JOSEPH SCALIGER AND MONTAIGNE
Montaigne. What could have
brought you, M. de l’Escale, to visit the old
man of the mountain, other than a good heart?
Oh, how delighted and charmed I am to hear you speak
such excellent Gascon. You rise early, I see:
you must have risen with the sun, to be here at this
hour; it is a stout half-hour’s walk from the
brook. I have capital white wine, and the best
cheese in Auvergne. You saw the goats and the
two cows before the castle.
Pierre, thou hast done well:
set it upon the table, and tell Master Matthew to
split a couple of chickens and broil them, and to pepper
but one. Do you like pepper, M. de l’Escale?
Scaliger. Not much.
Montaigne. Hold hard! let the
pepper alone: I hate it. Tell him to broil
plenty of ham; only two slices at a time, upon his
salvation.
Scaliger. This, I perceive,
is the antechamber to your library: here are
your everyday books.
Montaigne. Faith! I have
no other. These are plenty, methinks; is not
that your opinion?
Scaliger. You have great resources
within yourself, and therefore can do with fewer.
Montaigne. Why, how many now
do you think here may be?
Scaliger. I did not believe
at first that there could be above fourscore.
Montaigne. Well! are fourscore
few? are we talking of peas and beans?
Scaliger. I and my father (put
together) have written well-nigh as many.
Montaigne. Ah! to write them
is quite another thing: but one reads books without
a spur, or even a pat from our Lady Vanity. How
do you like my wine? it comes from the
little knoll yonder: you cannot see the vines,
those chestnut-trees are between.
Scaliger. The wine is excellent;
light, odoriferous, with a smartness like a sharp
child’s prattle.
Montaigne. It never goes to
the head, nor pulls the nerves, which many do as if
they were guitar-strings. I drink a couple of
bottles a day, winter and summer, and never am the
worse for it. You gentlemen of the Agennois have
better in your province, and indeed the very best
under the sun. I do not wonder that the Parliament
of Bordeaux should be jealous of their privileges,
and call it Bordeaux. Now, if you prefer your
own country wine, only say it: I have several
bottles in my cellar, with corks as long as rapiers,
and as polished. I do not know, M. de l’Escale,
whether you are particular in these matters: not
quite, I should imagine, so great a judge in them as
in others?
Scaliger. I know three things:
wine, poetry, and the world.
Montaigne. You know one too
many, then. I hardly know whether I know anything
about poetry; for I like Clem Marot better than Ronsard.
Ronsard is so plaguily stiff and stately, where there
is no occasion for it; I verily do think the man must
have slept with his wife in a cuirass.
Scaliger. It pleases me greatly
that you like Marot. His versions of the Psalms
is lately set to music, and added to the New Testament
of Geneva.
Montaigne. It is putting a
slice of honeycomb into a barrel of vinegar, which
will never grow the sweeter for it.
Scaliger. Surely, you do not
think in this fashion of the New Testament!
Montaigne. Who supposes it?
Whatever is mild and kindly is there. But Jack
Calvin has thrown bird-lime and vitriol upon it, and
whoever but touches the cover dirties his fingers
or burns them.
Scaliger. Calvin is a very
great man, I do assure you, M. de Montaigne.
Montaigne. I do not like your
great men who beckon me to them, call me their begotten,
their dear child, and their entrails; and, if I happen
to say on any occasion, ’I beg leave, sir, to
dissent a little from you,’ stamp and cry, ‘The
devil you do!’ and whistle to the executioner.
Scaliger. You exaggerate, my worthy friend!
Montaigne. Exaggerate do I,
M. de l’Escale? What was it he did the
other day to the poor devil there with an odd name? Melancthon,
I think it is.
Scaliger. I do not know:
I have received no intelligence of late from Geneva.
Montaigne. It was but last
night that our curate rode over from Lyons (he made
two days of it, as you may suppose) and supped with
me. He told me that Jack had got his old friend
hanged and burned. I could not join him in the
joke, for I find none such in the New Testament, on
which he would have founded it; and, if it is one,
it is not in my manner or to my taste.
Scaliger. I cannot well believe
the report, my dear sir. He was rather urgent,
indeed, on the combustion of the heretic Michael Servetus
some years past.
Montaigne. A thousand to one,
my spiritual guide mistook the name. He has heard
of both, I warrant him, and thinks in his conscience
that either is as good a roast as the other.
