Essays of Montaigne, vol. 6 by Michel de Montaigne
Author:Michel de Montaigne
Language: eng
Format: mobi, epub
Publisher: Liberty Fund, Inc.
Published: 2010-09-07T23:00:00+00:00
WE TASTE NOTHING PURE
THE FEEBLENESS of our condition is such that things cannot, in their natural simplicity and purity, fall into our use; the elements that we enjoy are changed, and so ’tis with metals; and gold must be debased with some other matter to fit it for our service. Neither has virtue, so simple as that which Aristo, Pyrrho, and also the Stoics, made the end of life; nor the Cyrenaic and Aristippic pleasure, been without mixture useful to it. Of the pleasure and goods that we enjoy, there is not one exempt from some mixture of ill and inconvenience:
“From the very fountain of our pleasure, something rises that is bitter, which even in flowers destroys.”
Our extremest pleasure has some air of groaning and complaining in it; would you not say that it is dying of pain? Nay, when we frame the image of it in its full excellence, we stuff it with sickly and painful epithets and qualities, languor, softness, feebleness, faintness, morbidezza: a great testimony of their consanguinity and consubstantiality. The most profound joy has more of severity than gaiety in it. The highest and fullest contentment offers more of the grave than of the merry:—
“Even felicity, unless it moderate itself, oppresses.”
Pleasure chews and grinds us; according to the old Greek verse, which says that the gods sell us all the goods they give us; that is to say, that they give us nothing pure and perfect, and that we do not purchase but at the price of some evil.
Labor and pleasure, very unlike in nature, associate, nevertheless, by I know not what natural conjunction. Socrates says, that some god tried to mix in one mass and to confound pain and pleasure, but not being able to do it, he bethought him at least to couple them by the tail. Metrodorus said, that in sorrow there is some mixture of pleasure. I know not whether or no he intended anything else by that saying; but for my part, I am of opinion that there is design, consent, and complacency in giving a man’s self up to melancholy. I say, that besides ambition, which may also have a stroke in the business, there is some shadow of delight and delicacy which smiles upon and flatters us even in the very lap of melancholy. Are there not some constitutions that feed upon it?—
“ ’Tis a certain kind of pleasure to weep;”
and one Attalus in Seneca says, that the memory of our lost friends is as grateful to us, as bitterness in wine, when too old, is to the palate:—
“Boy, when you pour out old Falernian wine, the bitterest put into my bowl;”
and as apples that have a sweet tartness.
Nature discovers this confusion to us; painters hold that the same motions and grimaces of the face that serve for weeping, serve for laughter too; and indeed, before the one or the other be finished, do but observe the painter’s manner of handling, and you will be in doubt to which
Download
Essays of Montaigne, vol. 6 by Michel de Montaigne.epub
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Wild Words from Wild Women by Stephens Autumn(2589)
776 Stupidest Things Ever Said by Ross Petras(2270)
The Essential Rumi by Coleman Barks(1632)
Lincoln by David Herbert Donald(1612)
Merriam-Webster's Pocket Dictionary by Merriam-Webster(1570)
The Fountainhead by Ayn Rand(1411)
Memoirs by David Rockefeller(1283)
Nobody Knows My Name by James Baldwin(1266)
Oxymoronica by Dr. Mardy Grothe(1218)
Torch Song Trilogy by Harvey Fierstein(1206)
The Yogi Book by Yogi Berra(1203)
Worldly Wisdom: Collected Quotations and Aphorisms by Josh Kaufman & Carlos Miceli(1198)
Waiting for the Punch by Marc Maron(1162)
I'm So Full of Happy Today by Martin Andersen & Moira Tuffy(1162)
The Abolition of Man by C. S. Lewis(1146)
Change Your Life!: A Little Book of Big Ideas by Allen Klein(1126)
That's What She Said by Kimothy Joy(1111)
The Wicked Wit of Queen Elizabeth II by Karen Dolby(1102)
Totally Scripted by Josh Chetwynd(1092)