<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0073" id="link2HCH0073"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XVII——OF PRESUMPTION </h2>
<p>There is another sort of glory, which is the having too good an opinion of
our own worth. 'Tis an inconsiderate affection with which we flatter
ourselves, and that represents us to ourselves other than we truly are:
like the passion of love, that lends beauties and graces to the object,
and makes those who are caught by it, with a depraved and corrupt
judgment, consider the thing which they love other and more perfect than
it is.</p>
<p>I would not, nevertheless, for fear of failing on this side, that a man
should not know himself aright, or think himself less than he is; the
judgment ought in all things to maintain its rights; 'tis all the reason
in the world he should discern in himself, as well as in others, what
truth sets before him; if it be Caesar, let him boldly think himself the
greatest captain in the world. We are nothing but ceremony: ceremony
carries us away, and we leave the substance of things: we hold by the
branches, and quit the trunk and the body; we have taught the ladies to
blush when they hear that but named which they are not at all afraid to
do: we dare not call our members by their right names, yet are not afraid
to employ them in all sorts of debauchery: ceremony forbids us to express
by words things that are lawful and natural, and we obey it: reason
forbids us to do things unlawful and ill, and nobody obeys it. I find
myself here fettered by the laws of ceremony; for it neither permits a man
to speak well of himself, nor ill: we will leave her there for this time.</p>
<p>They whom fortune (call it good or ill) has made to, pass their lives in
some eminent degree, may by their public actions manifest what they are;
but they whom she has only employed in the crowd, and of whom nobody will
say a word unless they speak themselves, are to be excused if they take
the boldness to speak of themselves to such as are interested to know
them; by the example of Lucilius:</p>
<p>"Ille velut fidis arcana sodalibus olim<br/>
Credebat libris, neque si male cesserat, usquam<br/>
Decurrens alio, neque si bene: quo fit, ut omnis,<br/>
Votiva pateat veluri descripta tabella<br/>
Vita senis;"<br/>
<br/>
["He formerly confided his secret thoughts to his books, as to tried<br/>
friends, and for good and evil, resorted not elsewhere: hence it<br/>
came to pass, that the old man's life is there all seen as on a<br/>
votive tablet."—Horace, Sat., ii. I, 30.]<br/></p>
<p>he always committed to paper his actions and thoughts, and there portrayed
himself such as he found himself to be:</p>
<p>"Nec id Rutilio et Scauro citra fidem; aut obtrectationi fuit."<br/>
<br/>
["Nor was this considered a breach of good faith or a disparagement<br/>
to Rutilius or Scaurus."—Tacitus, Agricola, c. I.]<br/></p>
<p>I remember, then, that from my infancy there was observed in me I know not
what kind of carriage and behaviour, that seemed to relish of pride and
arrogance. I will say this, by the way, that it is not unreasonable to
suppose that we have qualities and inclinations so much our own, and so
incorporate in us, that we have not the means to feel and recognise them:
and of such natural inclinations the body will retain a certain bent,
without our knowledge or consent. It was an affectation conformable with
his beauty that made Alexander carry his head on one side, and caused
Alcibiades to lisp; Julius Caesar scratched his head with one finger,
which is the fashion of a man full of troublesome thoughts; and Cicero, as
I remember, was wont to pucker up his nose, a sign of a man given to
scoffing; such motions as these may imperceptibly happen in us. There are
other artificial ones which I meddle not with, as salutations and congees,
by which men acquire, for the most part unjustly, the reputation of being
humble and courteous: one may be humble out of pride. I am prodigal enough
of my hat, especially in summer, and never am so saluted but that I pay it
again from persons of what quality soever, unless they be in my own
service. I should make it my request to some princes whom I know, that
they would be more sparing of that ceremony, and bestow that courtesy
where it is more due; for being so indiscreetly and indifferently
conferred on all, it is thrown away to no purpose; if it be without
respect of persons, it loses its effect. Amongst irregular deportment, let
us not forget that haughty one of the Emperor Constantius, who always in
public held his head upright and stiff, without bending or turning on
either side, not so much as to look upon those who saluted him on one
side, planting his body in a rigid immovable posture, without suffering it
to yield to the motion of his coach, not daring so much as to spit, blow
his nose, or wipe his face before people. I know not whether the gestures
that were observed in me were of this first quality, and whether I had
really any occult proneness to this vice, as it might well be; and I
cannot be responsible for the motions of the body; but as to the motions
of the soul, I must here confess what I think of the matter.</p>
<p>This glory consists of two parts; the one in setting too great a value
upon ourselves, and the other in setting too little a value upon others.
