
The Complete Works of Michel de Montaigne Introduction by Stuart Hampshire
by Montaigne, Michel de; Frame, Donald M.; Hampshire, Stuart-
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Summary
Author Biography
Table of Contents
Introduction | |
Translator's Note | |
Select Bibliography | |
Chronology | |
Essays | |
By diverse means we arrive at the same end (1578-80) | p. 3 |
Of sadness (1572-74) | p. 6 |
Our feelings reach out beyond us (1572-74) | p. 9 |
How the soul discharges its passions on false objects when the true are wanting (1572-74) | p. 16 |
Whether the governor of a besieged place should go out to parley (1572-74) | p. 18 |
Parley time is dangerous (1572-74) | p. 20 |
That intention is judge of our actions (1572-74) | p. 23 |
Of idleness (1572-74) | p. 24 |
Of liars (1572-74) | p. 25 |
Of prompt or slow speech (1572-74) | p. 30 |
Of prognostications (1572-74) | p. 32 |
Of constancy (1572-74) | p. 35 |
Ceremony of interviews between kings (1572-74) | p. 38 |
That the taste of good and evil depends in large part on the opinion we have of them (1572-74) | p. 39 |
One is punished for defending a place obstinately without reason (1572-74) | p. 56 |
Of the punishment of cowardice (1572-74) | p. 57 |
A trait of certain ambassadors (1572-74) | p. 59 |
Of fear (1572-74) | p. 62 |
That our happiness must not be judged until after our death (1572-74) | p. 64 |
That to philosophize is to learn to die (1572-74) | p. 67 |
Of the power of the imagination (1572-74) | p. 82 |
One man's profit is another man's harm (1572-80) | p. 92 |
Of custom, and not easily changing an accepted law (1572-74) | p. 93 |
Various outcomes of the same plan (1572-80) | p. 109 |
Of pedantry (1572-78) | p. 118 |
Of the education of children (1579-80) | p. 129 |
It is folly to measure the true and false by our own capacity (1572-74) | p. 160 |
Of friendship (1572-76, 1578-80) | p. 164 |
Twenty-nine sonnets of Etienne de La Boetie (1578-80) | p. 176 |
Of moderation (1572-80) | p. 177 |
Of cannibals (1578-80) | p. 182 |
We should meddle soberly with judging divine ordinances (1572-74) | p. 194 |
To flee from sensual pleasures at the price of life (1575-74) | p. 196 |
Fortune is often met in the path of reason (1572-74) | p. 197 |
Of a lack in our administrations (1572-74) | p. 200 |
Of the custom of wearing clothes (1572-74) | p. 201 |
Of Cato the Younger (1572-74) | p. 205 |
How we cry and laugh for the same thing (1572-74) | p. 208 |
Of solitude (1572-74) | p. 211 |
A consideration upon Cicero (1572-74) | p. 222 |
Of not communicating one's glory (1572-74) | p. 227 |
Of the inequality that is between us (1572-74) | p. 229 |
Of sumptuary laws (1572-74) | p. 238 |
Of sleep (1572-74) | p. 240 |
Of the battle of Dreux (1572-74) | p. 242 |
Of names (1572-74) | p. 243 |
Of the uncertainty of our judgment (1572-74) | p. 248 |
Of war horses (1572-74) | p. 254 |
Of ancient customs (1572-80) | p. 261 |
Of Democritus and Heraclitus (1572-80) | p. 266 |
Of the vanity of words (1572-80) | p. 269 |
Of the parsimony of the ancients (1572-80) | p. 271 |
Of a saying of Caesar's (1572-80) | p. 272 |
Of vain subtleties (1572-80) | p. 273 |
Of smells (1572-80) | p. 276 |
Of prayers (1572-80) | p. 278 |
Of age (1572-80) | p. 287 |
Of the inconsistency of our actions (1572-74) | p. 290 |
Of drunkenness (1573-74) | p. 296 |
A custom of the island of Cea (1573-74) | p. 303 |
Let business wait till tomorrow (1573-74) | p. 318 |
Of conscience (1573-74) | p. 320 |
Of practice (1573-74) | p. 324 |
Of honorary awards (1578-80) | p. 334 |
Of the affection of fathers for their children (1578-80) | p. 337 |
Of the arms of the Parthians (1578-80) | p. 356 |
Of books (1578-80) | p. 359 |
Of cruelty (1578-80) | p. 372 |
Apology for Raymond Sebond (1575-76, 1578-80) | p. 386 |
Of judging of the death of others (1572-80) | p. 556 |
How our mind hinders itself (1575-76 | p. 562 |
That our desire is increased by difficulty (1575-76) | p. 563 |
Of glory (1578-80) | p. 568 |
Of presumption (1578-80) | p. 581 |
Of giving the lie (1578-80) | p. 611 |
Of freedom of conscience (1578-80) | p. 615 |
We taste nothing pure (1578-80) | p. 619 |
Against do-nothingness (1578-80) | p. 622 |
Of riding post (1578-80) | p. 626 |
Of evil means employed to a good end (1578-80) | p. 627 |
Of the greatness of Rome (1578-80) | p. 630 |
Not to counterfeit being sick (1578-80) | p. 632 |
Of thumbs (1578-80) | p. 634 |
Cowardice, mother of cruelty (1578-80) | p. 635 |
