Utopia (Burnet translation)

Utopia (Burnet translation)

by Thomas More

12 chapters3h 53mEnglish1516

About this book

This book is all about the fictional country called Utopia. It is a country with an ‘ideal’ form of communism, in which everything really does belong to everybody, everyone does the work they want to, and everyone is alright with that. This country uses gold for chamber pots and prison chains, pearls and diamonds for children’s playthings, and requires that a man and a woman see each other exactly as they are, naked, before getting married. This book gave the word 'utopia' the meaning of a perfect society, while the Greek word actually means ‘no place’. Enjoy listening to this story about a country that really is too good to be true. (Summary by Jenilee.) This is the 17th century translation by Gilbert Burnet, edited in the 19th century by Henry Morley.

Chapters (11)

1Discourses of Raphael Hythloday, of the Best State of a Commonwealth
1614
2Discourses (pt 2)
1693
3Discourses (pt 3)
1185
4Of Their Towns, Particularly of Amaurot
327
5Of Their Magistrates
190
6Of Their Trades, and Manner of Life
610
7Of Their Traffic
689
8Of the Travelling of the Utopians
2585
9Of Their Slaves, and Of Their Marriages
1166
10Of Their Military Discipline
1201
11Of the Religions of the Utopians
2263

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