As to the one, methinks these considerations ought, in the first place, to
be of some force: I feel myself importuned by an error of the soul that
displeases me, both as it is unjust, and still more as it is troublesome;
I attempt to correct it, but I cannot root it out; and this is, that I
lessen the just value of things that I possess, and overvalue things,
because they are foreign, absent, and none of mine; this humour spreads
very far. As the prerogative of the authority makes husbands look upon
their own wives with a vicious disdain, and many fathers their children;
so I, betwixt two equal merits, should always be swayed against my own;
not so much that the jealousy of my advancement and bettering troubles my
judgment, and hinders me from satisfying myself, as that of itself
possession begets a contempt of what it holds and rules. Foreign
governments, manners, and languages insinuate themselves into my esteem;
and I am sensible that Latin allures me by the favour of its dignity to
value it above its due, as it does with children, and the common sort of
people: the domestic government, house, horse, of my neighbour, though no
better than my own, I prize above my own, because they are not mine.
Besides that I am very ignorant in my own affairs, I am struck by the
assurance that every one has of himself: whereas there is scarcely
anything that I am sure I know, or that I dare be responsible to myself
that I can do: I have not my means of doing anything in condition and
ready, and am only instructed therein after the effect; as doubtful of my
own force as I am of another's. Whence it comes to pass that if I happen
to do anything commendable, I attribute it more to my fortune than
industry, forasmuch as I design everything by chance and in fear. I have
this, also, in general, that of all the opinions antiquity has held of men
in gross, I most willingly embrace and adhere to those that most contemn
and undervalue us, and most push us to naught; methinks, philosophy has
never so fair a game to play as when it falls upon our vanity and
presumption; when it most lays open our irresolution, weakness, and
ignorance. I look upon the too good opinion that man has of himself to be
the nursing mother of all the most false opinions, both public and
private. Those people who ride astride upon the epicycle of Mercury, who
see so far into the heavens, are worse to me than a tooth-drawer that
comes to draw my teeth; for in my study, the subject of which is man,
finding so great a variety of judgments, so profound a labyrinth of
difficulties, one upon another, so great diversity and uncertainty, even
in the school of wisdom itself, you may judge, seeing these people could
not resolve upon the knowledge of themselves and their own condition,
which is continually before their eyes, and within them, seeing they do
not know how that moves which they themselves move, nor how to give us a
description of the springs they themselves govern and make use of, how can
I believe them about the ebbing and flowing of the Nile? The curiosity of
knowing things has been given to man for a scourge, says the Holy
Scripture.</p>
<p>But to return to what concerns myself; I think it would be very difficult
for any other man to have a meaner opinion of himself; nay, for any other
to have a meaner opinion of me than of myself: I look upon myself as one
of the common sort, saving in this, that I have no better an opinion of
myself; guilty of the meanest and most popular defects, but not disowning
or excusing them; and I do not value myself upon any other account than
because I know my own value. If there be any vanity in the case, 'tis
superficially infused into me by the treachery of my complexion, and has
no body that my judgment can discern: I am sprinkled, but not dyed. For in
truth, as to the effects of the mind, there is no part of me, be it what
it will, with which I am satisfied; and the approbation of others makes me
not think the better of myself. My judgment is tender and nice, especially
in things that concern myself.</p>
<p>I ever repudiate myself, and feel myself float and waver by reason of my
weakness. I have nothing of my own that satisfies my judgment. My sight is
clear and regular enough, but, at working, it is apt to dazzle; as I most
manifestly find in poetry: I love it infinitely, and am able to give a
tolerable judgment of other men's works; but, in good earnest, when I
apply myself to it, I play the child, and am not able to endure myself. A
man may play the fool in everything else, but not in poetry;</p>
<p>"Mediocribus esse poetis<br/>
Non dii, non homines, non concessere columnae."<br/>
<br/>
["Neither men, nor gods, nor the pillars (on which the poets<br/>
offered their writings) permit mediocrity in poets."<br/>
—Horace, De Arte Poet., 372.]<br/></p>
<p>I would to God this sentence was written over the doors of all our
printers, to forbid the entrance of so many rhymesters!</p>
<p>"Verum<br/>
Nihil securius est malo poetae."<br/>
<br/>
["The truth is, that nothing is more confident than a bad poet."<br/>
—Martial, xii. 63, 13.]<br/></p>
<p>Why have not we such people?—[As those about to be mentioned.]—
Dionysius the father valued himself upon nothing so much as his poetry; at
