Authors: Sarah Bakewell
Françoise de la Chassaigne, left a prey, alas, to perpetual mourning, has erected this monument to the memory of this husband whom rightly she regrets. He had no other wife; she will have had no other husband.
His body, minus the heart, was laid in this tomb at last on May 1, 1594, a year and a half after his death. He had already had to wait a long time for his eternal rest—and it was not to be eternal at all. About a decade later, work began on enlargements to the church and alterations to its layout. This would have left Montaigne’s tomb stranded a long way from the new altar, in breach of the agreement with Françoise.
She sued the Feuillants, and won. They were obliged to move the tomb, in 1614, to a prime position in the new chapel.
There he lay, and the decades went by peacefully until the French Revolution came along some nine generations later. The new secular state abolished the Feuillants along with other religious orders, and confiscated their property, including the church and everything in it. This was during a time when Montaigne was being held up as a hero of the Enlightenment—a freethinking
philosophe
, someone worthy of honor by the revolutionary regime. It seemed wrong to leave him where he was. So it was ordered in 1800 that he be disinterred and reburied in the hall of monuments in Bordeaux’s great new secular temple: the Académie des sciences, belles-lettres et arts. The precious remains were extracted and conveyed with portentous solemnity to the new location, accompanied by cavalry in procession and saluted all the way with brass fanfares.
Two and a half years later, an antiquary working through records at the same Bordeaux Académie made an embarrassing discovery. The body that had been moved was not Montaigne’s. It was that of his nephew’s wife, a woman named Marie de Brian who had been buried in the same tomb along
with other members of the family. Quietly, with no brass or cavalry this time, she was retrieved from the hall of monuments and returned to her original place. Montaigne remained where he had been all the time, untouched, in the original tomb. The man who so disliked building work, idealistic “innovation,” and unnecessary upheavals had, after all, remained undisturbed by the Revolution, which had swept over his head like a wave over a deep sea bed.
Then, in May 1871, a fire destroyed the church. The tomb remained mostly undamaged, but it now sat unprotected amid the church’s gaping ruins for almost a decade. In December 1880, officials opened it to assess the state of the revered relic, and found that the lead shell around Montaigne’s remains had crumbled to bits. They sorted out the fragments, and made a new oak coffin for him. The restored tomb then spent five years in temporary quarters in the Depository of the Charterhouse, before being installed on March 11, 1886 in the entrance hall of a new building at the University of Bordeaux, containing the faculties of theology, science, and literature. Today, it is at the Musée d’Aquitaine in Bordeaux, where it can be seen on proud display.
There could hardly have been a more appropriate set of posthumous adventures for someone so attuned to the flux of the world, and so aware of how all human endeavors become muddled by error. Even after he died, something seemed to keep pulling Montaigne back into the stream of life rather than leaving him frozen in perfect remembrance. And his real legacy has nothing to do with his tomb at all. It is found in the turbulent fortunes of the
Essays
, his endlessly evolving second self. They remained alive, and, for Montaigne, it was always life that mattered. Virginia Woolf was especially fond of quoting this thought from his last essay: it was as close as Montaigne ever came to a final or best answer to the question of how to live.
Life should be an aim unto itself, a purpose unto itself.
Either this is not an answer at all, or it is the only possible answer. It has the same quality as the answer given by the Zen master who, when asked, “What is enlightenment?” whacked the questioner on the head with a stick
Enlightenment is something learned on your own body: it takes the form of things happening to you. This is why the Stoics, Epicureans, and Skeptics taught tricks rather than precepts. All philosophers can offer is that blow on the head: a useful technique, a thought experiment, or an experience—in Montaigne’s case, the experience of reading the
Essays
. The subject he teaches is simply himself, an ordinary example of a living being.
Although the
Essays
present a different facet to every eye, everything in them is united in that one figure: Montaigne. This is why readers return to him in a way they do to few others of his century, or indeed to most writers of any epoch. The
Essays
are
his
essays. They test and sample a mind that is an “I” to itself, as all minds are.
