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On State
Controlled Marriage
by Tommaso Campanella
The race is managed for the good of the
commonwealth, and not of private individuals, and
the magistrates must be obeyed. They deny what we
hold -- viz., that it is natural to man to
recognize his offspring and to educate them, and to
use his wife and house and children as his own. For
they say that children are bred for the
preservation of the species and not for individual
pleasure, as St. Thomas also asserts. Therefore the
breeding of children has reference to the
commonwealth, and not to individuals, except in so
far as they are constituents of the commonwealth.
And since individuals for the most part bring forth
children wrongly and educate them wrongly, they
consider that they remove destruction from the
State, and therefore for this reason, with most
sacred fear, they commit the education of the
children, who, as it were, are the element of the
republic, to the care of magistrates; for the
safety of the community is not that of a few. And
thus they distribute male and female breeders of
the best natures according to philosophical rules.
Plato thinks that this distribution ought to be
made by lot, lest some men seeing that they are
kept away from the beautiful women, should rise up
with anger and hatred against the magistrates; and
he thinks further that those who do not deserve
cohabitation with the more beautiful women, should
be deceived while the lots are being led out of the
city by the magistrates, so that at all times the
women who are suitable should fall to their lot,
not those whom they desire.
This shrewdness, however, is not necessary among
the inhabitants of the City of the Sun. For with
them deformity is unknown. When the women are
exercised they get a clear complexion, and become
strong of limb, tall and agile, and with them
beauty consists in tallness and strength.
Therefore, if any woman dyes her face, so that it
may become beautiful, or used high-heeled boots so
that she may appear tall, or garments with trains
to cover her wooden shoes, she is condemned to
capital punishment. But if the women should even
desire them, they have no facility for doing these
things. For who indeed would give them this
facility? Further, they assert that among us abuses
of this kind arise from the leisure and sloth of
women. By these means they lose their color and
have pale complexions, and become feeble and small.
For this reason they are without proper
complexions, use high sandals, and become beautiful
not from strength, but from slothful tenderness.
And thus they ruin their own tempers and natures,
and consequently those of their offspring.
Furthermore, if at any time a man is taken captive
with ardent love for a certain woman, the two are
allowed to converse and joke together, and to give
one another garlands of flowers or leaves, and to
make verses. But if the race is endangered, by no
means is further union between them permitted.
Moreover, the love born of eager desire is not
known among them; only that born of friendship.
Excerpted from The City of
the Sun in Total Commonwealths, by Tommaso
Campanella
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LA
Citt`a Del Sole: Dialogo Poetico - the City of the
Sun: A Poetical Dialogue, by Tommaso
Campanella
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