the Olympic games, with chariots surpassing all the others in
magnificence, he sent also poets and musicians to present his verses, with
tent and pavilions royally gilt and hung with tapestry. When his verses
came to be recited, the excellence of the delivery at first attracted the
attention of the people; but when they afterwards came to poise the
meanness of the composition, they first entered into disdain, and
continuing to nettle their judgments, presently proceeded to fury, and ran
to pull down and tear to pieces all his pavilions: and, that his chariots
neither performed anything to purpose in the race, and that the ship which
brought back his people failed of making Sicily, and was by the tempest
driven and wrecked upon the coast of Tarentum, they certainly believed was
through the anger of the gods, incensed, as they themselves were, against
the paltry Poem; and even the mariners who escaped from the wreck seconded
this opinion of the people: to which also the oracle that foretold his
death seemed to subscribe; which was, "that Dionysius should be near his
end, when he should have overcome those who were better than himself,"
which he interpreted of the Carthaginians, who surpassed him in power; and
having war with them, often declined the victory, not to incur the sense
of this prediction; but he understood it ill; for the god indicated the
time of the advantage, that by favour and injustice he obtained at Athens
over the tragic poets, better than himself, having caused his own play
called the Leneians to be acted in emulation; presently after which
victory he died, and partly of the excessive joy he conceived at the
success.</p>
<p>[Diodorus Siculus, xv. 7.—The play, however, was called the<br/>
"Ransom of Hector." It was the games at which it was acted that<br/>
were called Leneian; they were one of the four Dionysiac festivals.]<br/></p>
<p>What I find tolerable of mine, is not so really and in itself, but in
comparison of other worse things, that I see well enough received. I envy
the happiness of those who can please and hug themselves in what they do;
for 'tis an easy thing to be so pleased, because a man extracts that
pleasure from himself, especially if he be constant in his self-conceit. I
know a poet, against whom the intelligent and the ignorant, abroad and at
home, both heaven and earth exclaim that he has but very little notion of
it; and yet, for all that, he has never a whit the worse opinion of
himself; but is always falling upon some new piece, always contriving some
new invention, and still persists in his opinion, by so much the more
obstinately, as it only concerns him to maintain it.</p>
<p>My works are so far from pleasing me, that as often as I review them, they
disgust me:</p>
<p>"Cum relego, scripsisse pudet; quia plurima cerno,<br/>
Me quoque, qui feci, judice, digna lini."<br/>
<br/>
["When I reperuse, I blush at what I have written; I ever see one<br/>
passage after another that I, the author, being the judge, consider<br/>
should be erased."—Ovid, De Ponto, i. 5, 15.]<br/></p>
<p>I have always an idea in my soul, and a sort of disturbed image which
presents me as in a dream with a better form than that I have made use of;
but I cannot catch it nor fit it to my purpose; and even that idea is but
of the meaner sort. Hence I conclude that the productions of those great
and rich souls of former times are very much beyond the utmost stretch of
my imagination or my wish; their writings do not only satisfy and fill me,
but they astound me, and ravish me with admiration; I judge of their
beauty; I see it, if not to the utmost, yet so far at least as 'tis
possible for me to aspire. Whatever I undertake, I owe a sacrifice to the
Graces, as Plutarch says of some one, to conciliate their favour:</p>
<p>"Si quid enim placet,<br/>
Si quid dulce horninum sensibus influit,<br/>
Debentur lepidis omnia Gratiis."<br/>
<br/>
["If anything please that I write, if it infuse delight into men's<br/>
minds, all is due to the charming Graces." The verses are probably<br/>
by some modern poet.]<br/></p>
<p>They abandon me throughout; all I write is rude; polish and beauty are
wanting: I cannot set things off to any advantage; my handling adds
nothing to the matter; for which reason I must have it forcible, very
full, and that has lustre of its own. If I pitch upon subjects that are
popular and gay, 'tis to follow my own inclination, who do not affect a
grave and ceremonious wisdom, as the world does; and to make myself more
sprightly, but not my style more wanton, which would rather have them
grave and severe; at least if I may call that a style which is an inform
and irregular way of speaking, a popular jargon, a proceeding without
definition, division, conclusion, perplexed like that Amafanius and
Rabirius.—[Cicero, Acad., i. 2.]—I can neither please nor
delight, nor even tickle my readers: the best story in the world is
spoiled by my handling, and becomes flat; I cannot speak but in rough
earnest, and am totally unprovided of that facility which I observe in
many of my acquaintance, of entertaining the first comers and keeping a
whole company in breath, or taking up the ear of a prince with all sorts
of discourse without wearying themselves: they never want matter by reason
