Essays of Michael, seigneur de Montaigne in three books : with marginal notes and quotations and an account of the author's life : with a short character of the author and translator, by a person of honour / made English by Charles Cotton ...

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Title
Essays of Michael, seigneur de Montaigne in three books : with marginal notes and quotations and an account of the author's life : with a short character of the author and translator, by a person of honour / made English by Charles Cotton ...
Author
Montaigne, Michel de, 1533-1592.
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London :: Printed for M. Gillyflower and W. Hensman ... and R. Wellington ... and H. Hindmarsh ...,
1700.
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Montaigne, Michel de, 1533-1592.
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http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A70610.0001.001
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"Essays of Michael, seigneur de Montaigne in three books : with marginal notes and quotations and an account of the author's life : with a short character of the author and translator, by a person of honour / made English by Charles Cotton ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A70610.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed May 13, 2025.

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CHAP. XX. (Book 20)

Of the Force of imagination. (Book 20)

FOrtis imaginatio generat casum,* 1.1 A strong Imagination begets Accident, say the School-men. I am one of those who are most sensible of the Power of Imagination: Every one is justled, but some are overthrown by it. It has a very great Impression upon me; and I make it my Business to avoid wanting force to resist it. I could live by the sole help of heathful and jolly Company. The very sight of anothers Pain does materially work upon me, and I naturally usurp the Sense of a third Person to share with him in his Torment. A perpetual Cough in another tickles my Lungs and Throat. I more unwillingly visit the sick I love, and am by Duty interested to look after, than those I care not for, and from whom I have no expectation. I take possessi∣on of the Disease I am concern'd at, and lay it too much to heart, and do not at all won∣der that Fancy should distribute Fevers, and sometimes kill such as allow too much Scope, and are too willing to entertain it. Simon

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Thomas was a great Physician of his time: I remember, that hapning one day at Tholouze to meet him at a rich old Fellows House, who was troubled with naughty Lungs, and dis∣coursing with his Patient about the method of his Cure; he told him, that one thing which would be very conducing to it, was, to give me such Occasion to be pleased with his Company, that I might come often to see him, by which means, and by fixing his Eyes up∣on the Freshness of my Complexion, and his Imagination upon the Sprightliest and Vi∣gour that glowed in my Youth, and posses∣sing all his Senses with the flourishing Age wherein I then was, his Habit of Body might peradventure be amended, but he forgot to say that mine at the same time might be made worse. Gallus Vibius so long cudgell'd his Brains to find out the Essence and Motions of Folly, till by the Inquisition, in the end he went directly out of his Wits, and to such a Degree, that he could never after recover his Judgment; and he might brag that he was become a Fool by too much Wisdom. Some there are who thorough Fear prevent the Hangman; like him whose Eyes being un∣bound to have his Pardon read to him, was found stark dead upon the Scaffold, by the Stroak of Imagination.* 1.2 We start, tremble, turn pale, and blush, as we are variously mov'd by Imagination; and being a-bed, feel our Bodies agitated with its Power to that degree, as even sometimes to Expire. And boyling Youth when fast asleep, grows so

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warm with Fancy, as in a Dream to satisfie amorous Desires.

* 1.3Ut quasi transactis saepe omnibus rebus, profundant Fluminis ingentes fluctus vestemque cruentent.
Who fansie gulling Lyes, his enflam'd Mind Lays his Loves Tribute there, where not design'd.

