Part 23 (2/2)

The fundamental principle of life he finds is to live. ”The glorious masterpiece of man is to live to the repulse.... All other things--as to reigne, to governe, to h.o.a.rd up treasure, to thrive, and to build--are for the most part but appendixes and supports thereunto ... it is for base and petty minds, dulled and overwhelmed with the weight of affaires, to be ignorant how to leave them, and not to know how to free themselves from them, nor how to leave and take them againe.... There is nothing so goodly, so faire, and so lawfull, as to play the man well and duely: nor science so hard and difficult as to know how to live this life well.... There is a kinde of husbandry in knowing how to enjoy it.

I enjoy it double to others.” And he concludes the book by praising this our mortal life, ”corporall voluptuousness” as well as that of the mind....

To anyone coming to Montaigne for the first time I would recommend this last essay, _Of Experience_, to be read first. He reveals himself more there than anywhere, and it is the details of his life, his likes and dislikes, that attract us most of all in this ”well-meaning booke.”

It is time to turn back to volume one. The essays here are shorter--fifty-seven in number, as against thirteen in the third volume.

They are as full of quaint conceits, quotations and anecdotes from the cla.s.sics, but not quite so full of himself. ”There is no man living,” he says in an essay _Of Liars_, ”whom it may lesse beseeme to speake of memorie, than my selfe, for to say truth, I have none at all.” Ten chapters later on he muses on the imminence of death: ”A man should ever, as much as in him lieth, be ready booted to take his journey, and above all things, looke he have then nothing to doe but with himselfe.”

Consequently he finds himself thinking of sudden death even in the transport of love: he writes things down at once lest he should die before he comes again to his writing-tables. ”The deadest deaths are the best.” ... ”I would have a man to be doing, and to prolong his lives offices as much as lieth in him, and let death seize upon me whilest I am setting my cabiges, carelesse of her dart, but more of my unperfect garden.” There are few things that so constantly occupy Montaigne's mind more than death. ”Life in itselfe is neither good nor evill: it is the place of good or evill, according as you prepare it for them. And if you have lived one day, you have seene all: one day is equal to all other daies.... The profit of life consists not in the s.p.a.ce, but rather in the use.... I imagine truly how much an ever-during life would be lesse tolerable and more painfull to a man, than is the life which I have given him.... Neither to fly from life nor to run to death I have tempered both the one and other betweene sweetnes and sourenes.”

Some of his wisest remarks are to be found in his essay, _Of Pedantisme_: ”We should rather enquire who is better wise than who is more wise ... even as birds flutter and skip from field to field to pecke up corne ... and without tasting the same, carrie it in their bils, therewith to feed their little ones; so doe our pedants gleane and pick learning from bookes, and never lodge it farther than their lips ... we take the opinions and knowledge of others into our protection....

I tell you they must be enfeoffed in us, and made our owne ... what avails it to have our bellies full of meat, if it be not digested?...

Except our mind be the better, unless our judgement be the sounder, I had rather my scholler had imployed his time in playing at tennis; I am sure his bodie would be the nimbler. See but one of these our universitie men returne from schole ... who is so inapt for any matter?

who so unfit for any companie? who so to seeke if he come into the world? all the advantage you discover in him is that his Latine and Greeke have made him more sottish, more stupid, and more presumptuous, than before he went from home. Whereas he should return with a mind full-fraught, he returnes with a wind-puft conceit; instead of plum-feeding the same, he has only spunged it up with varietie.”

Montaigne has very little use for such ”flim-flam tales” as the succession of kings and ”the first preter perfect tense of [Greek: tupt?]”: ”I find Rome to have beene most valiant when it was least learned.”

