The Essays of Montaigne — Volume 04 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 68 pages of information about The Essays of Montaigne — Volume 04.

The Essays of Montaigne — Volume 04 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 68 pages of information about The Essays of Montaigne — Volume 04.
keep it at liberty and in power to judge freely of things; but as to externals, absolutely to follow and conform himself to the fashion of the time.  Public society has nothing to do with our thoughts, but the rest, as our actions, our labours, our fortunes, and our lives, we are to lend and abandon them to its service and to the common opinion, as did that good and great Socrates who refused to preserve his life by a disobedience to the magistrate, though a very wicked and unjust one for it is the rule of rules, the general law of laws, that every one observe those of the place wherein he lives.

          ["It is good to obey the laws of one’s country.” 
          —­Excerpta ex Trag.  Gyaecis, Grotio interp., 1626, p. 937.]

And now to another point.  It is a very great doubt, whether any so manifest benefit can accrue from the alteration of a law received, let it be what it will, as there is danger and inconvenience in altering it; forasmuch as government is a structure composed of divers parts and members joined and united together, with so strict connection, that it is impossible to stir so much as one brick or stone, but the whole body will be sensible of it.  The legislator of the Thurians—­[Charondas; Diod.  Sic., xii. 24.]—­ordained, that whosoever would go about either to abolish an old law, or to establish a new, should present himself with a halter about his neck to the people, to the end, that if the innovation he would introduce should not be approved by every one, he might immediately be hanged; and he of the Lacedaemonians employed his life to obtain from his citizens a faithful promise that none of his laws should be violated.—­[Lycurgus; Plutarch, in Vita, c. 22.]—­The Ephoros who so rudely cut the two strings that Phrynis had added to music never stood to examine whether that addition made better harmony, or that by its means the instrument was more full and complete; it was enough for him to condemn the invention, that it was a novelty, and an alteration of the old fashion.  Which also is the meaning of the old rusty sword carried before the magistracy of Marseilles.

For my own part, I have a great aversion from a novelty, what face or what pretence soever it may carry along with it, and have reason, having been an eyewitness of the great evils it has produced.  For those which for so many years have lain so heavy upon us, it is not wholly accountable; but one may say, with colour enough, that it has accidentally produced and begotten the mischiefs and ruin that have since happened, both without and against it; it, principally, we are to accuse for these disorders: 

“Heu! patior telis vulnera facta meis.”

          ["Alas!  The wounds were made by my own weapons.” 
          —­Ovid, Ep.  Phyll.  Demophoonti, vers. 48.]

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The Essays of Montaigne — Volume 04 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.