EFTA00738725
EFTA00738726 DataSet-9
EFTA00738727

EFTA00738726.pdf

DataSet-9 1 page 230 words document
P17 V16 P23
Open PDF directly ↗ View extracted text
👁 1 💬 0
📄 Extracted Text (230 words)
Johnson have said to Montaigne's tower? But Montaigne's tower was the centre of his whole scheme of existence ; it made his house a symbol of his creed ; to know him, we must begin by entering it. `Every man,' he wrote, `should have a back-shop all his own . . . in the which he can establish his true liberty, his chief refuge, his best solitude. And here it is that he must hold his ordinary intercourse with himself.'' Miserable, to my way of thinking, is he who bath no place where he can be at home to himself ; where he can privily court him- self ; where he can hide himself. To me, it is much more bearable to be always alone than never.' 2 So, on one side of his dwelling-house, he built himself a tower to which he could retire to live at ease ; and here he spent most of his days. The average man, when he is bored by family existence, goes into the world, and distracts himself by politics or business. Montaigne said that he had used all his store of ambition for La Bootie, and had none left for himself. But the truth was that he was naturally indolent, and even had he not had a Ethel!, i. 39 : 'De la Solitude.' &Nth, iii. 3 : De trois Commerce': EFTA00738726
ℹ️ Document Details
SHA-256
b19f3655a50dee53dfad5b079e544cbe07e50857caa17caba333b03cd3ba7344
Bates Number
EFTA00738726
Dataset
DataSet-9
Document Type
document
Pages
1

Comments 0

Loading comments…
Link copied!