The Complete Essays Quotes
21,125 ratings, 4.23 average rating, 1,101 reviews
Open Preview
The Complete Essays Quotes
Showing 211-240 of 296
“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.”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“I have heard Silvius, an excellent physician of Paris, say that lest the digestive faculties of the stomach should grow idle, it were not amiss once a month to rouse them by this excess, and to spur them lest they should grow dull and rusty; and one author tells us that the Persians used to consult about their most
important affairs after being well warmed with wine.”
― The Complete Essays
important affairs after being well warmed with wine.”
― The Complete Essays
“No virtue assists itself with falsehood; truth is never matter of error. To speak more of one’s self than is really true is not always mere presumption; ‘tis, moreover, very often folly; to, be immeasurably pleased with what one is, and to fall into an indiscreet self-love, is in my opinion the substance of this vice. The most sovereign remedy to cure it, is to do quite contrary to what these people direct who, in forbidding men to speak of themselves, consequently, at the same time, interdict thinking of themselves too. Pride dwells in the thought; the tongue can have but a very little share in it. They”
― The Essays of Montaigne
― The Essays of Montaigne
“A certain French nobleman always used to blow his nose with his fingers, something quite opposed to our customs. Defending his action (and he was famous for his repartee) he asked me why that filthy mucus should be so privileged that we should prepare fine linen to receive it and then, going even further, should wrap it up and carry it carefully about on our persons; that practice ought to excite more loathing and nausea than seeing him simply excrete it (wherever it might be) as we do all our other droppings. I considered that what he said was not totally unreasonable, but habit had prevented me from noticing just that strangeness which we find so hideous in similar customs in another country. Miraculous”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“Overigens is wat wij gewoonlijk vrienden en vriendschappen noemen niet meer dan een door een of ander toeval of vordeel tot stand gekomen bekendheid of vertrouwdheid met iemand, waarin de geesten elkaar vinden. In de vriendschap waarvan ik spreek, vermengen en versmelten beide geesten zich tot een zo alles omvattend samengaan, dat ze de naad die hen verbindt foen verdwijnen en niet meer terugvinden. Als men bij mij zou aandringen te zeggen waarom ik van hem hield, voel ik dat dat alleen uitgedrukt kan worden door te antwoorden: 'Omdat hij het was; omdat ik het was'.”
― Essays
― Essays
“[Folly never thinks it has enough, even when it obtains what it desires, but Wisdom is happy with what is to hand and is never vexed with itself.]3”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“it is myself I paint. My”
― The Complete Essays of Montaigne:
― The Complete Essays of Montaigne:
“Ne garip ... insanı öldürmek için gün ışığında geniş meydanlar ararız ama onu yaratmak için karanlık köşelere gizleniriz. Şu insan ne korkunç bir hayvan ki kendi zevklerini başının belası sayıyor. Bizi yaratan işi hayvanlık saymaktan daha büyük hayvanlık mı olur?”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“Anyone who has not groomed his life in general towards some definite end cannot possibly arrange his individual actions properly. It is impossible to put the pieces together if you do not have in your head the idea of the whole. What is the use of providing yourself with paints if you do not know what to paint? No man sketches out a definite plan for his life; we only determine bits of it. The bowman must first know what he is aiming at: then he has to prepare hand, bow, bowstring, arrow and his drill to that end. Our projects go astray because they are not addressed to a target.16 No wind is right for a seaman who has no predetermined harbour.”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“>Any instruction which convince people that religious belief alone, without morality, suffices to satisfy God’s justice is destructive of all government and is far more harmful than is ingenious and subtle. Men’s practices reveal an extraordinary distinction between devotion and sense of right and wrong.”