Although it be no new thing to see Horns grown in a Night on the Fore-head of one that had none when he went to Bed; notwithstand∣ing, what besell Cyppus, a noble Roman, is ve∣ry r••••merable; who having one day been a ve∣ry delig••••d Spectator of a Bull-baiting, and having all the night dreamt that he had Horns on his Head, did by the Force of Imagination, really cause them to grow there. Passion made the Son of Croesus to speak, who was born dumb, by that means supplying him with so necessary a Faculty, which Nature had de∣ny'd him. And Antiochus sell into a Fever, en∣flam'd with the Beauty of Stratonissa, too deep∣ly imprinted in his Soul. Pliny pretends to have seen Lucius Cressitius, who from a Wo∣man was turn'd into a Man upon her very Wedding day. Pontanus, and others, report the like Metamorphoses that in these latter days have hapned in Italy, and through the vehement Desire of him and his Mother

* 1.4Vota puer slvit, quae foemina voverat Iphis.
Iphis, a Boy, the Vow desray'd That he had promis'd when a Maid.

My self passing by Vitry le Francois, a Town in Champagne, saw a Man, the Bishop of

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Soissons had in Confirmation, call'd German, whom all the Inhabitants of the Place had known to be a Girl till two and twenty Years of Age, call'd Mary. He was at the time of my being there very full of Beard, Old, and not Married, who told us, that by straining himself in a Leap, his male Instruments came out; and the Maids of that Place have to this day a Song, wherein they advise one another not to take too great Strides, for fear of being turn'd into Men, as Mary German was. It is no wonder if this sort of Accident frequently happen; for if Imagination have any Power in such things, it is so continually and vigorously bent upon this Subject, that to the end it may not so often relapse into the same Thought, and Violence of Desire, it were better once for all to give these young Wen∣ches the Things they long for. Some stick not to attribute the Scars of King Dagobert, and St. Francis, to the Force of Imaginati∣on; and it is said, that by it Bodies will some∣times be removed from their Places; and Cel∣sus tells us of a Priest whose Soul would be ra∣vish'd into such an Ecstasie, that the Body would, for a long time remain without Sense or Respiration. St. Augustine makes mention of another, who, upon the hearing of any lamen∣table or doleful Cries, would presently fall into a Swoon, and be so far out of himself, that it was in vain to call, hollow in his Ears, pinch, or burn him, till he voluntarily came to him∣self; and then he would say that he had heard Voices as it were a far off, and did feel when

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they pinch'd and burn'd him: and to prove that this was no obstinate Dissimulation in de∣fiance of his Sense of Feeling, it was manifest, that all the while he had neither Pulse nor Breathing. 'Tis very probable, that Visions, Exchantments, and all Extraordinary Effects of that Nature, derive their Credit principal∣ly from the Power of Imagination, working and making its chiefest Impression upon vulgar and more easie Souls, whose Belief is so strange∣ly impos'd upon as to think they see what they do not. I am not satisfied, and make a very great Question, Whether those pleasant Liga∣tures with which this Age of ours is so fetter'd, and there is almost no other Talk, are not mere voluntary Impressions of Apprehension and fear; for I know by experience, in the Case of a particular Friend of mine, one for whom I can be as Responsible as for my self, and a Man that cannot possibly fall under any manner of Suspicion of insufficiency, and as little of being enchanted, who having heard a Companion of his make a Relation of an unusual Frigidity that surpriz'd him at a very unseasonable time, being afterwards himself engag'd upon the same Account, the Horror of the former Story on a sudden so strangely possess'd his Imagination, that he ran the same Fortune the other had done; and from that time forward (the scurvy Remembrance of his Disaster running in his Mind, and tyrannizing over him) was extreamly sub∣ject to Relapse into the same Misfortune. He found some Remedy, however, for

