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<h2> CHAPTER LIV——OF VAIN SUBTLETIES </h2>
<p>There are a sort of little knacks and frivolous subtleties from which men
sometimes expect to derive reputation and applause: as poets, who compose
whole poems with every line beginning with the same letter; we see the
shapes of eggs, globes, wings, and hatchets cut out by the ancient Greeks
by the measure of their verses, making them longer or shorter, to
represent such or such a figure. Of this nature was his employment who
made it his business to compute into how many several orders the letters
of the alphabet might be transposed, and found out that incredible number
mentioned in Plutarch. I am mightily pleased with the humour of him,</p>
<p>["Alexander, as may be seen in Quintil., Institut. Orat., lib.<br/>
ii., cap. 20, where he defines Maratarexvia to be a certain<br/>
unnecessary imitation of art, which really does neither good nor<br/>
harm, but is as unprofitable and ridiculous as was the labour of<br/>
that man who had so perfectly learned to cast small peas through the<br/>
eye of a needle at a good distance that he never missed one, and was<br/>
justly rewarded for it, as is said, by Alexander, who saw the<br/>
performance, with a bushel of peas."—Coste.]<br/></p>
<p>who having a man brought before him that had learned to throw a grain of
millet with such dexterity and assurance as never to miss the eye of a
needle; and being afterwards entreated to give something for the reward of
so rare a performance, he pleasantly, and in my opinion justly, ordered a
certain number of bushels of the same grain to be delivered to him, that
he might not want wherewith to exercise so famous an art. 'Tis a strong
evidence of a weak judgment when men approve of things for their being
rare and new, or for their difficulty, where worth and usefulness are not
conjoined to recommend them.</p>
<p>I come just now from playing with my own family at who could find out the
most things that hold by their two extremities; as Sire, which is a title
given to the greatest person in the nation, the king, and also to the
vulgar, as merchants, but never to any degree of men between. The women of
great quality are called Dames, inferior gentlewomen, Demoiselles, and the
meanest sort of women, Dames, as the first. The cloth of state over our
tables is not permitted but in the palaces of princes and in taverns.
Democritus said, that gods and beasts had sharper sense than men, who are
of a middle form. The Romans wore the same habit at funerals and feasts.
It is most certain that an extreme fear and an extreme ardour of courage
equally trouble and relax the belly. The nickname of Trembling with which
they surnamed Sancho XII., king of Navarre, tells us that valour will
cause a trembling in the limbs as well as fear. Those who were arming that
king, or some other person, who upon the like occasion was wont to be in
the same disorder, tried to compose him by representing the danger less he
was going to engage himself in: "You understand me ill," said he, "for
could my flesh know the danger my courage will presently carry it into, it
would sink down to the ground." The faintness that surprises us from
frigidity or dislike in the exercises of Venus are also occasioned by a
too violent desire and an immoderate heat. Extreme coldness and extreme
heat boil and roast. Aristotle says, that sows of lead will melt and run
with cold and the rigour of winter just as with a vehement heat. Desire
and satiety fill all the gradations above and below pleasure with pain.
Stupidity and wisdom meet in the same centre of sentiment and resolution,
in the suffering of human accidents. The wise control and triumph over
ill, the others know it not: these last are, as a man may say, on this
side of accidents, the others are beyond them, who after having well
weighed and considered their qualities, measured and judged them what they
are, by virtue of a vigorous soul leap out of their reach; they disdain
and trample them underfoot, having a solid and well-fortified soul,
against which the darts of fortune, coming to strike, must of necessity
rebound and blunt themselves, meeting with a body upon which they can fix
no impression; the ordinary and middle condition of men are lodged betwixt
these two extremities, consisting of such as perceive evils, feel them,
and are not able to support them. Infancy and decrepitude meet in the
imbecility of the brain; avarice and profusion in the same thirst and
desire of getting.</p>
<p>A man may say with some colour of truth that there is an Abecedarian
ignorance that precedes knowledge, and a doctoral ignorance that comes
after it: an ignorance that knowledge creates and begets, at the same time
that it despatches and destroys the first. Of mean understandings, little
inquisitive, and little instructed, are made good Christians, who by
reverence and obedience simply believe and are constant in their belief.
In the average understandings and the middle sort of capacities, the error
of opinion is begotten; they follow the appearance of the first
impression, and have some colour of reason on their side to impute our
walking on in the old beaten path to simplicity and stupidity, meaning us
who have not informed ourselves by study. The higher and nobler souls,
more solid and clear-sighted, make up another sort of true believers, who
by a long and religious investigation of truth, have obtained a clearer
and more penetrating light into the Scriptures, and have discovered the
mysterious and divine secret of our ecclesiastical polity; and yet we see
some, who by the middle step, have arrived at that supreme degree with
marvellous fruit and confirmation, as to the utmost limit of Christian
intelligence, and enjoy their victory with great spiritual consolation,
humble acknowledgment of the divine favour, reformation of manners, and
singular modesty. I do not intend with these to rank those others, who to
clear themselves from all suspicion of their former errors and to satisfy
us that they are sound and firm, render themselves extremely indiscreet
and unjust, in the carrying on our cause, and blemish it with infinite
reproaches of violence and oppression. The simple peasants are good
people, and so are the philosophers, or whatever the present age calls
them, men of strong and clear reason, and whose souls are enriched with an
ample instruction of profitable sciences. The mongrels who have disdained
the first form of the ignorance of letters, and have not been able to
attain to the other (sitting betwixt two stools, as I and a great many
more of us do), are dangerous, foolish, and importunate; these are they
that trouble the world. And therefore it is that I, for my own part,
retreat as much as I can towards the first and natural station, whence I
so vainly attempted to advance.</p>
<p>Popular and purely natural poesy</p>
<p>["The term poesie populaire was employed, for the first time, in the<br/>
French language on this occasion. Montaigne created the expression,<br/>
and indicated its nature."—Ampere.]<br/></p>
<p>has in it certain artless graces, by which she may come into comparison
with the greatest beauty of poetry perfected by art: as we see in our
Gascon villanels and the songs that are brought us from nations that have
no knowledge of any manner of science, nor so much as the use of writing.
The middle sort of poesy betwixt these two is despised, of no value,
honour, or esteem.</p>
<p>But seeing that the path once laid open to the fancy, I have found, as it
commonly falls out, that what we have taken for a difficult exercise and a
rare subject, prove to be nothing so, and that after the invention is once
warm, it finds out an infinite number of parallel examples. I shall only
add this one—that, were these Essays of mine considerable enough to
deserve a critical judgment, it might then, I think, fall out that they
would not much take with common and vulgar capacities, nor be very
acceptable to the singular and excellent sort of men; the first would not
understand them enough, and the last too much; and so they may hover in
the middle region.</p>
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