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The Art of True Solitude — The Essays of Montaigne

The Essays of Montaigne - The Art of True Solitude

Michel de Montaigne

The Essays of Montaigne

The Art of True Solitude

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

Summary

The Art of True Solitude

The Essays of Montaigne by Michel de Montaigne

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Montaigne opens by challenging the public-service rhetoric of ambition. Those in office, he says, usually seek titles for private gain, and crowds spread vice faster than virtue because imitation and hatred are both dangerous. A wise man may live content in a palace, yet if choice is free he should flee the crowd; changing country or retiring to a study does not free a man who carries his anxieties with him, and Socrates' joke that a traveler took himself along states the whole problem.

Care follows the horseman, avarice enters cloisters, and moving a sick man often worsens the disease. True solitude is inward: Stilpo, after fire destroyed his city, said nothing of his was lost; Paulinus prayed that thieves had not yet touched what was truly his. Montaigne urges a backshop of the mind, wholly our own, where liberty does not depend on wives, goods, or applause, and where we entertain ourselves with ourselves before loss makes absence familiar.

Most retreats fail because people swap one busyness for another, governing a household with nearly royal trouble, or chase glory through books. Pliny and Cicero want immortal fame from letters while claiming to leave the world; Montaigne calls that contradiction and warns that over-study can ruin health like any other obsession. He prefers easy books or those that teach how to live and die, proceeding to pleasure in work but never past the point where trouble begins.

For those who can truly withdraw after serving the world, he cites letters urging friends to quit business and fruit of name together, keep honest images before the mind, and know that the greatest thing is to belong to oneself. That, he says, is the precept of true philosophy, not the half-retreat that collects praise for others' ears while the soul remains engaged elsewhere.

In this chapter: Terms Characters Key Quotes Themes Modern Story

Why This Matters

Connect literature to life

Skill: Building Inner Retreat

Geography rarely fixes what the mind keeps importing into every room. Montaigne says a wise man must reserve a backshop wholly his own, and Socrates mocked a traveler who took himself along with him. Before you change cities or jobs to find peace, build a private place in your mind that outside chaos cannot inventory.

Coming Up in Chapter 39

After inward retreat, Montaigne sizes up a famous orator's vanity. Cicero and Pliny will beg historians to remember them and publish letters they never sent, all to harvest glory from elegant prose.

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Chapter 38

The Art of True Solitude

OF SOLITUDE Let us pretermit that long comparison betwixt the active and the solitary life; and as for the fine sayings with which ambition and avarice palliate their vices, that we are not born for ourselves but for the public,--[This is the eulogium passed by Lucan on Cato of Utica, ii. 383.]--let us boldly appeal to those who are in public affairs; let them lay their hands upon their hearts, and then say whether, on the contrary, they do not rather aspire to titles and offices and that tumult of the world to make their private advantage at the public…

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Now let's explore the literary elements.

Key Quotes & Analysis

"make their private advantage at the public expense."

— Montaigne

Context: Ambition exposed

Public rhetoric, private aim.

In Today's Words:

Montaigne says men in public affairs aspire to titles and tumult to make their private advantage at the public expense, not the common good. Service language often masks elbowroom and gain. When someone claims they serve everyone, ask what status or margin they are quietly buying.

"he took himself along with him” “Quid terras alio calentes Sole mutamus? patriae quis exsul Se quoque fugit?” [“Why do we seek climates warmed by another sun? Who is the man that by fleeing from his country, can also flee from himself?” --Horace, Od."

— Socrates (via Montaigne)

Context: Travel does not cure the soul

Inner baggage persists.

In Today's Words:

Socrates mocked a man who returned from travel unchanged by saying he took himself along with him, habits and all. New scenery does not replace old habits of fear, vanity, or resentment. If the problem is internal, no move solves it until the mind does.

"reserve a backshop, wholly our own and entirely free, wherein to settle our true liberty, our principal solitude and retreat."

— Montaigne

Context: Inner liberty

Private mental refuge.

In Today's Words:

Montaigne says we must reserve a backshop wholly our own and entirely free, where true liberty and solitude live. Wives, goods, and health matter, but happiness cannot depend wholly on them. Keep one inward room that belongs only to you, even in a crowded house.

