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The Power of Imagination — The Essays of Montaigne

The Essays of Montaigne - The Power of Imagination

Michel de Montaigne

The Essays of Montaigne

The Power of Imagination

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Analysis by the Wide Reads editorial team·Reviewed against the source text·Updated December 16, 2025

Summary

The Power of Imagination

The Essays of Montaigne by Michel de Montaigne

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The schoolmen say strong imagination begets the event itself, and Montaigne is painfully susceptible: another's cough tickles his lungs, and he usurps their sensations. He could live on jolly company alone. Fancy can raise fevers and even kill those who entertain it too willingly; Simon Thomas prescribed that a sick old man study Montaigne's fresh complexion, forgetting the visitor might sicken in return. Montaigne avoids the sick he loves more than strangers he does not.

Examples multiply across history and gossip. Gallus Vibius studied madness until he became mad; men die on scaffolds when pardons are read; Cippus grows horns after dreaming of bulls; Passion gives voices nature denied. Sexual dread shows the pattern plainly: a friend cured impotence by confessing it beforehand; Montaigne once staged a gold-plate charm and ribbon ritual for a count's wedding night because empty ceremony, when believed, steadies the soul. Women should put off coy disdain with the petticoat, he adds, since a hostile face extinguishes vigor.

The body disobeys the will in hair, tears, appetite, and the indocile member Montaigne half-defends against universal blame. Physicians exploit the same force: a merchant took clysters that were only warm water; a woman vomited a pin after a trick basin; guests sickened because the host joked they had eaten cat. Even dogs mourn masters and horses whinny in sleep. Montaigne would plead for the unruly member as unjustly singled out when tears, appetite, and pulse also disobey the will.

Imagination also spreads outward, as plague does, marking unborn children, Jacob's sheep, or a cat and bird staring each other down. Montaigne piles marvels yet insists he reports honestly what may happen, borrowing examples as possibilities rather than demanding belief in magic. He prefers delivering what may happen over cataloging only what has happened, and admits historians may be too scrupulous for such work. The lesson: prepare the mind before the body performs, name fear before it manufactures failure, and treat belief as a bodily force that can harm, heal, or infect the room you share with others.

In this chapter: Terms Characters Key Quotes Themes Modern Story

Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Treating Belief as a Bodily Force

What you expect can reshape what your body does under pressure. Montaigne cured a bridegroom's wedding-night failure with a ridiculous gold charm because the ritual quieted his terrified imagination. Before a high-stakes moment, name the fear out loud so your mind stops manufacturing the failure you dread.

Coming Up in Chapter 21

After imagination's tricks, Montaigne asks a colder economic truth. He will show how merchants, lawyers, and physicians profit by another's loss, and whether any gain escapes that rule.

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Chapter 20

The Power of Imagination

OF THE FORCE OF IMAGINATION “Fortis imaginatio generat casum,” say the schoolmen. [“A strong imagination begets the event itself.”--Axiom. Scholast.] I am one of those who are most sensible of the power of imagination: every one is jostled by it, but some are overthrown by it. It has a very piercing impression upon me; and I make it my business to avoid, wanting force to resist it. I could live by the sole help of healthful and jolly company: the very sight of another’s pain materially pains me, and I often usurp the sensations of another person. A perpetual cough…

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"strong imagination begets the event itself."

— Schoolmen (via Montaigne)

Context: Opening axiom

Belief can materialize outcomes.

In Today's Words:

The schoolmen's axiom, quoted here, says strong imagination begets the event itself. Montaigne spends the essay proving it with bodies, not metaphysics or magic. When you keep rehearsing disaster before a meeting or exam, notice whether you are predicting the future or training your nerves to produce it.

"I often usurp the sensations of another person."

— Montaigne

Context: His sympathetic sensitivity

Imagination imports foreign pain.

In Today's Words:

Montaigne says he often usurp the sensations of another person; another's cough tickles his throat. That is imagination as contagion before any theory is needed. In hospitals or hard meetings, guard how much secondhand panic you absorb before it becomes your own symptom and your own story.

"flat plate of gold, whereon were graven some celestial figures, supposed good against sunstroke or pains in the head, being applied to the suture: where, that it might the better remain firm, it was sewed to a ribbon to be tied under the chin; a foppery cousin-german to this of which I am speaking."

— Montaigne

Context: Wedding-night charm for the Count

Ritual calms performance terror.

In Today's Words:

Montaigne describes a gold plate with celestial figures he sewed to a ribbon to fake a charm for a bridegroom terrified of sorcery. The theater worked because belief needed props and a script. Honest preparation and a frank confession can do the same without lying to yourself or the person you trust.

"infected body communicates its malady to those that approach or live near it, as we see in the plague, the smallpox, and sore eyes, that run through whole families and cities:-- “Dum spectant oculi laesos, laeduntur et ipsi; Multaque corporibus transitione nocent."

