Paris: Pléiade/Gallimard, 1,975 pp., e79.00
Montaigne remarked that when someone dwelt on the language, the style, of his Essays, 'I would prefer that he shut up.'[1] It was, above all, the objective content of which he was proud, more material and denser, he says, than in other writers. But, as he observes at once, his meaning is not always straightforward. To his essay 'Considerations on Cicero,' published in 1580, he added the following passage many years later:
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