<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0074" id="link2HCH0074"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XVIII——OF GIVING THE LIE </h2>
<p>Well, but some one will say to me, this design of making a man's self the
subject of his writing, were indeed excusable in rare and famous men, who
by their reputation had given others a curiosity to be fully informed of
them. It is most true, I confess and know very well, that a mechanic will
scarce lift his eyes from his work to look at an ordinary man, whereas a
man will forsake his business and his shop to stare at an eminent person
when he comes into a town. It misbecomes any other to give his own
character, but him who has qualities worthy of imitation, and whose life
and opinions may serve for example: Caesar and Xenophon had a just and
solid foundation whereon to found their narrations, the greatness of their
own performances; and were to be wished that we had the journals of
Alexander the Great, the commentaries that Augustus, Cato, Sylla, Brutus,
and others left of their actions; of such persons men love and contemplate
the very statues even in copper and marble. This remonstrance is very
true; but it very little concerns me:</p>
<p>"Non recito cuiquam, nisi amicis, idque coactus;<br/>
Non ubivis, coramve quibuslibet, in medio qui<br/>
Scripta foro recitant, sunt multi, quique lavantes."<br/>
<br/>
["I repeat my poems only to my friends, and when bound to do so;<br/>
not before every one and everywhere; there are plenty of reciters<br/>
in the open market-place and at the baths."—Horace, sat. i. 4, 73.]<br/></p>
<p>I do not here form a statue to erect in the great square of a city, in a
church, or any public place:</p>
<p>"Non equidem hoc studeo, bullatis ut mihi nugis,<br/>
Pagina turgescat......<br/>
Secreti loquimur:"<br/>
<br/>
["I study not to make my pages swell with empty trifles;<br/>
you and I are talking in private."—Persius, Sat., v. 19.]<br/></p>
<p>'tis for some corner of a library, or to entertain a neighbour, a kinsman,
a friend, who has a mind to renew his acquaintance and familiarity with me
in this image of myself. Others have been encouraged to speak of
themselves, because they found the subject worthy and rich; I, on the
contrary, am the bolder, by reason the subject is so poor and sterile that
I cannot be suspected of ostentation. I judge freely of the actions of
others; I give little of my own to judge of, because they are nothing: I
do not find so much good in myself, that I cannot tell it without
blushing.</p>
<p>What contentment would it not be to me to hear any one thus relate to me
the manners, faces, countenances, the ordinary words and fortunes of my
ancestors? how attentively should I listen to it! In earnest, it would be
evil nature to despise so much as the pictures of our friends and
predecessors, the fashion of their clothes and arms. I preserve their
writing, seal, and a particular sword they wore, and have not thrown the
long staves my father used to carry in his hand, out of my closet.</p>
<p>"Paterna vestis, et annulus, tanto charior est<br/>
posteris, quanto erga parentes major affectus."<br/>
<br/>
["A father's garment and ring is by so much dearer to his posterity,<br/>
as there is the greater affection towards parents."<br/>
—St. Aug., De Civat. Dei, i. 13.]<br/></p>
<p>If my posterity, nevertheless, shall be of another mind, I shall be
avenged on them; for they cannot care less for me than I shall then do for
them. All the traffic that I have in this with the public is, that I
borrow their utensils of writing, which are more easy and most at hand;
and in recompense shall, peradventure, keep a pound of butter in the
market from melting in the sun:—[Montaigne semi-seriously speculates
on the possibility of his MS. being used to wrap up butter.]</p>
<p>"Ne toga cordyllis, ne penula desit olivis;<br/>
Et laxas scombris saepe dabo tunicas;"<br/>
<br/>
["Let not wrappers be wanting to tunny-fish, nor olives;<br/>
and I shall supply loose coverings to mackerel."<br/>
—Martial, xiii. I, I.]<br/></p>
<p>And though nobody should read me, have I wasted time in entertaining
myself so many idle hours in so pleasing and useful thoughts? In moulding
this figure upon myself, I have been so often constrained to temper and
compose myself in a right posture, that the copy is truly taken, and has
in some sort formed itself; painting myself for others, I represent myself
in a better colouring than my own natural complexion. I have no more made
my book than my book has made me: 'tis a book consubstantial with the
author, of a peculiar design, a parcel of my life, and whose business is
not designed for others, as that of all other books is. In giving myself
so continual and so exact an account of myself, have I lost my time? For
they who sometimes cursorily survey themselves only, do not so strictly
examine themselves, nor penetrate so deep, as he who makes it his
business, his study, and his employment, who intends a lasting record,
with all his fidelity, and with all his force: The most delicious
pleasures digested within, avoid leaving any trace of themselves, and
avoid the sight not only of the people, but of any other person. How often
has this work diverted me from troublesome thoughts? and all that are
frivolous should be reputed so. Nature has presented us with a large
faculty of entertaining ourselves alone; and often calls us to it, to
