
This edition brings together the first portion of Montaigne’s celebrated essays, rendered into English by Charles Cotton and carefully edited for modern readers. Alongside the essays themselves, it includes a concise biography and a selection of the author’s surviving letters, offering a fuller picture of the man behind the prose. The introductory notes explain how this translation was refined against later French editions, ensuring that the subtle nuances of Montaigne’s original voice are preserved.
Montaigne’s writing reads like a candid conversation with himself, dissecting his thoughts, habits, and doubts with the frankness of a scholar examining his own anatomy. He invites listeners into the mind of a sixteenth‑century thinker whose curiosity about human nature still feels remarkably contemporary. Whether you are new to his work or revisiting his reflections, this volume provides a thoughtful entry point into the timeless dialogue he began centuries ago.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (115K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2004-11-01
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1533–1592
Best known for shaping the personal essay into a literary form, this French Renaissance writer turned self-examination into an art. His reflections on doubt, habit, friendship, and human nature still feel surprisingly modern.
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