He acknowledges that he himself has ”a smacke of everything in generall, but nothing to the purpose in particular.” ”The good that comes of studie is to prove better, wiser and honester ... a mere bookish sufficiencie is unpleasant--among the liberall sciences, let us begin with that which makes us free ... remove these thornie quiddities of logike, whereby our life can no whit be amended, and betake ourselves to the simple discourses of Philosophy ... all sports and exercises shall be a part of study; running, wrestling, musicke, dancing, hunting, and managing of armes and horses ... it is not a mind, it is not a body that we erect, but it is a man, and we must not make two parts of him.” He hates severity of discipline in education, and would see ”pictures of Gladness and Joy, of Flora and of the Graces to be set up round about the school-house.” He derides the waste of time spent on grammar and logic: ”It is a naturall, simple, and unaffected speech that I love, so written as it is spoken, and such upon the paper, as it is in the mouth, a pithie, sinnowie, full, strong, compendious and materiall speech, not so delicate and affected as vehement and piercing.... I must needs acknowledge that the Greeke and Latine tongues are great ornaments in a gentleman, but they are purchased at over-high a rate,” yet he himself has nothing but praise for Ovid, Virgil and the rest, and calls the Arthurian romances ”wit-besotting trash.”

His essay _Of Friends.h.i.+p_ contains much that is self-revelatory: ”I am nothing inquisitive whether a Lackey be chaste or no, but whether he be diligent ... I feare not a hot swearing Cooke, as one that is ignorant and unskilfull ... in bed I prefer beauty than goodnesse.” He returns to the subject of moderation in this volume and, as we might expect, limits his discussion to moderation in the pa.s.sion of love: ”The love we beare to women is very lawful: yet doth Divinitie bridle and restraine the same.” ... ”A man that is able may have wives, children, goods, and chiefly health, but not so tie himselfe unto them that his felicitie depend on them. We should reserve a storehouse for our selves ...

altogether ours, and wholly free ... the greatest thing of the world is for a man to know how to be his owne.” In _A Consideration upon Cicero_ he returns to himself: ”I deadly hate to heare a flatterer ... I ever write my letters in past-hast ... I commonly begin without project: the first word begets the second ... there is no accident woundeth men deeper, or goeth so neere the heart as the losse of children ... there is nothing I hate more than driving of bargaines ... to have more meanes of expences is ever to have increase of sorrow ... in the third stage of my life I measure my garment according to my cloth, and let my expenses goe together with my comming in ... I live from hand to mouth ... a straight oare, being under water seemeth to be crooked. It is no matter to see a thing, but the matter is how a man doth see the same ... it is the enjoying, and not the possessing that makes us happy. He that cannot stay till he be thirsty, can take no pleasure in drinking.”

One of his most delicious confessions occurs in his essay _Of Smels and Odors_: ”As for me in particular, my mostachoes, which are verie thick, serve me for that purpose. Let me but approach my gloves or my hand-kercher to them, their smell will sticke upon them a whole day.

They manifest the place I came from. The close-smacking, sweetnesse-moving, love-alluring, and greedie-smirking kisses of youth, were heretofore wont to sticke on them many houres after.... The princ.i.p.all care I take is to avoid and be far from all manner of filthy, foggy, ill-savouring and unwholesome aires.” So much for the first volume.

We now come finally to the second, the longest, containing thirty-seven essays of varying length. He begins with a delightful essay on _Inconstancy_. ”There is nothing I so hardly beleeve to be in man as constancie, and nothing so easy to be found in him as inconstancy”--and in woman he expects never to find faithfulness. Of himself he writes as I quoted before: ”All contrarities are found in me, according to some turne or removing, and in some fas.h.i.+on or other.”

