opinions. To the latter it is that Sir Thomas More belongs. An age and a
    type of mind have found in him and his Utopia a figurehead and a token;
    and pleasant and honourable as his personality and household present
    themselves to the modern reader, it is doubtful if they would by this
    time have retained any peculiar distinction among the many other
    contemporaries of whom we have chance glimpses in letters and suchlike
    documents, were it not that he happened to be the first man of affairs
    in England to imitate the "Republic" of Plato. By that chance it fell to
    him to give the world a noun and an adjective of abuse, "Utopian," and
    to record how under the stimulus of Plato's releasing influence the
    opening problems of our modern world presented themselves to the English
    mind of his time. For the most part the problems that exercised him are
    the problems that exercise us to-day, some of them, it may be, have
    grown up and intermarried, new ones have joined their company, but few,
    if any, have disappeared, and it is alike in his resemblances to and
    differences from the modern speculative mind that his essential interest
    lies.

    The portrait presented by contemporary mention and his own intentional
    and unintentional admissions, is of an active-minded and
    agreeable-mannered man, a hard worker, very markedly prone to quips and
    whimsical sayings and plays upon words, and aware of a double reputation
    as a man of erudition and a wit. This latter quality it was that won him
    advancement at court, and it may have been his too clearly confessed
    reluctance to play the part of an informal table jester to his king that
    laid the grounds of that deepening royal resentment that ended only with
    his execution. But he was also valued by the king for more solid merits,
    he was needed by the king, and it was more than a table scorned or a
    clash of opinion upon the validity of divorce; it was a more general
    estrangement and avoidance of service that caused that fit of regal
    petulance by which he died.

    It would seem that he began and ended his career in the orthodox
    religion and a general acquiescence in the ideas and customs of his
    time, and he played an honourable and acceptable part in that time; but
    his permanent interest lies not in his general conformity but in his
    incidental scepticism, in the fact that underlying the observances and
    recognised rules and limitations that give the texture of his life were
    the profoundest doubts, and that, stirred and disturbed by Plato, he saw
    fit to write them down.
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