The Essays of Montaigne, Volume 3Reeves and Turner, 1877 - French essays |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 61
Page 5
... keep themselves strictly to their duty by simple reason : " Utatur motu animi , qui uti ratione non potest . " All legitimate and equitable intentions are tem- perate and equable of themselves ; if otherwise , they dege- nerate into ...
... keep themselves strictly to their duty by simple reason : " Utatur motu animi , qui uti ratione non potest . " All legitimate and equitable intentions are tem- perate and equable of themselves ; if otherwise , they dege- nerate into ...
Page 6
... keeping a resident ambassador with presents at Delphos , to watch and see which way fortune would incline , and then take fit occasion to fall in with the victors . It would be a kind of treason to proceed after this manner in our own ...
... keeping a resident ambassador with presents at Delphos , to watch and see which way fortune would incline , and then take fit occasion to fall in with the victors . It would be a kind of treason to proceed after this manner in our own ...
Page 9
... keeping my back still turned to ambi- tion ; but , if not like rowers who so advance backward , yet so , at the same time , that I am less obliged to my resolution than to my good fortune , that I was not wholly embarked in it . For ...
... keeping my back still turned to ambi- tion ; but , if not like rowers who so advance backward , yet so , at the same time , that I am less obliged to my resolution than to my good fortune , that I was not wholly embarked in it . For ...
Page 19
... keep my word . For my part , when my tongue has sometimes inconsiderately said something that I did not think , I have made a conscience of disowning it : otherwise , by degrees , we shall abolish all the right another derives from our ...
... keep my word . For my part , when my tongue has sometimes inconsiderately said something that I did not think , I have made a conscience of disowning it : otherwise , by degrees , we shall abolish all the right another derives from our ...
Page 41
... keep a man's self tied and bound by necessity to one only course ; those are the bravest souls that have in them the most variety and pliancy . Of this here is an honourable testimony of the elder Cato : " Huic versatile ingenium sic ...
... keep a man's self tied and bound by necessity to one only course ; those are the bravest souls that have in them the most variety and pliancy . Of this here is an honourable testimony of the elder Cato : " Huic versatile ingenium sic ...
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
according actions Æneid Æsop affairs Alcibiades amongst appetite Aristotle beauty better betwixt body Carneades cause Cicero command common condition conscience contrary custom death desire Diogenes Laertius discourse disease Epaminondas Epicurus evil example excuse fancy Favorinus favour fear folly fools forasmuch fortune friends give hand Herodotus honour humour Idem imagination judge judgment justice king laws less liberty live Livy look Lucretius manner marriage matter means mind Montaigne nature necessity never obligation occasion opinion ordinary ourselves pain passion peradventure Plato pleased pleasure Plutarch Pompey present prince Quæs quam reason repentance Seneca sick Socrates soever sort soul speak stancy Suetonius suffer Tacitus thee things thou thoughts tion trouble truth Tusc understanding Valerius Maximus vice vigour virtue wherein whilst whoever wise withal women words worse Xenophon
Popular passages
Page 142 - Dum nova canities, dum prima et recta senectus, Dum superest Lachesi, quod torqueat, et pedibus me Porto meis, nullo dextram subeunte bacillo.
Page 185 - ... love in biting and scratching. It is not vigorous and generous enough if it be not quarrelsome ; if civilized and artificial, if it treads nicely, and fears the shock.
Page 24 - I speak truth, not so much as I would, but as much as I dare: and I dare a little the more, as I grow older; for methinks custom allows to age more liberty of prating, and more indiscretion of talking of a man's self.
Page 311 - Etenim ipsae se impellunt, ubi semel a ratione discessum est, ipsaque sibi imbecillitas indulget in altumque provehitur imprudens nee reperit locum consistendi.
Page 87 - might I have had my own will, I would not have married Wisdom herself, if she would have had me: but 'tis to much purpose to evade it, the common custom and use of life will have it so. Most of my actions are guided by example, not choice.
Page 318 - My humour is no friend to tumult ; I could appease a commotion without commotion, and chastise a disorder without being myself disorderly ; if I stand in need of anger and inflammation, I borrow it, and put it on. My manners are languid, rather faint than sharp. I do not condemn a magistrate who sleeps, provided the people under his charge sleep as well as he : the laws in that case sleep too.
Page 46 - Cecropis? omnia graece! cum sit turpe magis nostris nescire latine, hoc sermone pavent, hoc iram gaudia curas, hoc cuncta effundunt animi secreta, quid ultra?
Page 316 - Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas, Atque metus omnes, et inexorabile fatum Subjecit pedibus, strepitumque Acherontis avari.
Page 253 - I have learned, I require in married women the economical virtue above all other virtues ; I put my wife to't, as a concern of her own, leaving her, by my absence, the whole government of my affairs. I see, and am vexed to see, in several families I know, Monsieur about dinner time come home all jaded and ruffled about his affairs, when Madame is still pouncing and tricking up herself, forsooth, in her closet : this is for queens to do, and that's a question, too : 'tis ridiculous and unjust that...
Page 162 - ... tis short both in extent of time and extent of matter: Vixere fortes ante Agamemnona Multi, sed omnes illacrymabiles Urgentur, ignotique longa Nocte.