In the articles "Utopia: A Day In Utopia," and "The Prince," Thomas More talks about the religious tolerance practiced in Utopia. He discusses the working process and procedures, which both upper and lower class people must follow to maintain Utopia's religious beliefs. Even though the two articles, "Utopia" and "The Prince" share the same content about Utopia, each article particularly focuses on two different types of people. In the article "Utopia," it mainly explains the working process and daily routine of the lower class people, while "The Prince" focuses on the procedures and methods a prince must follow to maintain his royal reputation in Utopia. In the article "Utopia," farming is classified as a job all lower class people must do. Unlike the prince, lower class people must learn the principles of agriculture at school and occasionally get taken out to the fields to watch work being done and also do the work themselves. Besides farming, each child can do the same work as their parents or be taught a special trade of his/her own as they grow up. He/she may be trained to process wool and flax or to become a stonemason, a blacksmith, or a carpenter. Those are the only choices of careers they have to choose from. Furthermore, lower class people of Utopia have no tailor or dressmaker, so everyone wears the same kind of clothes. That is why everybody has to learn from those career choices. In addition, if a person learns one trade properly, he/she can get permission to learn another as long as it is essential to the public. With this in mind, people of Utopia have to work six hours daily. Each career has a chief business to make sure nobody sits around doing nothing and everyone gets his/her job done. In fact almost everyday and everything is scheduled for the lower class people of Utopia. For example, they have to go to bed at 8 every night and only sleep for eight hours. At their six-hour jobs, they have to work three hours