“Everyday life is miraculous because it subjects the violent impulses to itself. The Essays of Montaigne are the revelation of the miracle of ordinary life.”
Much mischief is the
product of dissatisfaction, of men and women looking for purpose, novelty or
distraction in life and deciding they have not found it. Only extremity, an
impulsive grab after an illusion, seems like an appropriate response to so
imperfect a world. We’re spoiled. It’s always easier to complain and rebel than
to give thanks for what we already have. The writer quoted above, sounding very
much like Michael Oakeshott, is Ann Hartle, a Montaigne scholar teaching at
Emory University, in her essay “Montaigne’s Radical Conservatism.” I have never
encountered a utopian delusion in all of Montaigne’s thought. In an early essay
not cited by Hartle, “Of a Saying of Caesar’s,” he writes:
“Everything, no matter
what it is, that falls within our knowledge and enjoyment, we find
unsatisfactory; and we go gaping after things to come and unknown, inasmuch as
things present do not satiate us. Not, in my opinion, that they do not have the
wherewithal to satiate us, but that we seize them with a sick and disordered
grasp.”
And here is Hartle’s gloss
on such thinking:
“Generosity is openness to
human diversity and trust in the goodness of ordinary men. The conservative
possesses and enjoys the good that is society. That is, he enjoys what we
already have. One of the most delightful features of the Essays is the way in
which Montaigne is always astonished at the familiar, ordinary, and common
things. The most common human actions are miracles to him. This is the hallmark
of the conservative character: to find joy in the everyday, in life itself.”
The spirit of such
conservatism, which Oakeshott would identify as a “disposition” rather than a
set of political provisions, has grown rare. In his Notebooks, 1922-86 (2014),
Oakeshott writes:
“We spend our lives trying
to discover how to live, a perfect way of life, sens de la vie. But we shall
never find it. Life is the search for it; the successful life is that which is
given up to this search; & when we think we have found it, we are farthest
from it. Delude ourselves that we have found it, persuade ourselves that here
at least there is a point at which we can rest – and life has become at once
moribund. Just as to remain in love we must be continually falling in love, so
to remain living we must be continually striving to live.”
[The Montaigne passage is
from the translation of The Complete Essays of Montaigne by Donald Frame
(Stanford University Press, 1957).]