Essays. Michel de Montaigne

Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу Essays - Michel de Montaigne страница 23

Essays - Michel de Montaigne

Скачать книгу

monstrous humours, though I lost two or three at nurse, if not without grief, at least without repining, and yet there is hardly any accident that pierces nearer to the quick. I see a great many other occasions of sorrow, that should they happen to me I should hardly feel; and have despised some, when they have befallen me, to which the world has given so terrible a figure that I should blush to boast of my constancy:

       Ex quo intelligitur, non in natura, sed in opinione,

       esse aegritudinem.

      [By which one may understand that grief is not in nature, but in opinion.

      —Cicero, Tusculum Disputations., iii. 28.]

       Ferox gens, nullam vitam rati sine armis esse.

      [A fierce people, who thought there was no life without war.

      —Livy, xxxiv. 17.]

      How many do we know who have forsaken the calm and sweetness of a quiet life at home amongst their acquaintance, to seek out the horror of unhabitable deserts; and having precipitated themselves into so abject a condition as to become the scorn and contempt of the world, have hugged themselves with the conceit, even to affectation. Cardinal Borromeo, who died lately at Milan, amidst all the jollity that the air of Italy, his youth, birth, and great riches, invited him to, kept himself in so austere a way of living, that the same robe he wore in summer served him for winter too; he had only straw for his bed, and his hours of leisure from affairs he continually spent in study upon his knees, having a little bread and a glass of water set by his book, which was all the provision of his repast, and all the time he spent in eating.

      I know some who consentingly have acquired both profit and advancement from cuckoldom, of which the bare name only affrights so many people.

      That our opinion gives the value to things is very manifest in the great number of those which we do, not so much prizing them, as ourselves, and never considering either their virtues or their use, but only how dear they cost us, as though that were a part of their substance; and we only repute for value in them, not what they bring to us, but what we add to them. By which I understand that we are great economisers of our expense: as it weighs, it serves for so much as it weighs. Our opinion will never suffer it to want of its value: the price gives value to the diamond; difficulty to virtue; suffering to devotion; and griping to physic. A certain person, to be poor, threw his crowns into the same sea to which so many come, in all parts of the world, to fish for riches. Epicurus says that to be rich is no relief, but only an alteration, of affairs. In truth, it is not want, but rather abundance, that creates avarice. I will deliver my own experience concerning this affair.

       Tot per impotentia freta.

      [Through so many ungovernable seas.

      —Catullus, iv. 18.]

       Fortuna vitrea est: turn, quumsplendet, frangitur.

      [Fortune is glass: in its greatest brightness it breaks.

      —Ex Mim. Publilius Syrus.]

      and to turn all our barricadoes and bulwarks topsy-turvy, I find that, by divers causes, indigence is as frequently seen to inhabit with those who have estates as with those that have none; and that, peradventure, it is then far less grievous when alone than when accompanied with riches. These flow more from good management than from revenue;

       Faber est suae quisque fortunae.

      [Everyone is the maker of his own fortune.

      —Sallust, De Repub. Ord., i. I.]

      and an uneasy, necessitous, busy, rich man seems to me more miserable than he that is simply poor.

       In divitiis mopes, quod genus egestatis gravissimum est.

      [Poor in the midst of riches, which

Скачать книгу