I should think myself very negligent of my duty if
I failed, to the utmost of my power, to prevent such
a name as his, and a memory so richly meriting remembrance,
from falling into oblivion; and if I did not use my
best endeavour to keep them fresh. I believe
that he feels something of what I do on his behalf,
and that my services touch and rejoice him.
In fact, he lives in my heart so vividly and so wholly,
that I am loath to believe him committed to the dull
ground, or altogether cast off from communication
with us. Therefore, Monsieur, since every new
light I can shed on him and his name, is so much added
to his second period of existence, and, moreover,
since his name is ennobled and honoured by the place
which receives it, it falls to me not only to extend
it as widely as I can, but to confide it to the keeping
of persons of honour and virtue; among whom you hold
such a rank, that, to afford you the opportunity of
receiving this new guest, and giving him good entertainment,
I decided on presenting to you this little work, not
for any profit you are likely to derive from it, being
well aware that you do not need to have Plutarch and
his companions interpreted to you—but it
is possible that Madame de Roissy, reading in it the
order of her household management and of your happy
accord painted to the life, will be pleased to see
how her own natural inclination has not only reached
but surpassed the theories of the wisest philosophers,
regarding the duties and laws of the wedded state.
And, at all events, it will be always an honour to
me, to be able to do anything which shall be for the
pleasure of you and yours, on account of the obligation
under which I lie to serve you.
Monsieur, I pray God to grant you a long and happy
life. From Montaigne, this 30th April 1570.
Your humble servant, Michel de Montaigne.
V.
To Monsieur, Monsieur de L’HOSPITAL, Chancellor
of France
Monseigneur,—I am of the opinion that
persons such as you, to whom fortune and reason have
committed the charge of public affairs, are not more
inquisitive in any point than in ascertaining the character
of those in office under you; for no society is so
poorly furnished, but that, if a proper distribution
of authority be used, it has persons sufficient for
the discharge of all official duties; and when this
is the case, nothing is wanting to make a State perfect
in its constitution. Now, in proportion as this
is so much to be desired, so it is the more difficult
of accomplishment, since you cannot have eyes to embrace
a multitude so large and so widely extended, nor to
see to the bottom of hearts, in order that you may
discover intentions and consciences, matters principally
to be considered; so that there has never been any
commonwealth so well organised, in which we might not
detect often enough defect in such a department or
such a choice; and in those systems, where ignorance
and malice, favouritism, intrigue, and violence govern,
if any selection happens to be made on the ground
of merit and regularity, we may doubtless thank Fortune,
which, in its capricious movements, has for once taken
the path of reason.