of the faculty and grace they have in taking hold of the first thing that
starts up, and accommodating it to the humour and capacity of those with
whom they have to do. Princes do not much affect solid discourses, nor I
to tell stories. The first and easiest reasons, which are commonly the
best taken, I know not how to employ: I am an ill orator to the common
sort. I am apt of everything to say the extremest that I know. Cicero is
of opinion that in treatises of philosophy the exordium is the hardest
part; if this be true, I am wise in sticking to the conclusion. And yet we
are to know how to wind the string to all notes, and the sharpest is that
which is the most seldom touched. There is at least as much perfection in
elevating an empty as in supporting a weighty thing. A man must sometimes
superficially handle things, and sometimes push them home. I know very
well that most men keep themselves in this lower form from not conceiving
things otherwise than by this outward bark; but I likewise know that the
greatest masters, and Xenophon and Plato are often seen to stoop to this
low and popular manner of speaking and treating of things, but supporting
it with graces which never fail them.</p>
<p>Farther, my language has nothing in it that is facile and polished; 'tis
rough, free, and irregular, and as such pleases, if not my judgment, at
all events my inclination, but I very well perceive that I sometimes give
myself too much rein, and that by endeavouring to avoid art and
affectation I fall into the other inconvenience:</p>
<p>"Brevis esse laboro,<br/>
Obscurus fio."<br/>
<br/>
[ Endeavouring to be brief, I become obscure."<br/>
—Hor., Art. Poet., 25.]<br/></p>
<p>Plato says, that the long or the short are not properties, that either
take away or give value to language. Should I attempt to follow the other
more moderate, united, and regular style, I should never attain to it; and
though the short round periods of Sallust best suit with my humour, yet I
find Caesar much grander and harder to imitate; and though my inclination
would rather prompt me to imitate Seneca's way of writing, yet I do
nevertheless more esteem that of Plutarch. Both in doing and speaking I
simply follow my own natural way; whence, peradventure, it falls out that
I am better at speaking than writing. Motion and action animate words,
especially in those who lay about them briskly, as I do, and grow hot. The
comportment, the countenance; the voice, the robe, the place, will set off
some things that of themselves would appear no better than prating.
Messalla complains in Tacitus of the straitness of some garments in his
time, and of the fashion of the benches where the orators were to declaim,
that were a disadvantage to their eloquence.</p>
<p>My French tongue is corrupted, both in the pronunciation and otherwise, by
the barbarism of my country. I never saw a man who was a native of any of
the provinces on this side of the kingdom who had not a twang of his place
of birth, and that was not offensive to ears that were purely French. And
yet it is not that I am so perfect in my Perigordin: for I can no more
speak it than High Dutch, nor do I much care. 'Tis a language (as the rest
about me on every side, of Poitou, Xaintonge, Angoumousin, Limousin,
Auvergne), a poor, drawling, scurvy language. There is, indeed, above us
towards the mountains a sort of Gascon spoken, that I am mightily taken
with: blunt, brief, significant, and in truth a more manly and military
language than any other I am acquainted with, as sinewy, powerful, and
pertinent as the French is graceful, neat, and luxuriant.</p>
<p>As to the Latin, which was given me for my mother tongue, I have by
discontinuance lost the use of speaking it, and, indeed, of writing it
too, wherein I formerly had a particular reputation, by which you may see
how inconsiderable I am on that side.</p>
<p>Beauty is a thing of great recommendation in the correspondence amongst
men; 'tis the first means of acquiring the favour and good liking of one
another, and no man is so barbarous and morose as not to perceive himself
in some sort struck with its attraction. The body has a great share in our
being, has an eminent place there, and therefore its structure and
composition are of very just consideration. They who go about to disunite
and separate our two principal parts from one another are to blame; we
must, on the contrary, reunite and rejoin them. We must command the soul
not to withdraw and entertain itself apart, not to despise and abandon the
body (neither can she do it but by some apish counterfeit), but to unite
herself close to it, to embrace, cherish, assist, govern, and advise it,
and to bring it back and set it into the true way when it wanders; in sum,
to espouse and be a husband to it, so that their effects may not appear to
be diverse and contrary, but uniform and concurring. Christians have a
particular instruction concerning this connection, for they know that the
Divine justice embraces this society and juncture of body and soul, even
to the making the body capable of eternal rewards; and that God has an eye
to the whole man's ways, and wills that he receive entire chastisement or
reward according to his demerits or merits. The sect of the Peripatetics,