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this Incovenience, by himself franckly con∣fessing, and declaring before-hand to the Party with whom he was to have to do, the Subjection he lay under, and the infirmity he was Subject to, by which means the Conten∣tion of his Soul was in some sort appeas'd; and knowing that now some such Misbeha∣viour was expected from him, the Restraint upon those Faculties grew less, and he less suffer'd by it, and afterwards, at such times as he could be in no such Apprehension, as not being about any such Act (his Thoughts be∣ing then disengag'd and free, and his Body being in its true and natural Estate) by cau∣sing those Parts to be handled and communi∣cated to the Knowledge of others, he was at last totally freed from that vexatious Infirmity. After a Man has once done a Woman right, he is never after in danger of misbehaving himself with that Person, unless upon the ac∣count of a manifest and inexcusable Weakness. Neither is this Disaster to be fear'd, but in Adventures where the Soul is over-extended with Desire or Respect, and especially where we meet with an unexpected Opportunity that requires a sudden and quick Dispatch; and in those Cases, there is no possible means for a Man always to defend himself from such a Surprize as shall put him damnably out of Countenance. And yet I have known some, who have secured themselves from this Mischance by coming half sated else∣where, purposely to abate the ardour of his Fury; and others, who by being grown old,

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find themselves less impotent by being loss able; and particularly one, who found an Advantage by being assur'd by a Friend of his, that he had a Counter-charm against cer∣tain Enchantments that would defend him from this Disgrace. The Story it self is not much amiss, and therefore you shall have it. A Count of a very great Family, and with whom I had the Honour to be very famili∣arly intimate, being married to a very fair Lady, who 〈◊〉〈◊〉 formerly been pretended to, and importunately courted by one who was invited to, and present at the Wedding: all his Friends were in very great Fear, but especially an old Lady his Kinswoman, who had the ordering of the Solemnity, and in whose House it was kept, suspecting his Ri∣val would, in Revenge, offer soul Play, and procure some of these kind of Sorceries to put a Trick upon him; which Fear she also communicated to me, who, to comfort her, bad her not trouble her self, but relie upon my Care to prevent or frustrate any such De∣signs. Now I had, by chance, about me a certain flat Plate of Gold whereon were gra∣ven some Coelestial Figures good to prevent Frenzy occasion'd by the Heat of the Sun, or for any Pains of the Head, being applied to the Suture; where, that it might the better remain firm, it was sowed to a Ribban to be tyed under the Chin. A Foppery Cozen-Ger∣man to this of which I am speaking, was by Jaques Pelletir, who liv'd in my House, pre∣sented to me for a singular Rarety, and a thing

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of Sovereign Vertue. I had a fancy to make some use of this Knack, and therefore private∣ly told the Count, that he might possibly run the same Fortune other Bridegrooms had some∣times done; especially some Persons being in the House, who no doubt would be glad to do him such a Courtesie, but let him boldly go to Bed, for I would do him the Office of a Friend, and if need were, would not spare a Mira∣cle that it was in my Power to do, provided he would engage to me, upon his Honour, to keep it to himself, and only when they came to bring him his Cawdle,* 1.5 if Matters had not gone well with him, to give me such a Sign, and leave the rest to me. Now he had his Ears so batter'd, and his mind so prepos∣sess'd with the eternal Tattle of this Business, that when he came to't he did really find him∣self tied with the Trouble of his Imagination, and accordingly at the time appointed gave me the Sign: Whereupon, I whisper'd him in the Ear, That he should rise under Pretence of putting us out of the Room, and after a jesting manner pull my Night-gown from my Shoulders; throw it over his own, and there keep it till he had perform'd what I had ap∣pointed him to do, which was, that when we were all gone out of the Chamber he should withdraw to make Water, should three times repeat such and such Words, and as often do such and such Actions: that at every of the three times he should tie the Ribban I put into his Hand about his Middle, and be sure to place the Medal was fastned