In his second essay he denounces drunkenness: ”Other vices but alter and distract the understanding, whereas this utterly subverteth the same, and astonieth the body ... my taste, my rellish, and my complexion are sharper enemies unto this vice than my discourse, for besides that I captivate more easily my conceits under the auctoritie of ancient opinions, indeede I finde it to be a fond, a stupid, and a base kinde of vice, but lesse malicious and hurtfull than others; all which shocke and with a sharper edge wound publike societie. And if we cannot give ourselves any pleasure except it cost us something; I finde this vice to be lesse chargeable unto our conscience than others: besides it is not hard to be prepared, difficult to be found ... sobrietie serveth to make us more jolly-quaint, l.u.s.ty, and wanton for the exercise of love matters.” He diverges from the point to talk about his father (a favourite topic with him), who at the age of sixty seldom ascended ”any staires without skipping three or four steps at once.” ”But come we to our drinking againe ... let none bestow the day in drinking, as the time that is due unto more serious negotiations, nor the nights wherein a man intendeth to get children.”

In the essay, _To-morrow is a New Day_ (most fascinating of all his t.i.tles), he tells us: ”Never was man lesse inquisitive, or pryed lesse into other mens affaires than I.” In _Of Exercise or Practice_ he returns to the subject of death. ”Let me be under a roofe, in a good chamber, warme-clad, and well at ease, in some tempestuous and stormy night. I am exceedingly perplexed and much grieved for such as are abroad and have no shelter. But let me be in the storme myselfe I doe not so much as desire to be else-where.... I am in good hope the like will happen to me of death: and that it is not worth the labour I take for so many preparations as I prepare against her ... for a man to acquaint himselfe with death, I finde no better way than to approach unto it.”

_Of the Affections of Fathers to their Children_ leads him to ”utterly condemne all manner of violence in the education of a young spirit, brought up to honour and libertie ... if it lay in my power to make my selfe feared, I had rather make my selfe beloved.” But with regard to children generally ”I wot not well, whether my selfe should not much rather desire to beget and produce a perfectly-well-shaped and excellently-qualified infant, by the acquaintance of the Muses than by the acquaintance of my wife.... There are few men given unto Poesie that would not esteeme it for a greater honour to be the father of Virgils Aeneidos than of the goodliest boy in Rome and that would not rather endure the losse of the one than the peris.h.i.+ng of the other.... Nay, I make a great question whether Phidias would as highly esteeme and dearely love the preservation and successfull continuance of his naturall children, as he would an exquisite and matchlesse-wrought Image, that with long study and diligent care he had perfected according unto art.”

In chapter ten, _Of Bookes_, he comes back yet again to his own writing: ”Let that which I borrow be survaied, and then tell me whether I have made good choice of ornaments to beautifie and set forth the invention which ever comes from mee ... I number not my borrowings, but weight them ... my intention is to pa.s.se the remainder of my life quietly and not laboriously, in rest and not in care. There is nothing I will trouble or vex myself about, no not for science it selfe, what esteeme soever it be of ... if I studie, I only endevour to find out the knowledge that teacheth or handleth the knowledge of my selfe, and which may instruct me how to die well and how to live well.... I doe nothing without blithnesse ... if one booke seeme tedious unto me I take another, which I follow not with any earnestnesse, except it be at such houres as I am idle, or that I am weary with doing nothing. I am not greatly affected to new books, because ancient Authors are, in my judgement, more full and pithy.... I esteeme Bocace his Decameron and Rabelais worth the paines-taking to reade them.... I speake my minde freely of all things.” He goes on to indulge in panegyrics of the cla.s.sics, specially his beloved ”Plutarke,” who is ”everywhere free and open hearted ... stuft with matters.” ... ”I am wonderfull curious to discover and know the minde, the soul, the genuine disposition and naturall judgement of my authors.” He objects to the ”remisse niceness”

of Cicero. ”Concerning his eloquence,” however, ”it is beyond all comparison, and I verily beleeve that none shall ever equall it.”

”Historians are my right hand, for they are pleasant and easie ... they ammuse and busie themselves more about counsels than events ... they are fittest for me; and that's the reason why Plutarke above all in that kinde doth best please me.” ”The subject of an historie should be naked, bare and formelesse.... I have a while since accustomed my selfe to note at the end of my booke the time I made an end to read it, and to set downe what censure or judgement I gave of it.”

