Thursday, February 4, 2010

Que sais-je?


I ran across these Quotations by Michel Eyquem de Montaigne.

Written in the late 1500's, they seem very relevent to today

To forbid us anything is to make us have a mind for it.
Obsession is the wellspring of genius and madness.
Everyone calls barbarity what he is not accustomed to
If you belittle yourself, you are believed; if you praise yourself, you are disbelieved.
When I play with my cat, how do I know that she is not passing time with me rather than I with her?
Life in itself is neither good nor evil, it is the place of good and evil, according to what you make it.
The continuous work of our life is to build death.
If you press me to say why I loved him, I can say no more than because he was I, and I was he.
Kings and philosophers defecate, and so do ladies.
I enter into discussion and argument with great freerdom and ease, inasmuch as opinion finds me in a bad soil to penetrate and take deep root in. No propositions astonish me, no belief offends me, whatever contrast it offers to my own. There is no fancy so frivolous and so extravagant that it does not seem to me quite suitable to the production of the human mind.
Our religion is made to eradicate vices, instead it encourages them, covers them, and nurtures them.
Human understanding is marvellously enlightened by daily conversation with men, for we are, otherwise, compressed and heaped up in ourselves, and have our sight limited to the length of our own noses.
Not being able to govern events, I govern myself.
The clatter of arms drowns the voice of law.
No matter that we may mount on stilts, we still must walk on our own legs. And on the highest throne in the world, we still sit only on our own bottom.
Montaigne's axiom: "Nothing is so firmly believed as that which least is known."
Man cannot make a worm, yet he will make gods by the dozen.
I have gathered a garland of other men’s flowers, and nothing is mine but the cord that binds them.
No man is a hero to his own valet.
The only thing certain is nothing is certain.
The greater part of the world's troubles are due to questions of grammar.

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