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to it (the Figures in such a Posture) exactly upon his Reins, which being done, and ha∣ving the last of the three times so well girt and fast tied the Ribban that it could neither untie nor slip from its Place, let him confi∣dently return to his Business, and withal not to forget to spread my gown upon the Bed, so that it might be sure to cover them both. These ridiculous Circumstances are the main of the Effect, our fancy being so far seduc'd, as to believe, that so strange and uncouth Formalities must of necessity proceed from some abstruse Science. Their inanity gives them Reverence and Weight. However, cer∣tain it is, that my Figures approv'd themselves more Venerean than Solar, and the fair Bride had no reason to complain. Now I cannot forbear to tell you, it was a sudden Whimsey, mix'd with a little Curiosity, that made me do a thing so contrary to my Nature; for I am an Enemy to all subtile, and counterfeit Actions, and abominate all manner of Fraud, though it be but for sport; for though the Action may not be wicked in it self, yet 'tis done after a wicked manner. Amasis King of AEgypt, married Laodicea a marvellous beau∣tiful Greek Virgin, who, tho famous for his Abilities elsewhere found himself quite ano∣ther Man with his Wife, and could by no means enjoy her; at which he was so enrag'd, that he threatned to kill her, suspecting her to be a Witch. As 'tis usually in things that consist in Fancy; she put him upon Devotion, who having accordingly made his Vows to

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Venus, he found himself divinely restor'd the very first Night after his Oblations and Sa∣crifices. Now in plain truth, Women are to blame, to entertain us with that disdainful, coy, and angry Countenance they commonly do, which extinguishes our Vigour, as it kin∣dles our Desire; which made the Daughter-in-Law of Prthagoras to say, That the Woman who goes to Bed to a Man, must put of her Mode∣sty with her Petticoat, and put it on again with the same. The Soul of the Assailant being disturb'd with many several Alarms, is easily astonish'd, and soon loses the Power of Performance; and whoever the Imagination has once put this Trick upon and confounded with the Shame of it, (and she never does it but at the first Ac∣quaintance, by reason Men are then More ar∣dent and eager, and also at this first Account a Man gives of himself, he is much more ti∣morous of miscarrying) having made an ill Beginning, he enters into such Indignations and Despite at the Accident, as will in fol∣lowing Opportunities be apt to remain, and continue him in the same Condition. As to what concerns Married People, having the Year before them (as we say) they ought ne∣ver to compell, or so much as to offer at the Feat, if they do not find themselves very rea∣dy: and it is better indecently to fail of hand∣selling the Nuptial Sheets, and of paying the Ceremony due to the Wedding-night, when a Man perceives himself full of Agitation and Trembling, expecting another opportu∣nity at a better and more private Leisure,

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when his Fancy shall be better compos'd, than to make himself perpetually miserable for having misbehav'd himself, and being baf∣fled at the first Assault. Till possession be ta∣ken, a man that knows himself subject to this Infirmity, should leisurely and by degrees make several little tryals and light offers, without obstinately attempting at once to force an absolute conquest over his own mu∣tinous and indispos'd Faculties; such as know their members to be naturally obedient to their desires, need to take no other care but only to counterplot their Fancy. The indocile and rude liberty of this scurvy Member, is suf∣ficiently remarkable, by its importunate, un∣ruly, and unseasonable tumidity and impai∣ence, at such times as we have nothing for it to do, and by its more unseasonable stupidity and disobedience, when we stand most in need of his Vigour, so imperiously contesting the Authority of the Will, and with so much obsti∣nacy denying all sollicitation both of Hand and Fancy. And yet though his Rebellion is so universally complain'd of, and that proofs are not wanting to condemn him, if he had never∣theless fee'd me to plead his Cause, I should peradventure bring the rest of his fellow mem∣bers into suspicion of comploting this mis∣chief against him, out of pure envy at the im∣portance, and ravishing pleasure particular to his Employment, so as to have by Confedera∣cy arm'd the whole World against him, by malevolently charging him alone with their common offence. For let any one consider,