Chapter eleven, _Of Crueltie_, contains this typical bit of common sense: ”Amongst all other vices, there is none I hate more than Crueltie.... I cannot well endure a seelie dew bedabled hare to groane when she is seized upon by the houndes, although hunting be a violent pleasure ... I seldom take any beast alive but I give him his libertie.”

But he well realises that ”Nature hath of her own selfe added unto man a certaine instinct to inhumanitie.”

He has a wonderful chapter on the habits of animals, and comes to this conclusion: ”Touching trust and faithfulnesse, there is no creature in the world so trecherous as man ... as for warre, which is the greatest and most glorious of all humane actions ... it seemeth it hath not much to make itselfe to be wished for in beasts.... We have not much more need of offices, of rules, and lawes how to live in our common-wealth than the cranes and ants have in theirs. Which notwithstanding, we see how orderly and without instruction they maintaine themselves.” It is in this very long chapter that he dives most deeply into philosophy. ”To a pensive and heart-grieved man a cleare day seemes gloomie and duskie.

Our senses are not only altered, but many times dulled, by the pa.s.sions of the mind.... Those which have compared our life unto a dreame, have happily had more reason so to doe than they were aware. When we dreame, our soule liveth, worketh and exerciseth all her faculties, even and as much as when it waketh ... we wake sleeping, and sleep waking.” In the chapter ent.i.tled _That our Desires are encreased by Difficultie_ we read: ”To forbid us anything is the ready way to make us long for it ...

that which so long held mariages in honour and safety in Rome was the liberty to break them who list. They kept their wives the better, forsomuch as they might leave them: and when divorces might freely be had, there past five hundred years and more before any would ever make use of them.” In the essay _Of Presumption_ we hear yet more of his idiosyncrasies: ”As for musicke, were it either in voice, which I have most harsh, and very unapt, or in instruments, I could never be taught any part of it. As for dancing, playing at tennis, or wrestling, I could never attaine to any indifferent sufficiencie, but none at all in swimming, in fencing, in vaulting, or in leaping. My hands are so stiffe and nummie, that I can hardly write for my selfe, so that what I have once scribled, I had rather frame it a new than take the paines to correct it: and I reade but little better ... I cannot very wel close up a letter, nor could I ever make a pen. I was never good carver at the table. I could never make ready nor arme a horse; nor handsomely array a hawke upon my fist, nor cast her off ... nor could I ever speake to dogges, to birds, or to horses. The conditions of my body are, in fine, very well agreeing with those of my minde, wherein is nothing lively, but onely a compleate and constant vigour.... I am extreamlie lazie and idle, and exceedingly free, both my nature and art. I would as willingly lend my blood as my care.” A n.o.ble and amazing confession. ”In events, I carry myselfe man-like; in the conduct childishly. The horror of a fall doth more hurt me than the blow. The play is not worth the candle ...

touching this new-found vertue of faining and dissimulation, which is now so much in credit, I hate it to the death ... it is for free-men to speake truth. It is the chief and fundamentall part of Vertue.... I eschew commandement, duty, and compulsion. What I doe easily and naturally, if I resolve to doe it by expresse and prescribed appointment, I can then doe it no more.... I helpe myselfe to loose what I particularly locke up.... In games wherein wit may beare a part, as of chesse, of cards, of tables ... I could never conceive but the common and plainest draughts. My apprehension is very sluggish and gloomy; but what it once holdeth, the same it keepeth fast.... There are divers of our French coines I know not: nor can I distinguish of one graine from another: nor do I scarcely know the difference between the cabige or lettice in my garden. I understand not the names of the most usuall tooles about husbandry ... I was never skilfull in mechanicall arts ...

nor in the diversitie and nature of fruits, wines, or cakes ... let me have all that may belong to a kitchin, yet shall I be ready to starve for hunger.”

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