Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"Is it that we pretend to a reformation? Truly, no: but it may be we are more addicted to Venus than our fathers were. They are two exercises that thwart and hinder one another in their vigor. Lechery weakens our stomach on the one side; and on the other sobriety renders us more spruce and amorous for the exercise of love."
54 Quotes
"Is it that we pretend to a reformation? Truly, no: but it may be we are more addicted to Venus than our fathers were. They are two exercises that thwart and hinder one another in their vigor. Lechery weakens our stomach on the one side; and on the other sobriety renders us more spruce and amorous for the exercise of love."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"The natural heat, say the good-fellows,first seats itself in the feet: that concerns infancy; thence it mounts into the middleregion, where it makes a long abode and produces, in my opinion, the sole true pleasures of human life; all other pleasures in comparison sleep; towards the end, like a vapor that still mounts upward, it arrives at the throat, where it makes its final residence, and concludes the progress."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"Antigonus, having taken one of his soldiers into a great degree of favor and esteem for his valor, gave his physicians strict charge to cure him of a long and inward disease under which he had a great while languished, and observing that, after his cure, he went much more coldly to work than before, he asked him what had so altered and cowed him: “Yourself, sir,” replied the other, “by having eased me of the pains that made me weary of my life."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"He who fears he shall suffer, already suffers what he fears."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"The advantage of living is not measured by length, but by use; some men have lived long, and lived little; attend to it while you are in it. It lies in your will, not in the number of years, for you to have lived enough."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"[Marriage] happens as with cages: the birds without despair to get in, and those within despair of getting out."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"Demetrius the grammarian finding in the temple of Delphos a knot of philosophers set chatting together, said to them, “Either I am much deceived,or by your cheerful and pleasant countenances, you are engaged in no very deep discourse.” To which one of them, Heracleon the Megarean, replied: “ ’Tis for such as are puzzled about inquiring whether the future tense of the verb Ballo be spelt with adouble L, or that hunt after the derivation of the comparatives Cheirou and Beltiou, and the superlatives Cheiriotou and Beliotou, to knit their brows whilst discoursing of their science; but as to philosophical discourses, they always divert and cheer up those that entertain them, and never deject them or make them sad."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"Did I know myself less, I might perhaps venture to handle something or other to the bottom, and to be deceived in my own inability; but sprinkling here one word and there another, patterns cut from severalpieces and scattered without design and without engaging myself too far, I am not responsible for them, or obliged to keep close to my subject, without varying at my own liberty and pleasure, and giving up myself to doubt and uncertainty, and to myown governing method, ignorance."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"...were these Essays of mine considerable enough to deserve a critical judgment, it might then, I think, fallout that they would not much take with common and vulgar capacities, nor be very acceptable to the singular and excellent sort of men; the first would not understand them enough, and the last too much; and so they may hover in the middle region."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"Every other knowledge is harmful to him who does not have knowledge of goodness."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"We must not attach knowledge to the mind, we have to incorporate it there."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"Judgement can do without knowledge: but not knowledge without judgement."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"Nothing is so firmly believed as that which we least know."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"All is a-swarm with commentaries: of authors there is a dearth."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"Stupidity and wisdom meet in the same centre of sentiment and resolution, in the suffering of human accidents."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"It is a disaster that wisdom forbids you to be satisfied with yourself and always sends you away dissatisfied and fearful, whereas stubbornness and foolhardiness fill their hosts with joy and assurance."
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"Why do people respect the package rather than the man?"
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
"Nature a, (ce crains-je) elle mesme attaché à l'homme quelque instinct à l'inhumanité"
Michel de Montaigne, The Complete Essays
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