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December 28, 12:01 AM, 2007 · No Comment · Previous · Next  

More on the Lawyerless Utopia

[Image]
Sir Thomas More, saint and martyr, wearing the chain of office of Lord Chancellor, oil portrait by Hans Holbein the Younger (1527)

They have no lawyers among them, for they consider them as a sort of people whose profession it is to disguise matters and to wrest the laws, and, therefore, they think it is much better that every man should plead his own cause, and trust it to the judge, as in other places the client trusts it to a counsellor; by this means they both cut off many delays and find out truth more certainly; for after the parties have laid open the merits of the cause, without those artifices which lawyers are apt to suggest, the judge examines the whole matter, and supports the simplicity of such well-meaning persons, whom otherwise crafty men would be sure to run down; and thus they avoid those evils which appear very remarkably among all those nations that labour under a vast load of laws.

Thomas More, Utopia, “Of their Slaves and of their Marriages” (1516)

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