The Essays of Montaigne — Volume 14 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 88 pages of information about The Essays of Montaigne — Volume 14.

The Essays of Montaigne — Volume 14 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 88 pages of information about The Essays of Montaigne — Volume 14.

This other story that follows is also of the same category.  Atalanta, a virgin of excelling beauty and of wonderful disposition of body, to disengage herself from the crowd of a thousand suitors who sought her in marriage, made this proposition, that she would accept of him for her husband who should equal her in running, upon condition that they who failed should lose their lives.  There were enough who thought the prize very well worth the hazard, and who suffered the cruel penalty of the contract.  Hippomenes, about to make trial after the rest, made his address to the goddess of love, imploring her assistance; and she, granting his request, gave him three golden apples, and instructed him how to use them.  The race beginning, as Hippomenes perceived his mistress to press hard up to him; he, as it were by chance, let fall one of these apples; the maid, taken with the beauty of it, failed not to step out of her way to pick it up: 

              “Obstupuit Virgo, nitidique cupidine pomi
               Declinat cursus, aurumque volubile tollit.”

["The virgin, astonished and attracted by the glittering apple,
stops her career, and seizes the rolling gold.” 
—­Ovid, Metam., x. 666.]

He did the same, when he saw his time, by the second and the third, till by so diverting her, and making her lose so much ground, he won the race.  When physicians cannot stop a catarrh, they divert and turn it into some other less dangerous part.  And I find also that this is the most ordinary practice for the diseases of the mind: 

          “Abducendus etiam nonnunquam animus est ad alia studia,
          sollicitudines, curas, negotia:  loci denique mutatione,
          tanquam aegroti non convalescentes, saepe curandus est.”

     ["The mind is sometimes to be diverted to other studies, thoughts,
     cares, business:  in fine, by change of place, as where sick persons
     do not become convalescent.”—­Cicero, Tusc.  Quaes., iv. 35.]

’Tis to little effect directly to jostle a man’s infirmities; we neither make him sustain nor repel the attack; we only make him decline and evade it.

This other lesson is too high and too difficult:  ’tis for men of the first form of knowledge purely to insist upon the thing, to consider and judge it; it appertains to one sole Socrates to meet death with an ordinary countenance, to grow acquainted with it, and to sport with it; he seeks no consolation out of the thing itself; dying appears to him a natural and indifferent accident; ’tis there that he fixes his sight and resolution, without looking elsewhere.  The disciples of Hegesias, who starved themselves to death, animated thereunto by his fine lectures, and in such numbers that King Ptolemy ordered he should be forbidden to entertain his followers with such homicidal doctrines, did not consider death in itself, neither did they judge of it; it was not there they fixed their thoughts; they ran towards and aimed at a new being.

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The Essays of Montaigne — Volume 14 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.