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<h2> CHAPTER XVIII——THAT MEN ARE NOT TO JUDGE OF OUR HAPPINESS TILL AFTER DEATH. </h2>
<p>[Charron has borrowed with unusual liberality from this and the<br/>
succeeding chapter. See Nodier, Questions, p. 206.]<br/>
"Scilicet ultima semper<br/>
Exspectanda dies homini est; dicique beatus<br/>
Ante obitum nemo supremaque funera debet."<br/>
["We should all look forward to our last day: no one can be called<br/>
happy till he is dead and buried."—Ovid, Met, iii. 135]<br/></p>
<p>The very children know the story of King Croesus to this purpose, who
being taken prisoner by Cyrus, and by him condemned to die, as he was
going to execution cried out, "O Solon, Solon!" which being presently
reported to Cyrus, and he sending to inquire of him what it meant, Croesus
gave him to understand that he now found the teaching Solon had formerly
given him true to his cost; which was, "That men, however fortune may
smile upon them, could never be said to be happy till they had been seen
to pass over the last day of their lives," by reason of the uncertainty
and mutability of human things, which, upon very light and trivial
occasions, are subject to be totally changed into a quite contrary
condition. And so it was that Agesilaus made answer to one who was saying
what a happy young man the King of Persia was, to come so young to so
mighty a kingdom: "'Tis true," said he, "but neither was Priam unhappy at
his years."—[Plutarch, Apothegms of the Lacedaemonians.]—In a
short time, kings of Macedon, successors to that mighty Alexander, became
joiners and scriveners at Rome; a tyrant of Sicily, a pedant at Corinth; a
conqueror of one-half of the world and general of so many armies, a
miserable suppliant to the rascally officers of a king of Egypt: so much
did the prolongation of five or six months of life cost the great Pompey;
and, in our fathers' days, Ludovico Sforza, the tenth Duke of Milan, whom
all Italy had so long truckled under, was seen to die a wretched prisoner
at Loches, but not till he had lived ten years in captivity,—[He was
imprisoned by Louis XI. in an iron cage]— which was the worst part
of his fortune. The fairest of all queens, —[Mary, Queen of Scots.]—widow
to the greatest king in Europe, did she not come to die by the hand of an
executioner? Unworthy and barbarous cruelty! And a thousand more examples
there are of the same kind; for it seems that as storms and tempests have
a malice against the proud and overtowering heights of our lofty
buildings, there are also spirits above that are envious of the
greatnesses here below:</p>
<p>"Usque adeo res humanas vis abdita quaedam<br/>
Obterit, et pulchros fasces, saevasque secures<br/>
Proculcare, ac ludibrio sibi habere videtur."<br/>
["So true it is that some occult power upsets human affairs, the<br/>
glittering fasces and the cruel axes spurns under foot, and seems to<br/>
make sport of them."—Lucretius, v. 1231.]<br/></p>
<p>And it should seem, also, that Fortune sometimes lies in wait to surprise
the last hour of our lives, to show the power she has, in a moment, to
overthrow what she was so many years in building, making us cry out with
Laberius:</p>
<p>"Nimirum hac die<br/>
Una plus vixi mihi, quam vivendum fuit."<br/>
["I have lived longer by this one day than I should have<br/>
done."—Macrobius, ii. 7.]<br/></p>
<p>And, in this sense, this good advice of Solon may reasonably be taken; but
he, being a philosopher (with which sort of men the favours and disgraces
of Fortune stand for nothing, either to the making a man happy or unhappy,
and with whom grandeurs and powers are accidents of a quality almost
indifferent) I am apt to think that he had some further aim, and that his
meaning was, that the very felicity of life itself, which depends upon the
tranquillity and contentment of a well-descended spirit, and the
resolution and assurance of a well-ordered soul, ought never to be
attributed to any man till he has first been seen to play the last, and,
doubtless, the hardest act of his part. There may be disguise and
dissimulation in all the rest: where these fine philosophical discourses
are only put on, and where accident, not touching us to the quick, gives
us leisure to maintain the same gravity of aspect; but, in this last scene
of death, there is no more counterfeiting: we must speak out plain, and
discover what there is of good and clean in the bottom of the pot,</p>
<p>"Nam vera; voces turn demum pectore ab imo<br/>
Ejiciuntur; et eripitur persona, manet res."<br/>
["Then at last truth issues from the heart; the visor's gone,<br/>
the man remains."—Lucretius, iii. 57.]<br/></p>
<p>Wherefore, at this last, all the other actions of our life ought to be
tried and sifted: 'tis the master-day, 'tis the day that is judge of all
the rest, "'tis the day," says one of the ancients,—[Seneca, Ep.,
102]— "that must be judge of all my foregoing years." To death do I
refer the assay of the fruit of all my studies: we shall then see whether
my discourses came only from my mouth or from my heart. I have seen many
by their death give a good or an ill repute to their whole life. Scipio,
the father-in-law of Pompey, in dying, well removed the ill opinion that
till then every one had conceived of him. Epaminondas being asked which of
the three he had in greatest esteem, Chabrias, Iphicrates, or himself.
"You must first see us die," said he, "before that question can be
resolved."—[Plutarch, Apoth.]—And, in truth, he would
infinitely wrong that man who would weigh him without the honour and
grandeur of his end.</p>
<p>God has ordered all things as it has best pleased Him; but I have, in my
time, seen three of the most execrable persons that ever I knew in all
manner of abominable living, and the most infamous to boot, who all died a
very regular death, and in all circumstances composed, even to perfection.
There are brave and fortunate deaths: I have seen death cut the thread of
the progress of a prodigious advancement, and in the height and flower of
its increase, of a certain person,—[Montaigne doubtless refers to
his friend Etienne de la Boetie, at whose death in 1563 he was present.]—with
so glorious an end that, in my opinion, his ambitious and generous designs
had nothing in them so high and great as their interruption. He arrived,
without completing his course, at the place to which his ambition aimed,
with greater glory than he could either have hoped or desired,
anticipating by his fall the name and power to which he aspired in
perfecting his career. In the judgment I make of another man's life, I
always observe how he carried himself at his death; and the principal
concern I have for my own is that I may die well—that is, patiently
and tranquilly.</p>
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