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the essays of montaigne, v15-第2部分

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much less consent to this stupidity than is the ordinary case with men of
my age。  Let us; at least; whilst we have truce; drive away incommodities
and difficulties from our commerce:

          〃Dum licet; obducta solvatur fronte senectus:〃

     '〃Whilst we can; let us banish old age from the brow。〃
     Herod。; Ep。; xiii。 7。'

               〃Tetrica sunt amcenanda jocularibus。〃

     '〃Sour things are to be sweetened with those that are pleasant。〃
     Sidonius Apollin。; Ep。; i。 9。'

I love a gay and civil wisdom; and fly from all sourness and austerity of
manners; all repellent; mien being suspected by me:

               〃Tristemque vultus tetrici arrogantiam:〃

          '〃The arrogant sadness of a crabbed face。〃Auctor Incert。'

               〃Et habet tristis quoque turba cinaedos。〃

          '〃And the dull crowd also has its voluptuaries。〃 (Or:)
          〃An austere countenance sometimes covers a debauched mind。〃
          Idem。'

I am very much of Plato's opinion; who says that facile or harsh humours
are great indications of the good or ill disposition of the mind。
Socrates had a constant countenance; but serene and smiling; not sourly
austere; like the elder Crassus; whom no one ever saw laugh。  Virtue is a
pleasant and gay quality。

I know very well that few will quarrel with the licence of my writings;
who have not more to quarrel with in the licence of their own thoughts:
I conform myself well enough to their inclinations; but I offend their
eyes。  'Tis a fine humour to strain the writings of Plato; to wrest his
pretended intercourses with Phaedo; Dion; Stella; and Archeanassa:

               〃Non pudeat dicere; quod non pudet sentire。〃

     '〃Let us not be ashamed to speak what we are not ashamed to think。〃'

I hate a froward and dismal spirit; that slips over all the pleasures of
life and seizes and feeds upon misfortunes; like flies; that cannot stick
to a smooth and polished body; but fix and repose themselves upon craggy
and rough places; and like cupping…glasses; that only suck and attract
bad blood。

As to the rest; I have enjoined myself to dare to say all that I dare to
do; even thoughts that are not to be published; displease me; the worst
of my actions and qualities do not appear to me so evil as I find it evil
and base not to dare to own them。  Every one is wary and discreet in
confession; but men ought to be so in action; the boldness of doing ill
is in some sort compensated and restrained by the boldness of confessing
it。  Whoever will oblige himself to tell all; should oblige himself to do
nothing that he must be forced to conceal。  I wish that this excessive
licence of mine may draw men to freedom; above these timorous and mincing
virtues sprung from our imperfections; and that at the expense of my
immoderation I may reduce them to reason。  A man must see and study his
vice to correct it; they who conceal it from others; commonly conceal it
from themselves; and do not think it close enough; if they themselves see
it: they withdraw and disguise it from their own consciences:

     〃Quare vitia sua nemo confitetur?  Quia etiam nunc in
     illia est; somnium narrare vigilantis est。〃

     '〃Why does no man confess his vices?  because he is yet in them;
     'tis for a waking man to tell his dream。〃Seneca; Ep。; 53。'

The diseases of the body explain themselves by their increase; we find
that to be the gout which we called a rheum or a strain; the diseases of
the soul; the greater they are; keep; themselves the most obscure;
the most sick are the least sensible; therefore it is that with an
unrelenting hand they most often; in full day; be taken to task; opened;
and torn from the hollow of the heart。  As in doing well; so in doing
ill; the mere confession is sometimes satisfaction。  Is there any
deformity in doing amiss; that can excuse us from confessing ourselves?
It is so great a pain to me to dissemble; that I evade the trust of
another's secrets; wanting the courage to disavow my knowledge。  I can
keep silent; but deny I cannot without the greatest trouble and violence
to myself imaginable to be very secret; a man must be so by nature; not
by obligation。  'Tis little worth; in the service of a prince; to be
secret; if a man be not a liar to boot。  If he who asked Thales the
Milesian whether he ought solemnly to deny that he had committed
adultery; had applied himself to me; I should have told him that he ought
not to do it; for I look upon lying as a worse fault than the other。
Thales advised him quite contrary; bidding him swear to shield the
greater fault by the less;