"This book-employment is as painful as any other, and as great an enemy to health, which ought to be the first thing considered; neither ought a man to be allured with the pleasure of it, which is the same that destroys the frugal, the avaricious, the voluptuous, and the ambitious man."

— Montaigne

Context: False scholarly retreat

Study can harm health.

In Today's Words:

Montaigne warns that this book-employment is as painful as any other and an enemy to health if pursued to excess like ambition. Retreat into study can become another vanity, not rest. If your solitude still exhausts you, you may have traded one treadmill for another.

Thematic Threads

Identity

In This Chapter

True identity must be independent of external circumstances and others' opinions

Development

Deepens earlier themes about authentic self-knowledge versus social performance

In Your Life:

You might recognize this when you feel like you need to move, quit, or escape to 'find yourself.'

Personal Growth

In This Chapter

Real growth happens internally through developing self-sufficiency and mental discipline

Development

Builds on previous chapters about learning from experience and self-examination

In Your Life:

This appears when you realize no external change will fix your internal restlessness.

Social Expectations

In This Chapter

The pressure to seek validation and approval follows us everywhere we go

Development

Continues exploration of how social pressures shape our choices and self-perception

In Your Life:

You see this when you change jobs or relationships but find yourself playing the same people-pleasing games.

Class

In This Chapter

True wealth is internal resources that can't be taken away by external circumstances

Development

Expands on earlier themes about what constitutes real versus superficial status

In Your Life:

This shows up when you realize your peace of mind isn't dependent on your paycheck or zip code.

Human Relationships

In This Chapter

Healthy relationships require being complete within yourself first, not seeking others to fill internal voids

Development

Builds toward understanding how self-sufficiency actually improves connections with others

In Your Life:

You experience this when you stop expecting others to make you happy and start bringing contentment to relationships.

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

    Why does Montaigne say that merchants avoid taking dissolute companions on sea voyages?

    ▶One way to read it

    He uses this example to show that bad company creates real danger through moral contagion. Just as merchants fear divine punishment for their companions' sins, we should recognize how others' vices can corrupt us.

    analysis • surface
  2. 2

    Why does Montaigne's story of Stilpo losing everything yet claiming no loss work as an argument?

    ▶One way to read it

    It demonstrates that true wealth lies in what cannot be taken away. Stilpo's wisdom and inner resources remained intact, proving that external possessions are not our real treasures.

    analysis • medium
  3. 3

    Where do you see people today trying to escape problems by changing locations rather than changing themselves?

    ▶One way to read it

    Social media detoxes, moving to new cities for fresh starts, or switching jobs to avoid difficult colleagues. Like Montaigne's traveler, they carry their anxieties and habits with them.

    application • medium
  4. 4

    How would you create Montaigne's 'backshop' of the mind in your daily routine?

    ▶One way to read it

    Set aside time for reflection without external input, practice being content alone without entertainment, or develop inner dialogue independent of others' opinions. The key is mental space that remains yours regardless of circumstances.

    application • deep
  5. 5

    What does Montaigne's insight about carrying our fetters with us reveal about human attempts at freedom?

    ▶One way to read it

    Most of our bondage is self-imposed through mental habits and dependencies. True liberation requires internal work, not external changes. We often mistake changing circumstances for changing ourselves.

    reflection • deep

Critical Thinking Exercise

10 minutes

Build Your Mental Backshop

Think of a current situation that's making you want to escape or make a major change. Write down what you're trying to get away from, then identify three internal resources or skills you could develop that would help you handle this situation differently, regardless of whether you stay or go. This isn't about talking yourself out of change, but about building strength before making decisions.

Consider:

  • •What specific emotions or thoughts are driving your desire to escape?
  • •Which of your reactions to this situation have you seen in other areas of your life?
  • •What would it look like to feel genuinely content in your current circumstances before deciding whether to change them?

Journaling Prompt

Write about a time when you made a big change hoping it would solve a problem, only to find the same issues in your new situation. What did you learn about yourself from that experience?

Coming Up Next...

Chapter 39: When Leaders Chase the Wrong Glory

After inward retreat, Montaigne sizes up a famous orator's vanity. Cicero and Pliny will beg historians to remember them and publish letters they never sent, all to harvest glory from elegant prose.

Continue to Chapter 39
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Why We Laugh and Cry Simultaneously
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When Leaders Chase the Wrong Glory
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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
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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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