All things have their season (1578-80) | p. 644 |
Of virtue (1578-80) | p. 646 |
Of a monstrous child (1578-80) | p. 653 |
Of anger (1578-80) | p. 655 |
Defense of Seneca and Plutarch (1578-80) | p. 661 |
The story of Spurina (1578-80) | p. 667 |
Observations on Julius Caesar's methods of making war (1578-80) | p. 674 |
Of three good women (1578-80) | p. 683 |
Of the most oustanding men (1578-80) | p. 690 |
Of the resemblance of children to fathers (1579-80) | p. 696 |
Of the useful and the honorable (1585-88) | p. 726 |
Of repentance (1585-88) | p. 740 |
Of three kinds of association (1585-88) | p. 753 |
Of diversion (1585-88) | p. 764 |
On some verses of Virgil (1585-88) | p. 774 |
Of coaches (1585-88) | p. 831 |
Of the disadvantage of greatness (1585-88) | p. 849 |
Of the art of discussion (1585-88) | p. 854 |
Of vanity (1585-88) | p. 876 |
Of husbanding your will (1585-88) | p. 932 |
Of cripples (1585-88) | p. 954 |
Of physiognomy (1585-88) | p. 964 |
Of experience (1587-88) | p. 992 |
Travel Journal | |
Across France toward Switzerland (September 5-28, 1580) | p. 1056 |
Switzerland (September 29-October 7, 1580) | p. 1068 |
Germany, Austria, and the Alps (October 8-27, 1580) | p. 1082 |
Italy: The road to Rome (October 28-November 29, 1580) | p. 1112 |
Italy: Rome (November 30, 1580-April 19, 1581) | p. 1141 |
Italy: From Rome to Loreto and La Villa (April 19-May 7, 1581) | p. 1179 |
Italy: First stay at La Villa (May 7-June 21, 1581) | p. 1200 |
Italy: Florence-Pisa-Lucca (June 21-August 13, 1581) | p. 1224 |
Italy: Second stay at La Villa (August 14-September 12, 1581) | p. 1240 |
Italy: Return to Rome (September 12-October 15, 1581) | p. 1247 |
Italy and France: The return home (October 15-November 30, 1581) | p. 1257 |
Letters | |
To Antoine Duprat (August 24, 1562?) | p. 1275 |
To his father: On the death of La Boetie (1563?; published 1570) | p. 1276 |
To his father: Dedication of Montaigne's translation of Sebond (June 18, 1568) | p. 1289 |
To Henri de Mesmes: Dedicatory epistle to La Boetie's translation of Plutarch's 'Rules of Marriage' (April 30, 1570) | p. 1290 |
To Michel de L'Hopital: Dedicatory epistle to La Boetie's Latin 'Poems' (April 30, 1570) | p. 1292 |
Notice to the reader of La Boetie's translations (August 10, 1570) | p. 1294 |
To Louis de Lansac: Dedicatory epistle to La Boetie's translation of Xenophon's 'Oeconomicus (1570?) | p. 1295 |
To Paul de Foix: Dedicatory epistle to La Boetie's 'French Verses' (September 1, 1570) | p. 1297 |
To his wife: Dedicatory epistle to La Boetie's translation of Plutarch's 'Letter of Consolation to His Wife' (September 10, 1570) | p. 1300 |
To the Jurats of Bordeaux (May 21, 1582) | p. 1301 |
To Marshal de Matignon (October 30, 1582) | p. 1302 |
To Antoine Duprat (November 22, 1582) | p. 1302 |
To King Henry III: Letter of remonstrance from the Mayor and Jurats of Bordeaux (August 31, 1583) | p. 1303 |
To King Henry of Navarre: Letter of remonstrance from the Mayor and Jurats of Bordeaux (December 10, 1583) | p. 1308 |
To Marshal de Matignon (December 14, 1583) | p. 1309 |
To Marshal de Matignon (January 21, 1584) | p. 1311 |
To Claude Dupuy (April 23, 1584?) | p. 1311 |
To Marshal de Matignon (July 12, 1584?) | p. 1312 |
To Marshal de Matignon (August 19, 1584) | p. 1313 |
To the Jurats of Bordeaux (December 10, 1584) | p. 1314 |
To Marshal de Matignon (January 18, 1585) | p. 1314 |
To Marshal de Matignon (January 26, 1585) | p. 1316 |
To Marshal de Matignon (February 2, 1585) | p. 1317 |
To the Jurats of Bordeaux (February 8, 1585) | p. 1318 |
To Marshal de Matignon (February 9, 1585) | p. 1318 |
To Marshal de Matignon (February 12, 1585?) | p. 1320 |
To Marshal de Matignon (February 13, 1585) | p. 1321 |
To Marshal de Matignon (February, 1585?) | p. 1322 |
To Marshal de Matignon (May 22, 1585?) | p. 1323 |
To Marshal de Matignon (May 27, 1585) | p. 1327 |
To the Jurats of Bordeaux (July 30, 1585) | p. 1328 |
To the Jurats of Bordeaux (July 31, 1585) | p. 1329 |
To Marshal de Matignon (June 12, 1587?) | p. 1329 |
To Marshal de Matignon (February 16, 1588?) | p. 1330 |
To Madame Paulmier (1588?) | p. 1331 |
To Antoine Loisel: Inscription on a copy of the 1588 Essays (1588?) | p. 1332 |
To King Henry IV (January 18, 1590?) | p. 1332 |
To ... (March or May 10, 1590) | p. 1335 |
To King Henry IV (September 2, 1590?) | p. 1335 |
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