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Essays of Michel de Montaigne — Complete - Montaigne, Michel de · 68 words
Our appetite is irresolute and fickle; it can neither keep nor enjoy anything with a good grace. and man concluding it to be the fault of the things he is possessed of, fills himself with and feeds upon the idea of things he neither knows nor understands, to which he devotes his hopes and his desires, paying them all reverence and honour, according to the saying of Caesar.
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