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whether there is any one Part of our Bodies that does not often refuse to perform its. Of∣fice at the Precept of the Will, and that does not often exercise its Function in defiance of her Command. They have every one of them proper Passions of their own, that rouze and awake, stupifie and benumb them, without our Leave or Consent. How often do the involuntary motions of the Countenance dis∣cover our inward Thoughts, and betray our most private Secrets to the Knowledge of the Standers by? The same Cause that animates this Member, does also, without our Know∣ledge, animate the Lungs, Pulse and Heart, the sight of a pleasing Object imperceptibly diffusing a Flame through all our Parts with a febrifick motion. Is there nothing but these Veins and muscles that swell, and flag without the Consent, not only of the Will, but even of our Knowledge also? We do not command our Hairs to stand on end, nor our Skin to shiver either with Fear or Desire. The Hands often convey themselves to Parts to which we do not direct them. The Tongue will be interdict, and the Voice sometimes suffo∣cated when we know not how to help it. When we have nothing to eat, and would wil∣lingly forbid it, the Appetite of Eating and Drinking does not for all that forbear to stir up the Parts that are subjected to it, no more not less than the other Appetite we were speaking of, and in like manner does as un∣seasonably leave us. The Vessels that serve to discharge the Belly have their proper Dilaa∣tions

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and Compressions, without, and beyond our Intelligence, as well as those which are destin'd to purge the Reins. And that which to justifie the Prerogative of the Will, St. Au∣gustine urges, of having seen a Man who could command his Back-side to discharge as often together as he pleas'd, and that Vives does yet fortifie with another Example in his time of one that could Fart, in Tune, does nothing suppose any more pure Obedience of that Part; for is any thing commonly more tumul∣tuary or indiscreet? To which let me add, that I my sef knew one so rude and ungo∣vern'd, as for forty Years together made his Master-Vent with one continued and uninter∣mitted Hurricane, and 'tis like will do till he expire that way, and vanish in his own Smoak. And I could heartily wish, that I only knew by Reading, how oft a Man's Belly, by the De∣nial of one single Puff, brings him to the ve∣ry door of an exceeding painful Death; and that the Emperour, who gave Liberty to let fly in all Places, had at the same time given us Power to do it. But for our Will, in whose behalf we prefer this Accusation, with how much greater Similitude of Truth may we reproach even her her self with Mutiny and Sedition for her Irregularity and Disobe∣dience? Does she always will what we would have her to do? Does she not often will what we forbid her to will, and that to our manifest Prejudice? Does she suffer her self any more than any of the other, to be govern'd and di∣rected by the Results of our Reason? To con∣clude,

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I should move in the Behalf of the Gen∣tleman, my Client, it might be considerd, that in this Fact, his Cause being inseparably conjoyn'd with an Accessary, yet he is only call'd in Question, and that by Arguments and Accusations that cannot be charg'd, nor reflect upon the other: whose Business indeed is sometimes inopportunely to invite, but never to refuse, and to allure after a tacite and clan∣destine manner; and therefore is the Malice and Injustice of his Accusers most manifestly apparent. But be it how it will, protesting against the proceedings of the Advocates and Judges, Nature will, in the mean time, pro∣ceed after her own wav, who had done but well, if she had endow'd this Member with some particular Privilege. The Author of the sole immortal Work of Mortals. A divine Work according to Socrates, and of Love, Desire of Immortality, and himself an immor∣tal Daemon. Some one perhaps by such an Ef∣fect of Imagination may have had the good luck to leave* 1.6 that behind him here in France, which his Companion who has come after, and behav'd himself better, has carried back with him into Spain. And that you may see why Men in such cases require a mind pre∣par'd for the thing they are to do, why do the Physicians tamper with, and prepossess before-hand their Patients credulity with ma∣ny false promises of Cure, if not to the end, that the effect of imagination may supply the imposture and defect of their Apozem? They know very well, that a great Master of

