Sir Thomas More, or, Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 138 pages of information about Sir Thomas More, or, Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society.

Sir Thomas More, or, Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 138 pages of information about Sir Thomas More, or, Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society.
was revealed when man was assured of judgment after death, and the means of salvation were afforded him.  I neither come to discover secret things nor hidden treasures; but to discourse with you concerning these portentous and monster-breeding times; for it is your lot, as it was mine, to live during one of the grand climacterics of the world.  And I come to you, rather than to any other person, because you have been led to meditate upon the corresponding changes whereby your age and mine are distinguished; and because, notwithstanding many discrepancies and some dispathies between us (speaking of myself as I was, and as you know me), there are certain points of sympathy and resemblance which bring us into contact, and enable us at once to understand each other.

Montesinos.—­Et in Utopia ego.

Sir Thomas More.—­You apprehend me.  We have both speculated in the joys and freedom of our youth upon the possible improvement of society; and both in like manner have lived to dread with reason the effects of that restless spirit which, like the Titaness Mutability described by your immortal master, insults heaven and disturbs the earth.  By comparing the great operating causes in the age of the Reformation, and in this age of revolutions, going back to the former age, looking at things as I then beheld them, perceiving wherein I judged rightly, and wherein I erred, and tracing the progress of those causes which are now developing their whole tremendous power, you will derive instruction, which you are a fit person to receive and communicate; for without being solicitous concerning present effect, you are contented to cast your bread upon the waters.  You are now acquainted with me and my intention.  To-morrow you will see me again; and I shall continue to visit you occasionally as opportunity may serve.  Meantime say nothing of what has passed—­not even to your wife.  She might not like the thoughts of a ghostly visitor:  and the reputation of conversing with the dead might be almost as inconvenient as that of dealing with the devil.  For the present, then, farewell!  I will never startle you with too sudden an apparition; but you may learn to behold my disappearance without alarm.

I was not able to behold it without emotion, although he had thus prepared me; for the sentence was no sooner completed than he was gone.  Instead of rising from the chair he vanished from it.  I know not to what the instantaneous disappearance can be likened.  Not to the dissolution of a rainbow, because the colours of the rainbow fade gradually till they are lost; not to the flash of cannon, or to lightning, for these things are gone as so on as they are come, and it is known that the instant of their appearance must be that of their departure; not to a bubble upon the water, for you see it burst; not to the sudden extinction of a light, for that is either succeeded by darkness or leaves a different hue upon the surrounding objects.  In the same indivisible point of time

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Sir Thomas More, or, Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.