— Montaigne

Context: Imagination spreading like plague

Mental states cross persons.

In Today's Words:

Montaigne compares imagination to plague: an infected body communicates its malady to those nearby. Fear and fancy can jump rooms the same way a cough does. When one person spirals, check whether the group is catching a story or a real threat before everyone acts on the mood alone.

Thematic Threads

Mind-Body Connection

In This Chapter

Montaigne demonstrates how imagination creates physical symptoms and cures

Development

Introduced here

In Your Life:

Your stress about a health issue might be making the symptoms worse.

Social Performance

In This Chapter

Sexual performance anxiety creates the dysfunction it fears through mental pressure

Development

Introduced here

In Your Life:

Worrying about how you'll perform in social situations often makes you perform worse.

Authority and Healing

In This Chapter

Doctors use rituals and confidence to activate patients' healing imagination

Development

Introduced here

In Your Life:

The bedside manner of your healthcare providers affects your actual recovery.

Personal Vulnerability

In This Chapter

Montaigne admits his own susceptibility to imagination's power

Development

Introduced here

In Your Life:

Acknowledging your mental patterns gives you power over them instead of being controlled by them.

Practical Psychology

In This Chapter

Understanding how expectation works gives tools for managing it

Development

Introduced here

In Your Life:

You can use positive visualization and mental preparation as practical life skills.

You now have the context. Time to form your own thoughts.

Discussion Questions

This is not a test. Five prompts guide you through the chapter, from how it opens to how it closes, so you notice context and rhythm rather than facts to memorize. Sit with each question in your own words. When you see "One way to read it," treat it as a starting point, not the only answer.

  1. 1

    What does Montaigne mean when he says imagination can 'give fevers and sometimes kill' those who allow it too much scope?

    ▶One way to read it

    He argues that strong mental states can create real physical effects. When we deeply believe something will happen to our bodies, that belief can actually make it occur.

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    Why does Montaigne's fake gold charm cure his friend's sexual performance anxiety when it has no real magical power?

    ▶One way to read it

    The charm works because it gives his friend confidence and breaks the cycle of fearful expectation. Sometimes believing in a solution creates the solution itself.

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    Where do you see Montaigne's 'expectation trap' playing out in modern medical or athletic performance?

    ▶One way to read it

    Athletes who psych themselves out before big games often perform poorly, while placebo effects show patients improving from fake treatments. Our minds shape our physical reality.

    application • medium
  4. 4

    How would you apply Montaigne's insight about honest communication to help someone overcome a fear-based performance problem?

    ▶One way to read it

    Like his friend who confessed his anxiety beforehand, openly discussing fears with trusted people can reduce their power. Naming the fear often diminishes its grip on us.

    application • deep
  5. 5

    What does Montaigne's emphasis on imagination's physical power reveal about the relationship between mind and body?

    ▶One way to read it

    He shows they're not separate but deeply interconnected. Our mental states don't just reflect our physical condition but actively shape it, making psychology a form of medicine.

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

Track Your Expectation Cycles

Think of a situation where you regularly expect things to go wrong - maybe giving presentations, having difficult conversations, or trying something new. Write down the specific thoughts that run through your head beforehand, then trace how those thoughts might be creating the very outcomes you fear. Finally, rewrite your mental script with more helpful expectations.

Consider:

  • •Notice the physical sensations that come with negative expectations - tension, shallow breathing, racing heart
  • •Consider how your expectations might change your behavior in ways that sabotage success
  • •Remember that changing your mental script isn't about fake positivity but about realistic confidence

Journaling Prompt

Write about a time when your expectations - positive or negative - seemed to create exactly what you predicted would happen. What does this teach you about the power of your own mind?

Coming Up Next...

Chapter 21: One Person's Gain, Another's Loss

After imagination's tricks, Montaigne asks a colder economic truth. He will show how merchants, lawyers, and physicians profit by another's loss, and whether any gain escapes that rule.

Continue to Chapter 21
Previous
Learning to Die Well
Contents
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One Person's Gain, Another's Loss
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Study guides, teaching tools, themes, and the full library.More ways to read The Essays of Montaigne: study guides, teaching tools, and the wider library.

  • The Essays of Montaigne Study Guide
  • Teaching Resources
  • Essential Life Index
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Life-skill deep dives in The Essays of Montaigne

  • Authentic Self-ExpressionMontaigne on honesty, shame, performance, and presenting your real contradictions. Seven essays on living without the mask custom demands.
  • Embracing UncertaintyMontaigne on doubt, limits of reason, and living without false certainty. Eight essays for when expert answers fail and judgment itself wobbles.
  • Self-ExaminationMontaigne invented honest self-study. Eight essays on observing your contradictions, bad memory, judgment, and the courage to report yourself without shame.
  • Testing Experience Against TheoryMontaigne on custom, fashion, medicine, and lived proof. Eight essays on trusting what you see when official wisdom fails your actual situation.

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