― The Complete Essays of Michel de Montaigne
― The Complete Essays of Michel de Montaigne
“Gjør vi ikke oss selv til dyr når vi kaller den handling som skaper oss dyrisk?”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“...ved sin bydende autoritet sløver og fordummer den all Platons samlede teologi og filosofi; likevel gir han ikke fra seg et kny. Overalt ellers kan man bevare en viss anstendighet; alle andre aktiviteter finner seg i sømmelighetsregler, men kjærlighetsakten kan man bare forestille seg som lastefull eller komisk. Bare prøv å finne en klok og behersket måte å bedrive den på.”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“Vi gjør kanskje rett i å klandre oss selv for å frembringe noe så tåpelig som mennesket, og i å kalle akten skammelig og de organer som brukes til den, for skamdeler (mine egne er for tiden blitt så ynkelige at jeg virkelig skammer meg over dem).”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“Hvor grotesk er ikke et vesen som føler avsky for sin egen person, som blir nedtrykt av sine gleder og ser på seg selv som en ulykke!”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“Vi er bare oppfinnsomme når det gjelder å mishandle oss selv, det er det virkelige bytte for vår åndskraft - et farlig redskap når det er i uorden!”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“Kjærligheten er en lidenskap som blander et ganske lite kvantum solid substans sammen med et langt større kvantum forfengelighet og feberfantasier.”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“Det er en kjedelig uvane som særlig går ut over damene, å måtte låne ut leppene til hvem som helst som har tre tjenere på slep, uansett hvor frastøtende han er.”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“Våre forfedre oppdro sine døtre til å oppføre seg bluferdig og fryktsomt (følelsene og driftene var de samme), vi oppdrar dem til selvsikkerhet - vi forstår oss ikke på det i det hele tatt. Det passer for de sarmatiske kvinnene som ikke har lov til å ligge med en mann før de egenhendig har drept en annen mann i krig.”
― Complete Essays
― Complete Essays
“De gangene jeg har merket at en kvinne har vært misfornøyd med meg, har jeg ikke straks gitt hennes lettsinn skylden, men har spurt meg selv om jeg ikke heller burde skylde på naturen. Sannelig har den gitt meg en behandling i strid med både strafferett og sivilrett - og krenket meg på det groveste.”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“Livet består av en del galskap, og en del visdom; den som bare skriver ærbødig og konvensjonelt, utelater mer enn halvparten.”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“Hadde jeg vært lege, ville jeg til en mann av min stand og støpning like gjerne ordinert dette som enhver annen medisin for å vekke og holde ham i ånde til høyt oppe i årene og skåne ham for alderdommens angrep enda en stund. Så lenge vi bare er i utkanten av den og pulsen stadig slår -”
― Complete Essays
― Complete Essays
“Jeg har ikke noen annen lidenskap til å holde meg i ånde.”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“Den ville i det minste i drømme varme opp det blod som naturen har latt i stikken, den ville løftet haken og drøyet både musklene, energien og livsgleden for denne stakkaren som i full fart iler mot sin undergang.”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“Men jeg innser klart at dette gode er svært vanskelig å gjenvinne; svakhet og lang erfaring har gitt oss en mer kresen og nøyeregnende smak. Vi forlanger mer samtidig som vi har mindre å tilby; vi vil ha flere valgmuligheter, når vi selv minst fortjener å bli valgt. Fordi vi vet at i er slik, blir vi mindre dristige og mer mistroiske, og i betraktning av vår egen og deres tilstand, er det ikke noe som kan forsikre oss om at vi er elsket.”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“Benim bütün çabam kimseye muhtaç olmadan yaşamaktır. İnsanlar hiçbir şeyimi almazlarsa, bana çok şey vermiş olurlar. Hiçbir kötülük etmezlerse, yeterince iyilik etmiş olurlar.”
― Denemeler
― Denemeler
“Folly is a bad quality; but not to be able to endure it, to fret and vex at it, as I do, is another sort of disease little less troublesome than folly itself; and is the thing that I will now accuse in myself.”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“I hail and caress truth in what quarter soever I find it, and cheerfully surrender myself, and open my conquered arms as far off as I can discover it; and, provided it be not too imperiously, take a pleasure in being reproved, and accommodate myself to my accusers, very often more by reason of civility than amendment, loving to gratify and nourish the liberty of admonition by my facility of submitting to it, and this even at my own expense.”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays
“I take so great a pleasure in being judged and known, that it is almost indifferent to me in which of the two forms I am so: my imagination so often contradicts and condemns itself, that ’tis all one to me if another do it, especially considering that I give his reprehension no greater authority than I choose; but I break with him, who carries himself so high, as I know of one who repents his advice, if not believed, and takes it for an affront if it be not immediately followed.”
― The Complete Essays
― The Complete Essays