Some might question whether there is still any need for an essayist such as Montaigne. Twenty-first-century people, in the developed world, are already individualistic to excess, as well as entwined with one another to a degree beyond the wildest dreams of a sixteenth-century winegrower. His sense of the “I” in all things may seem a case of preaching to the converted, or even feeding drugs to the addicted. But Montaigne offers more than an incitement to self-indulgence. The twenty-first century has everything to gain from a Montaignean sense of life, and, in its most troubled moments so far, it has been sorely in need of a Montaignean politics. It could use his sense of moderation, his love of sociability and courtesy, his suspension of judgment, and his subtle understanding of the psychological mechanisms involved in confrontation and conflict. It needs his conviction that no vision of heaven, no imagined Apocalypse, and no perfectionist fantasy can ever outweigh the tiniest of selves in the real world. It is unthinkable to Montaigne that one could ever “gratify heaven and nature by committing massacre and homicide, a belief universally embraced in all religions.” To believe that life could demand any such thing is to forget what day-to-day existence actually is. It entails forgetting that, when you look at a puppy held over a bucket of water, or even at a cat in the mood for play, you are looking at a creature who looks back at you. No abstract principles are involved; there are only two individuals, face to face, hoping for the best from one another.
Perhaps some of the credit for Montaigne’s last answer should therefore go to his cat—a specific sixteenth-century individual, who had a rather
pleasant life on a country estate with a doting master and not too much competition for his attention. She was the one who, by wanting to play with Montaigne at an inconvenient moment, reminded him what it was to be alive. They looked at each other, and, just for a moment, he leaped across the gap in order to see himself through her eyes. Out of that moment—and countless others like it—came his whole philosophy.
There they are, then, in Montaigne’s library. The cat is attracted by the scratching of his pen; she dabs an experimental paw at the moving quill. He looks at her, perhaps momentarily irritated by the interruption. Then he smiles, tilts the pen, and draws the feather-end across the paper for her to chase. She pounces. The pads of her paws smudge the ink on the last few words; some sheets of paper slide to the floor. The two of them can be left there, suspended in the midst of their lives with the
Essays
not yet fully written, while we go and get on with ours—with the
Essays
not yet fully read.
My five years of “voluntary servitude” to Montaigne have been an extraordinary half-decade, during which I have learned a lot—not least about the kindness of the friends, scholars, and colleagues who have helped me in so many ways.
In particular, I wish to thank Warren Boutcher, Emily Butterworth, Philippe Desan, George Hoffmann, Peter Mack, and John O’Brien, for the warmth of their encouragement, the generosity of their assistance, and their willingness to share their time, knowledge, and experience.
My gratitude goes to Elizabeth Jones for supplying me with fascinating material from her documentary,
The Man Who Ate His Archbishop’s Liver
, as well as to Francis Couturas at the Musée d’art et d’archéologie du Périgord in Périgueux, Anne-Laure Ranoux at the Musée du Louvre, Anne-Sophie Marchetto of
Sud-Ouest
, and to Michel Iturria for permission to use his cartoon “Enfin! Une groupie!” I am also extremely grateful to John Stafford for allowing me to use his photographs.
I relied a great deal on libraries including the Bibliothèque nationale de France, the Bibliothèque municipale de Bordeaux, the British Library, and the London Library, and I thank the staff of all these for their expertise. Stanford University Press’s generosity in so readily granting permission to quote from Donald Frame’s translation is very much appreciated.
The book was completed with the help of an Authors’ Foundation grant from the Society of Authors, and a London Library Carlyle Membership; I am most grateful for both.
As always, many thanks go to my agent Zoë Waldie at Rogers, Coleridge & White, and to my editor, Jenny Uglow, as well as Alison Samuel, Parisa Ebrahimi, Beth Humphries, Sue Amaradivakara, and everyone else at Chatto & Windus who believed in the book and helped bring it to life.
For reading the manuscript in various stages of disarray, advising me wisely, and reassuring me that everything was going according to plan, however unlikely this looked, I thank Tündi Haulik, Julie Wheelwright, Jane and Ray Bakewell, and Simonetta Ficai-Veltroni—who lived with Montaigne for so long and never lost faith in him (or me).
I first met Montaigne when, some twenty years ago in Budapest, I was so desperate for something to read on a train that I took a chance on a cheap
Essays
translation in a secondhand shop. It was the only English-language book on the shelf; I very much doubted that I would enjoy it. There is no one in particular I can thank for this turn of events: only Fortune, and the Montaignean truth that the best things in life happen when you don’t get what you think you want.