of all sects the most sociable, attribute to wisdom this sole care equally
to provide for the good of these two associate parts: and the other sects,
in not sufficiently applying themselves to the consideration of this
mixture, show themselves to be divided, one for the body and the other for
the soul, with equal error, and to have lost sight of their subject, which
is Man, and their guide, which they generally confess to be Nature. The
first distinction that ever was amongst men, and the first consideration
that gave some pre-eminence over others, 'tis likely was the advantage of
beauty:</p>
<p>"Agros divisere atque dedere<br/>
Pro facie cujusque, et viribus ingenioque;<br/>
Nam facies multum valuit, viresque vigebant."<br/>
<br/>
["They distributed and conferred the lands to every man according<br/>
to his beauty and strength and understanding, for beauty was much<br/>
esteemed and strength was in favour."—Lucretius, V. 1109.]<br/></p>
<p>Now I am of something lower than the middle stature, a defect that not
only borders upon deformity, but carries withal a great deal of
inconvenience along with it, especially for those who are in office and
command; for the authority which a graceful presence and a majestic mien
beget is wanting. C. Marius did not willingly enlist any soldiers who were
not six feet high. The Courtier has, indeed, reason to desire a moderate
stature in the gentlemen he is setting forth, rather than any other, and
to reject all strangeness that should make him be pointed at. But if I
were to choose whether this medium must be rather below than above the
common standard, I would not have it so in a soldier. Little men, says
Aristotle, are pretty, but not handsome; and greatness of soul is
discovered in a great body, as beauty is in a conspicuous stature: the
Ethiopians and Indians, says he, in choosing their kings and magistrates,
had regard to the beauty and stature of their persons. They had reason;
for it creates respect in those who follow them, and is a terror to the
enemy, to see a leader of a brave and goodly stature march at the head of
a battalion:</p>
<p>"Ipse inter primos praestanti corpore Turnus<br/>
Vertitur arma, tenens, et toto vertice supra est."<br/>
<br/>
["In the first rank marches Turnus, brandishing his weapon,<br/>
taller by a head than all the rest."—Virgil, AEneid, vii. 783.]<br/></p>
<p>Our holy and heavenly king, of whom every circumstance is most carefully
and with the greatest religion and reverence to be observed, has not
himself rejected bodily recommendation,</p>
<p>"Speciosus forma prae filiis hominum."<br/>
<br/>
["He is fairer than the children of men."—Psalm xiv. 3.]<br/></p>
<p>And Plato, together with temperance and fortitude, requires beauty in the
conservators of his republic. It would vex you that a man should apply
himself to you amongst your servants to inquire where Monsieur is, and
that you should only have the remainder of the compliment of the hat that
is made to your barber or your secretary; as it happened to poor
Philopoemen, who arriving the first of all his company at an inn where he
was expected, the hostess, who knew him not, and saw him an unsightly
fellow, employed him to go help her maids a little to draw water, and make
a fire against Philopoemen's coming; the gentlemen of his train arriving
presently after, and surprised to see him busy in this fine employment,
for he failed not to obey his landlady's command, asked him what he was
doing there: "I am," said he, "paying the penalty of my ugliness." The
other beauties belong to women; the beauty of stature is the only beauty
of men. Where there is a contemptible stature, neither the largeness and
roundness of the forehead, nor the whiteness and sweetness of the eyes,
nor the moderate proportion of the nose, nor the littleness of the ears
and mouth, nor the evenness and whiteness of the teeth, nor the thickness
of a well-set brown beard, shining like the husk of a chestnut, nor curled
hair, nor the just proportion of the head, nor a fresh complexion, nor a
pleasing air of a face, nor a body without any offensive scent, nor the
just proportion of limbs, can make a handsome man. I am, as to the rest,
strong and well knit; my face is not puffed, but full, and my complexion
betwixt jovial and melancholic, moderately sanguine and hot,</p>
<p>"Unde rigent setis mihi crura, et pectora villis;"<br/>
<br/>
["Whence 'tis my legs and breast bristle with hair."<br/>
—Martial, ii. 36, 5.]<br/></p>
<p>my health vigorous and sprightly, even to a well advanced age, and rarely
troubled with sickness. Such I was, for I do not now make any account of
myself, now that I am engaged in the avenues of old age, being already
past forty:</p>
<p>"Minutatim vires et robur adultum<br/>
Frangit, et in partem pejorem liquitur aetas:"<br/>
<br/>
["Time by degrees breaks our strength and makes us grow feeble.<br/>
—"Lucretius, ii. 1131.]<br/></p>
<p>what shall be from this time forward, will be but a half-being, and no
more me: I every day escape and steal away from myself:</p>
<p>"Singula de nobis anni praedantur euntes."<br/>
<br/>
["Of the fleeting years each steals something from me."<br/>
—Horace, Ep., ii. 2.]<br/></p>
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