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their Trade has given it under his hand, that he has known some with whom the very sight of a potion would work: which Exam∣ples of Fancy and Conceit come now into my head, by the remembrance of a story was told me by a domestick Apothecary of my Father's, a blunt Swisse (a Nation not much addicted to vanity and lying) of a Merchant he had long known at Tholouse, who being a valeth∣dinary, and much afflicted with Fits of the Stone, had often occasion to take Clysters, of which he caus'd several sorts to be prescrib'd him by the Physicians, according to the acci∣dents of his Disease: one of which being one time brought him, and none of the usual forms, as feeling if it were not too hot, and the like, being omitted, he was laid down on his Belly, the Syringe put up, and all Cere∣monies perform'd, injection excepted; after which, the Apothecary being gone, and the Patient accommodated as if he had really re∣ceiv'd a Clyster, he found the same operation and effect that those do who have taken one indeed; and if at any time the Physician did not find the Operation sufficient, he would usually give him two or three more after the same manner. And the Fellow moreover swore to me, that to save charges (for he pay'd as if he had really taken them) this sick mans Wife, having sometimes made tryal of warm Water only, the effect discover'd the Cheat, and finding these would do no good, was fain to return to the old way. A Woman fansying she had swallow'd a pin in a piece of

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Bread, cry'd out of an intolerable pain in her Throat, where she thought she felt it stick: but an ingenious Fellow that was brought to her, seeing no outward Tomour nor alterati∣on, supposing it only to be conceit taken at some Crust of Bread that had hurt her as it went down, caus'd her to vomit, and cunning∣ly, unseen, threw a crooked Pin into the Ba∣son, which the Woman no sooner saw, but believing she had cast it up, she presently found her self eas'd of her pain. I my self knew a Gentleman, who having treated a great deal of good Company at his house, three or four days after bragg'd in jest (for there was no such thing) that he had made them eat of a bak'd Cat; at which, a young Gentlewoman, who had been at the Feast, took such a horror, that falling into a violent vomiting end a Fever, there was no possible means to save her. Even brute Beasts are also subject to the force of Imagination a well as we; as is seen by Dogs, who die of grief for the loss of their Masters, and are seen to quest, tremble, and start, as Horses will kick and whinney in their sleep. Now all this may be attributed to the affinity and relation betwixt the Souls and Bodies of Brutes, but 'tis quite another thing when the Imagination works up∣on the Souls of rational men, and not only to the prejudice of their own particular Bodies, but of others also. And as an infected Body communicates its Malady to those that ap∣proach, or live near it, as we see in the Plague, the small Pox, and sore Eyes that run through whole Families and Cities;

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* 1.7Dum spectant oculi laesos, laeduntur & ipsi: Multáque corporibus transitione nocent.
Viewing sore eyes, eyes to be sore are brought, And many ills are by transition caught.
So the Imagination being vehemently agitated, darts out Infection capable of offending the stranger Object. The Ancients had an opi∣nion of certain Women of Scythia, that being animated and inrag'd against any one, they kill'd them only with their looks: Tortoises and Ostriches hatch their Eggs with only look∣ing on them, which inferrs, that their Eyes have in them some ejaculative vertue. And the Eyes of Witches are said to be dangerous and hurtful.

* 1.8Nescio quis teneros oculus mihi fascinat agnos.
What Eye it is, I do not know, My tender Lambs bewitches so.

Magicians are no very good Authority for me, but we experimentally see, that Women impart the Marks of their Fancy to the Chil∣dren they carry in their Wombs; witness her that was brought to Bed of a Moor: and there was presented to Charles the Emperour, and King of Bohemia, a Girl from about Pisa, all over-rough and cover'd with Hair, whom her Mother said to be so conceiv'd by reason of a Picture of St John Baptist, that hung within the Curtains of her Bed. It is the same with Beasts, witness Jacob's ring-streaked and spot∣ted