     'Montaigne's memory here serves him ill; for the question being put
     to Thales; his answer was: 〃But is not perjury worse than
     adultery?〃Diogenes Laertius; in vita; i。 36。'

nevertheless; this counsel was not so much an election as a
multiplication of vice。  Upon which let us say this in passing; that we
deal liberally with a man of conscience when we propose to him some
difficulty in counterpoise of vice; but when we shut him up betwixt two
vices; he is put to a hard choice as Origen was either to idolatrise or
to suffer himself to be carnally abused by a great Ethiopian slave they
brought to him。  He submitted to the first condition; and wrongly; people
say。  Yet those women of our times are not much out; according to their
error; who protest they had rather burden their consciences with ten men
than one mass。

If it be indiscretion so to publish one's errors; yet there is no great
danger that it pass into example and custom; for Ariston said;  that the
winds men most fear are those that lay them open。  We must tuck up this
ridiculous rag that hides our manners: they send their consciences to the
stews; and keep a starched countenance: even traitors and assassins
espouse the laws of ceremony; and there fix their duty。  So that neither
can injustice complain of incivility; nor malice of indiscretion。  'Tis
pity but a bad man should be a fool to boot; and that outward decency
should palliate his vice: this rough…cast only appertains to a good and
sound wall; that deserves to be preserved and whited。

In favour of the Huguenots; who condemn our auricular and private
confession; I confess myself in public; religiously and purely: St。
Augustin; Origeti; and Hippocrates have published the errors of their
opinions; I; moreover; of my manners。  I am greedy of making myself
known; and I care not to how many; provided it be truly; or to say
better; I hunger for nothing; but I mortally hate to be mistaken by those
who happen to learn my name。  He who does all things for honour and
glory; what can he think to gain by shewing himself to the world in a
vizor; and by concealing his true being from the people?  Praise a
humpback for his stature; he has reason to take it for an affront:
if you are a coward; and men commend you for your valour; is it of you
they speak?  They take you for another。  I should like him as well who
glorifies himself in the compliments and congees that are made him as if
he were master of the company; when he is one of the least of the train。
Archelaus; king of Macedon; walking along the street; somebody threw
water on his head; which they who were with him said he ought to punish:
〃Aye; but;〃 said he; 〃whoever it was; he did not throw the water upon me;
but upon him whom he took me to be。〃  Socrates being told that people
spoke ill of him; 〃Not at all;〃 said he; 〃there is nothing; in me of what
they say。〃

For my part; if any one should recommend me as a good pilot; as being
very modest or very chaste; I should owe him no thanks; and so; whoever
should call me traitor; robber; or drunkard; I should be as little
concerned。  They who do not rightly know themselves; may feed themselves
with false approbations; not I; who see myself; and who examine myself
even to my very bowels; and who very well know what is my due。  I am
content to be less commended; provided I am better known。  I may be
reputed a wise man in such a sort of wisdom as I take to be folly。
I am vexed that my Essays only serve the ladies for a common piece of
furniture; and a piece for the hall; this chapter will make me part of
the water…closet。  I love to traffic with them a little in private;
public conversation is without favour and without savour。  In farewells;
we oftener than not heat our affections towards the things we take leave
of; I take my last leave of the pleasures of this world: these are our
last embraces。

But let us come to my subject: what has the act of generation; so
natural; so necessary; and so just; done to men; to be a thing not to
be spoken of without blushing; and to be excluded from all serious and
moderate discourse?   We boldly pronounce kill; rob; betray; and that we
dare only to do betwixt the teeth。  Is it to say; the less we expend in
words; we may pay so much the more in thinking?  For it is certain that
the words least in use; most seldom written; and best kept in; are the
best and most generally known: no age; no manners; are ignorant of them;
no more than the word bread they imprint themselves in every one without
being; expressed; without voice; and without figure; and the sex that
most practises it is bound to say least of it。  'Tis an act that we have
placed in the franchise of silence; from which to take it is a crime even
to accuse and judge it; neither dare we reprehend it but by periphrasis
and picture。  A great favour to a criminal to be so execrable that
justice thinks it unjust to touch and see him; free; and safe by the
benefit of the severity of his condemnation。  Is it not here as in matter
of books; that sell better and become more public for being suppressed?
For my part; I will take Aristotle at his word; who says; that
〃bashfulness is an ornament to youth; but a reproach to old age。〃  These
verses are preached in the ancient school; a school that I much more
adhere to than the modern: its virtues appear to me to be greater; and
the vices less:

              〃Ceux qui par trop fuyant Venus estrivent;
               Faillent autant que ceulx qui trop la suyvent。〃

     '〃They err as much who too much forbear Venus; as the
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