Scaliger. Theologians are proud
and intolerant, and truly the farthest of all men
from theology, if theology means the rational sense
of religion, or indeed has anything to do with it in
any way. Melancthon was the very best of the
reformers; quiet, sedate, charitable, intrepid, firm
in friendship, ardent in faith, acute in argument,
and profound in learning.
Montaigne. Who cares about
his argumentation or his learning, if he was the rest?
Scaliger. I hope you will suspend
your judgment on this affair until you receive some
more certain and positive information.
Montaigne. I can believe it of the Sieur
Calvin.
Scaliger. I cannot. John
Calvin is a grave man, orderly and reasonable.
Montaigne. In my opinion he
has not the order nor the reason of my cook.
Mat never took a man for a sucking-pig, cleaning and
scraping and buttering and roasting him; nor ever
twitched God by the sleeve and swore He should not
have His own way.
Scaliger. M. de Montaigne,
have you ever studied the doctrine of predestination?
Montaigne. I should not understand
it, if I had; and I would not break through an old
fence merely to get into a cavern. I would not
give a fig or a fig-leaf to know the truth of it, as
far as any man can teach it me. Would it make
me honester or happier, or, in other things, wiser?
Scaliger. I do not know whether it would materially.
Montaigne. I should be an egregious
fool then to care about it. Our disputes on controverted
points have filled the country with missionaries and
cut-throats. Both parties have shown a disposition
to turn this comfortable old house of mine into a
fortress. If I had inclined to either, the other
would have done it. Come walk about it with me;
after a ride, you can do nothing better to take off
fatigue.
Scaliger. A most spacious kitchen!
Montaigne. Look up!
Scaliger. You have twenty or
more flitches of bacon hanging there.
Montaigne. And if I had been
a doctor or a captain, I should have had a cobweb
and predestination in the place of them. Your
soldiers of the religion on the one side, and
of the good old faith on the other, would not
have left unto me safe and sound even that good old
woman there.
Scaliger. Oh, yes! they would, I hope.
Old Woman. Why dost giggle,
Mat? What should he know about the business?
He speaks mighty bad French, and is as spiteful as
the devil. Praised be God, we have a kind master,
who thinks about us, and feels for us.
Scaliger. Upon my word, M.
de Montaigne, this gallery is an interesting one.
Montaigne. I can show you nothing
but my house and my dairy. We have no chase in
the month of May, you know unless you would
like to bait the badger in the stable. This is
rare sport in rainy days.
Scaliger. Are you in earnest, M. de Montaigne?
Montaigne. No, no, no, I cannot
afford to worry him outright: only a little for
pastime a morning’s merriment for
the dogs and wenches.
Scaliger. You really are then
of so happy a temperament that, at your time of life,
you can be amused by baiting a badger!
Montaigne. Why not? Your
father, a wiser and graver and older man than I am,
was amused by baiting a professor or critic. I
have not a dog in the kennel that would treat the
badger worse than brave Julius treated Cardan
and Erasmus, and some dozens more. We are all
childish, old as well as young; and our very last
tooth would fain stick, M. de l’Escale, in some
tender place of a neighbour. Boys laugh at a person
who falls in the dirt; men laugh rather when they make
him fall, and most when the dirt is of their own laying.
Is not the gallery rather cold, after
the kitchen? We must go through it to get into
the court where I keep my tame rabbits; the stable
is hard by: come along, come along.
Scaliger. Permit me to look
a little at those banners. Some of them are old
indeed.
Montaigne. Upon my word, I
blush to think I never took notice how they are tattered.
I have no fewer than three women in the house, and
in a summer’s evening, only two hours long, the
worst of these rags might have been darned across.
Scaliger. You would not have done it surely!
Montaigne. I am not over-thrifty;
the women might have been better employed. It
is as well as it is then; ay?
Scaliger. I think so.
Montaigne. So be it.
Scaliger. They remind me of
my own family, we being descended from the great Cane
della Scala, Prince of Verona, and from
the House of Hapsburg, as you must have heard from
my father.
Montaigne. What signifies it
to the world whether the great Cane was tied to his
grandmother or not? As for the House of Hapsburg,
if you could put together as many such houses as would
make up a city larger than Cairo, they would not be
worth his study, or a sheet of paper on the table
of it.