HyperEssays is a project to create a modern and accessible online edition of the Essays of Michel de Montaigne.
HyperEssays.net hosts four editions of the Essays:
- A 1598 edition, in middle French, edited by Marie de Gournay. This is a slightly revised version of Gournay’s original edition published in 1595.
- A complete and searchable edition of John Florio’s 1603 translation of the Essays, in early modern English.
- A 1685 translation by Charles Cotton, also in early modern English. Only some chapters of this edition have been copyedited and posted.
- A complete and searchable modern edition of the Essays based on W. Carew Hazlitt’s 1877 update of Charles Cotton’s translation. I am slowly replacing the Cotton/Hazlitt translation with a contemporary one and adding new notes.
My goals with HyperEssays are to provide context and tools for first-time readers of the Essays and to design a lasting resource for all interested in Montaigne’s work.
To that end, I copyedit, update, and annotate the original text and its translations. I tag them for indexing and searching, and format them them for easy reading on smartphones, desktop computers, and tablets. In addition, I prepare and provide free chapter PDFs for offline reading.
You can help make HyperEssays a reliable online resource by supporting this project. With your contribution, this site can continue to grow and remain free and accessible to all.
What are the Essays about?
The Essays is not a single, cohesive book but a collection of short and long pieces on various subjects such as religion, horses, friendship, sleep, law, or suicide, which Montaigne wrote over more than twenty years. His goals for the book and the circumstances under which he worked on it changed over time.
The first edition, published in 1580, comprised two books. Eight years later, an updated edition included hundreds of revisions and a new, third book. By the time of his death, in 1592, Montaigne had planned many more changes, which were incorporated in the first posthumous edition of 1595.
So, while you can read the Essays from beginning to end, starting with Montaigne’s address To the Reader, you can also follow John Cage’s advice and “begin anywhere.”
Pick from a selection of some of the most well-known chapters:
Or look at the table of contents and let your curiosity guide you.
Who was Michel de Montaigne?
Michel de Montaigne, the author of the Essays, is often described as a sixteenth-century French philosopher. But was Montaigne actually a philosopher? And did he really retire from the world to write in solitude for years, as is commonly believed?
In On Montaigne, I address these questions and provide biographical context to better understand the Essays. The companion timeline provides a chronological overview of his life.
If you want to learn more about him, I recommend these four biographies of Montaigne (along with two modern translations of the Essays). Each one is engaging but written with a different audience in mind.
Recent updates
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- Dec 21, 2024 · On Repentance
- Dec 21, 2024 · On Pedantry
- Dec 20, 2024 · Let Others Judge of Our Happiness after Our Death
- Dec 18, 2024 · Que nostre desir s’accroist par la malaisance
- Dec 15, 2024 · Comme nostre esprit s’empesche soy-mesmes
- Dec 15, 2024 · On Repentance
- Dec 15, 2024 · De juger de la mort d’autruy
- Dec 14, 2024 · Apologie de Raimond de Sebonde
- Dec 10, 2024 · A Consideration on Cicero
- Dec 9, 2024 · Apology for Raymond Sebond
- Nov 29, 2024 · De la cruauté
- Nov 26, 2024 · Let Others Judge of Our Happiness after Our Death
Work on HyperEssays started on January 17, 2020 and likely won’t be completed for many years.