indefati9able's review against another edition

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5.0

A 16th century man who feels his 56 years of age is quite old and thinks it's close to the end:

"Whoever saw old age that did not applaud the past and condemn the present?" –Montaigne

A sufferer of kidney stones, who doesn't like doctors that much and has serious distrust for and mildly adverse view of medicine, which he sees it as an "art" more than science:

"The art of medicine is not so fixed that we are without authority, no matter what we do; it changes according to the climates and according to the moons, according to Fernel and according to L'Escale. If your doctor does not think it good for you to sleep, to drink wine, or to eat such-and-such a food, don't worry: I'll find you another who will not agree with him." –Montaigne

At times, a seemingly humblebragging philosopher who opine on almost every topic he can think of within a single essay:

"Both kings and philosophers defecate, and ladies too." –Montaigne

Lover of Plutarch, Socrates, Horace, Cicero, and Virgil. Admirer of "the most outstanding men": Homer, Caesar, and Epaminondas.

"Mingle a dash of folly with your wisdom." –Horace

"Those who flee Venus too much sin no less / Than those who do pursue her to excess." –Plutarch

Master quoter who sometimes complains about other people who excessively or unnecessarily quote great minds.

"I quote others only in order the better to express myself." –Montaigne

"If it is unbecoming to me, as I believe it is, no matter; it may be useful to someone else." –Montaigne

A learned man who still can hail from five hundred years away as loudly and clearly as any wise man or woman of today, if there are any.

"Que sçais-je?" –Montaigne

A humble but beautiful mind with dizzyingly meandering opinions and thoughts which nonetheless elegantly culminate centuries of wisdom before his, and eventually leading to their "Rome" like all roads of yesterday did and still do today.

"The great and glorious masterpiece of man is to live with purpose." –Montaigne

And, lastly, I shall forever imagine Montaigne's voice as Christopher Lane's distinguished and carrying voice with the eloquent language of Donald M. Frame. A superb performance and peerless translation.

"The most certain sign of wisdom is cheerfulness." –Montaigne

Happy reading and listening. I hope you'll enjoy it too. Here are two quotes from yours truly because I too believe they do better at expressing myself:

"Wisdom is not wisdom when it is derived from books alone." –Horace

"Books delight to the very marrow of one's bones. They speak to us, consult with us, and join with us in a living and intense intimacy." –Plutarch

zmb's review against another edition

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4.0

Montaigne, in his Essays, tends more towards engaging than profound, but his early skeptical humanism and revealing self portrait is a very worthy read. His classical scholarship is quite impressive, although his veneration of the Romans and Greeks does occasionally get out of hand. In many ways, his ideas are of his time as well as ahead of it, but that makes him all the more human and interesting.

The major takeaway from his travel journal that I got was that I am very glad that kidney stones are now a curable disease. There was a lot of interest to me in there, but also an awful lot of talk about urination.

His extant letters show how terrible the French wars of religion were, much moreso than the occasional (mostly disparaging) references to Protestantism in the Essays themselves.

jpwright87's review against another edition

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“We dignify our stupidities when we put them in print.”

Such is Montaigne’s thesis statement… at least at certain points, and not always completely, and also depending on who he’s quoting. Clear enough? If you’re looking for overarching narrative structure or a principled, well fleshed out worldview, you’ve come to the wrong place. The best I can say of Montaigne, and also why I think he remains a big name in intellectual history, is his honesty. In his life-long essays and ramblings we see someone who was nearly a pagan Epicurean while also a loyal Catholic during wars with Protestants, someone who would write flowery and witty letters to honorable so-and-so’s as well as on his kidney stones, and someone who could still fit a type of what we would consider French today. It’s a remarkable achievement for literature and essay writing, certainly, but it’s not one I would inflict on anybody. Over the essays, we see a man in the prime of his life emphasizing reason and service to the country slowly become more jaded and concerned with death as time goes on. One thing that shocked me, given the confessional genre, is that he seems not to be aware of St. Augustine’s Confessions. So, he’s really starting from the ground up.

Select quotes (there are many):

I honor most those to whom I show least honor.

We wish nothing freely, nothing absolutely, nothing constantly.

That knowledge is the mother of all virtue, and that all vice is produced by ignorance. If that is true, it is subject to a long interpretation.

I always call reason that semblance of intellect that each man fabricates in himself.

Aristotle says that anger sometimes serves as a weapon for virtue and valor. That is quite likely; yet those who deny it answer humorously that it is a weapon whose use is novel. For we move other weapons, this one moves us; our hand does not guide it, it guides our hand; it holds us, we do not hold it.

I am pleased to be less praised, provided I am better known.

Myself now and myself a while ago are indeed two; but when better, I simply cannot say.

It is putting a very high price on one’s conjectures to have a man roasted alive because of them.

vtlism's review against another edition

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5.0

an endless delight.
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