1533 (Feb. 28) | Montaigne is born. |
1539?–48 | He goes to school at the Collège de Guyenne, Bordeaux. |
1548 (Aug.) | Salt-tax riots in Bordeaux; Montaigne witnesses the mob killing of Moneins. |
1548–54 | He studies: probably law, probably in Paris and/or Toulouse. |
1554 | He begins work at the Cour des Aides in Périgueux. |
1557 | All Périgueux men are transferred to the Bordeaux parlement . |
1558–59 | Montaigne becomes friends with Estienne de La Boétie. |
1559 | Treaty of Câteau Cambrésis ends France’s foreign wars, with disastrous consequences. |
1562 | Massacre of Vassy: beginning of the civil wars. In Rouen with Charles IX, Montaigne meets three Tupinambá Brazilians. |
1563 (Aug. 18) | La Boétie dies, Montaigne at his bedside. |
1565 (Sept. 23) | Montaigne marries Françoise de La Chassaigne. |
1568 (June 18) | Pierre Eyquem dies, and Montaigne inherits the estate. |
1569 | Montaigne publishes his translation of Sebond’s Natural Theology . |
| Montaigne’s brother Arnaud dies in a tennis accident. |
1569 or early 1570 | Montaigne himself almost dies in a riding accident. |
1570 | Montaigne retires from the Bordeaux parlement . |
| His first baby is born, and dies after two months. |
| He edits the works of La Boétie. |
1571 (Feb.) | Montaigne makes his birthday inscription in his library. |
(Sept. 9) | His only surviving child, Léonor, is born. |
1572 | Montaigne probably begins work on the Essays . |
(Aug.) | St. Bartholomew’s massacres. |
1574 | Death of Charles IX; Henri III becomes king. |
1576 | Montaigne has his medal struck, with scales and the motto epokhe . |
1578 | He suffers his first kidney-stone attacks. |
1580 | Essais: 1st edition. |
(June)–1581 (Nov.) | Montaigne travels in Switzerland, Germany, and Italy. |
1581 (Aug.) | He is elected mayor of Bordeaux. |
1582 | Essais: 2nd edition. |
1583 (Aug.) | He is reelected mayor of Bordeaux. |
1584 (Dec.) | Henri de Navarre stays at Montaigne estate. |
1585 | Plague on the estate; Montaigne flees. |
1587 | Essais: 3rd edition. |
(Oct.) | Henri de Navarre again calls at Montaigne estate. |
1588 | Montaigne in Paris on secret mission, then follows court of Henri III. He meets Marie de Gournay. |
(May) | Day of the Barricades; Henri III flees Paris. |
(June) | Essais: the much enlarged 5th edition (the 4th, if it existed, has never been traced). |
(10 July) | Montaigne imprisoned in the Bastille, and released. |
(Autumn) | He recuperates in Picardy with Marie de Gournay. |
(Dec.) | Henri III has the duc de Guise assassinated. |
1588–92 | Montaigne works on final additions to the Essays . |
1589 (Aug.) | Henri III is assassinated; Henri IV succeeds to the throne, though his claim is disputed. |
1592 (Sept. 13) | Montaigne dies of a quinsy. |
1595 | Marie de Gournay’s edition of the Essais , which will dominate Montaigne-reading for three centuries. |
1601 | Death of Montaigne’s mother Antoinette de Louppes de Villeneuve. |
| Pierre Charron’s “remix,” La Sagesse . |
1603 | Essayes: first English translation by John Florio. |
1616 | Death of Montaigne’s daughter, Léonor. |
1627 | Death of Montaigne’s widow Françoise de La Chassaigne. |
1637 | Descartes’s Discours de la méthode . |
1645 | Death of Marie de Gournay. |
1662 | Blaise Pascal dies, leaving the notes published as the Pensées . |
1676 | Essais placed on Index of Prohibited Books . |
1685–86 | Essays translated into English by Charles Cotton. |
1724 | French Essais published in London by refugee Pierre Coste. |
1772 | Discovery of Montaigne’s travel journal in an old trunk. |
| Annotated “Bordeaux Copy” of Essais unearthed from archives and used to authenticate the journal. |
1789 | French Revolution. |
1800 | Revolutionary authorities decide to re-bury |
| Montaigne as a secular hero in the Bordeaux |
| Académie, but the plan goes awry. |
1850 | Montaigne’s “plague” letters published, causing consternation. |
1854 | Essais removed from the Index of Prohibited Books . |
1880–86 | Montaigne’s tomb renovated and moved to University of Bordeaux. |
1906 | First volume of Strowski’s edition published, based primarily on “Bordeaux Copy.” |
1912 | First volume of Armaingaud’s edition published, based primarily on “Bordeaux Copy.” |
2007 | New Pléiade edition published, based primarily on Gournay’s 1595 edition. |