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Goats, and Sheep, and the Hares and Par∣tridges that the Snow turns white upon the Mountains. There was at my House a little while ago, a Cat seen watching a Bird upon the Top of a Tree, who for some time mu∣tually fixing their Eyes upon one another, the Bird at last let her self fall as dead into the Cats Claws, either dazled and astonish'd by the Force of her own Imagination, or drawn by some attractive Power of the Cat. Such as are addicted to the Pleasures of the Field, have, I make no question, heard the Story of the Faulconer, who having earnestly fix'd his Eyes upon a Kite in the Air, lay'd a Wager, that he would bring her down with the sole Power of his Sight, and did so, as it was said; for the Tales I borrow, I charge upon the Consciences of those from whom I have them. The Discourses are my own, and found them∣selves upon the Proofs of Reason, not of Ex∣perience; to which every one has Liberty to add his own Examples: and who has none, (the Number and Varieties of Accidents con∣sider'd) let him not forbear to believe that these I set down are enough: and if I do not apply them well, let some other do it for me. And also in the Subjects of which I treat, viz. of our Manners and Motions, the Testimonies and Instances I produce, how fabulous soever, provided they are possible, serve as well as the true; whether it has really happen'd or no, at Rome or at Paris, to Peter or John, tis still within the Verge of Possibility, and humane Capacity, which serves me to good use, and

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supplies me with Variety in the things I write. I see, and make my Advantage of it as well in Shadow as in Substance; and a∣mongst the various Examples I every where meet with in History, I cull out the most rare and memorable to fit my own Turn. There are some Authors whose only end and Design it is, to give an Account of things that have hapned; mine, if I could arrive unto it, should be to deliver what may come to pass. There is a just Liberty allow'd in the Schools, of supposing and contriving Simile's, when they are at a Loss for them in their own Rea∣ding: I do not, however, make any use of that Privilege, and as to that Affair in super∣stitious Religion surpass all Historical Autho∣rity. In the Examples which I here bring in of what I have heard, read, done, or said, I have forbid my self to dare to alter even the most light and indifferent Circumstances; my Conscience does not falsifie one Tittle, what my Ignorance may do I cannot say. And this it is that makes me sometimes enter into Dis∣pute with my own Thoughts, whether or no, a Divine, or a Philosopher, Men of so exact and tender Wisdom and Conscience, are fit to write History: for, how can they stake their Reputation upon the Publick Faith? how be responsible for the Opinions of Men they do not know? And with what Assurance deliver their Conjectures for Current Pay? Of Actions performd before their own Eyes, wherein se∣veral Persons were Actors, they would be un∣willing to give Evidence upon Oath before a

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Judge; and cannot be so familiarly and tho∣roughly acquainted with any for whose Inten∣tions they would become absolute Caution. For my part, I think it less hazardous to write things past, than present, by how much the Writer is only to give an Account of things e∣very one knows he must of necessity borrow up∣on Trust. I am sollicited to write the Affairs of my own Time by some who fansie I look upon them with an Eye less blinded with Pre∣judice, or Partiality, than another, and have a clearer Insight into them by reason of the free Access Fortune has given me to the Heads of both Factions; but they do not consider, that to purchase the Glory of Salust, I would not give my self the Trouble, being a sworn Ene∣my as I am to all Obligation, Assiduity, and Perseverance: besides that, there is nothing so contrary to my Stile, as a continued and ex∣tended Narrative, I so often Interrupt, and cut my self short in my Writing only for want of Breath. I have neither Fancy, nor Expres∣sion worth any thing, and am ignorant beyond a Child, of the Phrases, and even the very Words proper to express the most common things; and for that Reason it is, that I have undertaken to say only what I can say, and have accommodated my Subject to my Force. Should I take one to be my Guide, peradventure I should not be able to keep Pace with him, and in the Precipitancy of my Career might deli∣ver Things, which upon better Thoughts, in my own Judgment, and according to Reason, would be criminal, and punishable in the

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highest degree Plutarch would tell us of what he has deliver'd to the Light, that it is the Work of others, that his Examples are all, and every where exactly true, that they are useful to Posterity, and are presented with a Lustre that will light us the way to Vertue, which was his Design: but it is not of so dan∣gerous consequence as in a Medicinal Drug, whether an old Story be so or so.

Notes

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