teach us that we owe ourselves in part to society, but chiefly and mostly
to ourselves. That I may habituate my fancy even to meditate in some
method and to some end, and to keep it from losing itself and roving at
random, 'tis but to give to body and to record all the little thoughts
that present themselves to it. I give ear to my whimsies, because I am to
record them. It often falls out, that being displeased at some action that
civility and reason will not permit me openly to reprove, I here disgorge
myself, not without design of public instruction: and also these poetical
lashes,</p>
<p>"Zon zur l'oeil, ion sur le groin,<br/>
Zon zur le dos du Sagoin,"<br/>
<br/>
["A slap on his eye, a slap on his snout, a slap on Sagoin's<br/>
back."—Marot. Fripelippes, Valet de Marot a Sagoin.]<br/></p>
<p>imprint themselves better upon paper than upon the flesh. What if I listen
to books a little more attentively than ordinary, since I watch if I can
purloin anything that may adorn or support my own? I have not at all
studied to make a book; but I have in some sort studied because I had made
it; if it be studying to scratch and pinch now one author, and then
another, either by the head or foot, not with any design to form opinions
from them, but to assist, second, and fortify those I already have
embraced. But whom shall we believe in the report he makes of himself in
so corrupt an age? considering there are so few, if, any at all, whom we
can believe when speaking of others, where there is less interest to lie.
The first thing done in the corruption of manners is banishing truth; for,
as Pindar says, to be true is the beginning of a great virtue, and the
first article that Plato requires in the governor of his Republic. The
truth of these days is not that which really is, but what every man
persuades another man to believe; as we generally give the name of money
not only to pieces of the dust alloy, but even to the false also, if they
will pass. Our nation has long been reproached with this vice; for
Salvianus of Marseilles, who lived in the time of the Emperor Valentinian,
says that lying and forswearing themselves is with the French not a vice,
but a way of speaking. He who would enhance this testimony, might say that
it is now a virtue in them; men form and fashion themselves to it as to an
exercise of honour; for dissimulation is one of the most notable qualities
of this age.</p>
<p>I have often considered whence this custom that we so religiously observe
should spring, of being more highly offended with the reproach of a vice
so familiar to us than with any other, and that it should be the highest
insult that can in words be done us to reproach us with a lie. Upon
examination, I find that it is natural most to defend the defects with
which we are most tainted. It seems as if by resenting and being moved at
the accusation, we in some sort acquit ourselves of the fault; though we
have it in effect, we condemn it in outward appearance. May it not also be
that this reproach seems to imply cowardice and feebleness of heart? of
which can there be a more manifest sign than to eat a man's own words—nay,
to lie against a man's own knowledge? Lying is a base vice; a vice that
one of the ancients portrays in the most odious colours when he says,
"that it is to manifest a contempt of God, and withal a fear of men." It
is not possible more fully to represent the horror, baseness, and
irregularity of it; for what can a man imagine more hateful and
contemptible than to be a coward towards men, and valiant against his
Maker? Our intelligence being by no other way communicable to one another
but by a particular word, he who falsifies that betrays public society.
'Tis the only way by which we communicate our thoughts and wills; 'tis the
interpreter of the soul, and if it deceive us, we no longer know nor have
further tie upon one another; if that deceive us, it breaks all our
correspondence, and dissolves all the ties of government. Certain nations
of the newly discovered Indies (I need not give them names, seeing they
are no more; for, by wonderful and unheardof example, the desolation of
that conquest has extended to the utter abolition of names and the ancient
knowledge of places) offered to their gods human blood, but only such as
was drawn from the tongue and ears, to expiate for the sin of lying, as
well heard as pronounced. That good fellow of Greece—[Plutarch, Life
of Lysander, c. 4.]—said that children are amused with toys and men
with words.</p>
<p>As to our diverse usages of giving the lie, and the laws of honour in that
case, and the alteration they have received, I defer saying what I know of
them to another time, and shall learn, if I can, in the meanwhile, at what
time the custom took beginning of so exactly weighing and measuring words,
and of making our honour interested in them; for it is easy to judge that
it was not anciently amongst the Romans and Greeks. And it has often
seemed to me strange to see them rail at and give one another the lie
without any quarrel. Their laws of duty steered some other course than
ours. Caesar is sometimes called thief, and sometimes drunkard, to his
teeth. We see the liberty of invective they practised upon one another, I
mean the greatest chiefs of war of both nations, where words are only
revenged with words, and do not proceed any farther.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />