Montaigne's Essays: John Florio's Translation ; Edited by J. I. M. Stewart, Volume 2Nonesuch Press, 1928 - Ethics |
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Page 8
... therein . Our essence is cymented with crased qualities ; ambition , jealosie , envy , revenge , superstition , dispaire , lodge in us , with so naturall a possession , as their image is also dis- cerned in beasts : yea and cruelty , so ...
... therein . Our essence is cymented with crased qualities ; ambition , jealosie , envy , revenge , superstition , dispaire , lodge in us , with so naturall a possession , as their image is also dis- cerned in beasts : yea and cruelty , so ...
Page 10
... entermedle himselfe therein , I holde it more excusable : ( Yet frame I not this excuse for my selfe ) then in forraine and strangers wars , wherewith according to our laws , no man is troubled against his will . IC Montaigne's Essayes.
... entermedle himselfe therein , I holde it more excusable : ( Yet frame I not this excuse for my selfe ) then in forraine and strangers wars , wherewith according to our laws , no man is troubled against his will . IC Montaigne's Essayes.
Page 19
... therein . And the good hap , which ever accompanied him in the encom- brances and difficulties hee was to subdue in the achieve- ment of his noble enterprise , seemed to bee sent him by the Gods , conspiring to second , and consenting ...
... therein . And the good hap , which ever accompanied him in the encom- brances and difficulties hee was to subdue in the achieve- ment of his noble enterprise , seemed to bee sent him by the Gods , conspiring to second , and consenting ...
Page 23
... therein moove without inter- mission ; yea the earth , the rockes of Caucasus , and the Pyramides of Ægypt , both with the publike and their own motion . Constancy it selfe is nothing but a languishing and wavering dance . I cannot ...
... therein moove without inter- mission ; yea the earth , the rockes of Caucasus , and the Pyramides of Ægypt , both with the publike and their own motion . Constancy it selfe is nothing but a languishing and wavering dance . I cannot ...
Page 24
... therein the cun- ningest man alive . Secondly , that never man waded further into his matter , nor more distinctly sifted the parts and dependances of it , nor arrived more exactly and fully to the end he proposed unto himselfe . To ...
... therein the cun- ningest man alive . Secondly , that never man waded further into his matter , nor more distinctly sifted the parts and dependances of it , nor arrived more exactly and fully to the end he proposed unto himselfe . To ...
Common terms and phrases
according actions Alcibiades alwayes ammuse amongst Antisthenes Aristotle arte behold beleeve better body cause charge choise commend common commonly conceit conscience contrary Cotgrave countenance custome dayes death desire discourses divers doth endevour Epaminondas Epicurus Epig esteeme evill excuse falne farre fashion Favorinus favour feare finde forsomuch fortune friends generall give goeth grace greatnesse hand hate hath himselfe hold honour humour imagination judge judgement kinde King lawes lawfull learning lesse liberty live manner matter meanes meere minde mooved naturall nature neere never offend opinion OVID passion peradventure perswade Plato pleased pleasure Princes profitable publike quæ reason runne saith seemeth seene setled shee shew sneese Socrates soever souldiers speake strange sufficiently Sunne thee therein things thinke thou tion trouble vertue vice VIRG warre whereof wherewith willingly wise wisedome Xenophon yeeld yeeres
Popular passages
Page 402 - The largest slice of this huge provision is, as a matter of course, given to the tyrannous demands of fiction. But in carrying out the scheme, publishers and editors contrived to keep in mind that books, like men and women, have their elective affinities. The present volume, for instance, will be found to have its companion books, both in the same section and just as significantly in other sections.
Page 403 - Or is it some more humble lay, Familiar matter of to-day? Some natural sorrow, loss, or pain, That has been, and may be again!
Page 402 - The Spectator and learn how Cleomira dances, when the elegance of her motion is unimaginable and ' her eyes are chastised with the simplicity and innocence of her thoughts.
Page 402 - ... significantly in other sections. With that idea too, novels like Walter Scott's Ivanhoe and Fortunes of Nigel, Lytton's Harold and Dickens's Tale of Two Cities, have been used as pioneers of history and treated as a sort of holiday history books. For in our day history is tending to grow more documentary and less literary; and "the historian who is a stylist," as one of our contributors, the late Thomas Seccombe, said, "will soon be regarded as a kind of Phoenix.
Page 70 - ... dixerat et niveis hinc atque hinc diva lacertis cunctantem amplexu molli fovet. ille repente accepit solitam flammam, notusque medullas intravit calor et labefacta per ossa cucurrit, 390 non secus atque olim tonitru cum rupta corusco ignea rima micans percurrit lumine nimbos.
Page 38 - ... huic versatile ingenium sic pariter ad omnia fuit, ut natum ad id unum diceres quodcumque ageret...
Page 119 - In amore haec omnia insunt vitia : injuriae, ôO.suspiciones, inimicitiae, indutiae, bellum, pax rursum : incerta haec si tu postules ratione certa facere, nihilo plus agas quam si des operam ut cum ratione insanias.
Page 173 - In quibus videndum est non modo quid quisque loquatur, sed etiam quid quisque sentiat atque etiam qua de causa quisque sentiat.