“Plutarch would rather have us applaud his judgement than his knowledge; he prefers to leave us not satiated but still hungry for more. He knew that even on the greatest subjects too much can be said, and that Alexandridas was right to reproach the man who made an excellent speech before the Ephors [magistrates, overseers], but was too long-winded. ‘Stranger,’ he said, ‘what you say is right, but you are saying it in the wrong way.’”
Brevity and
concision of expression, knowing when to be quiet, is probably the chief virtue
in written and spoken language. Excess verbiage suggests muddled thinking and/or
monomania (Fidel Castro Syndrome). Word count is often inversely proportional to
quality and richness of thought. The Gettysburg Address has 271 words.
The passage
above is taken from Montaigne’s essay “On the Education of Children” (trans. J.M. Cohen, 1958). In the Summer 2016 issue of The Virginia Quarterly Review, Kay Ryan published a poem with a title,
“Even on the Greatest Subjects Too Much Can Be Said,” from Montaigne’s
essay:
“You can
oversell
the sea,
say, or
the way we
miss
the dead.
The littlest
bit of
absence excites
oceans. And
of oceans
the less
said the
better: the
wet beyond
the land: we have a
built-in hair-trigger
primed to understand.”
Ryan’s terse, well-constructed verse embodies Montaigne’s advice. Like J.V. Cunningham’s and Samuel Menashe’s, few of her poems can be further reduced. Ryan trusts her readers enough to keep it short. We can fill in the blanks: “we have a / built-in hair-trigger / primed to understand.” This sentence by Montaigne immediately follows the ones quoted above: “Men that have thin bodies stuff them out with padding; those whose substance is slender puff it out with words.”
With Seneca
and Tacitus, Plutarch is the writer most often cited in the Essays. In his introduction to the 1983
North Point Press edition of Montaigne’s
Travel Journal (collected in Every
Force Evolves a Form, 1987), Guy Davenport writes:
“We all lead
a moral inner life of the spirit, on which religion, philosophy, and tacit
opinion have many claims. To reflect on this inner life rationally is a skill
no longer taught, though successful introspection, if it can make us at peace
with ourselves, is sanity itself. The surest teachers of such reflection,
certainly the wittiest and most forgiving, are Plutarch and Montaigne.”
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