Michel de Montaigne

Essays


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and understanding, which is to make matters still worse for me. But they do me wrong; for experience, rather, daily shows us, on the contrary, that a strong memory is commonly coupled with infirm judgment. They do, me, moreover (who am so perfect in nothing as in friendship), a great wrong in this, that they make the same words which accuse my infirmity, represent me for an ungrateful person; they bring my affections into question upon the account of my memory, and from a natural imperfection, make out a defect of conscience. “He has forgot,” says one, “this request, or that promise; he no more remembers his friends; he has forgot to say or do, or conceal such and such a thing, for my sake.” And, truly, I am apt enough to forget many things, but to neglect anything my friend has given me in charge, I never do it. And it should be enough, methinks, that I feel the misery and inconvenience of it, without branding me with malice, a vice so contrary to my humour.

      Secondly, that, by this means, I the less remember the injuries I have received; insomuch that, as the ancient said [Cicero, Pro Ligurio, c. 12] I should have a register of injuries, or a prompter, as Darius, who, that he might not forget the offence he had received from those of Athens, so oft as he sat down to dinner, ordered one of his pages three times to repeat in his ear, “Sir, remember the Athenians” [Herodotus, Histories v. 105.] and then, again, the places which I revisit, and the books I read over again, still smile upon me with a fresh novelty.

       Ut externus alienopene non sit hominis vice.

      [As a foreigner cannot be said to supply us the place of a man.

      —Pliny, Natural History. vii. I]

      And how much less sociable is false speaking than silence?