“I seek from books only to give myself pleasure through an honest amusement; or, if I study, I seek only the knowledge that treats of the understanding of myself and that instructs me how to die well and how to live well.
I leaf through books; I do not study them. What remains with me from them is something that I no longer recognize as belonging to another. It is what my judgment has drawn from them for its own use; the author remains only as an occasion.
If I encounter difficulties, I do not gnaw at them; after having given them one or two assaults, I leave them there. If I insisted on them, I would lose myself and my time as well; for my mind is so tender and so little enduring that what I do not see at first, I see even less by persisting.
I do what I can; the rest I leave.
I do not attach myself much to new books, because the old ones seem to me fuller and firmer. Nor do I attach myself to entire books: I take here and there what serves me at the moment when I need it.
It is not my books that have made me; it is I who have made my books. They belong to me in a far more intimate way than I belong to them.”
Montaigne, Essays, II, 10
To truly read means accepting that something escapes immediate mastery, accepting not yet knowing what these words will make appear.
Latin etymology reminds us that experience is linked to peril—not in a dramatic sense, but in the sense of a tipping point. In reading too there exists this fragile moment when understanding ceases to be purely voluntary. The reader advances without guarantee. He encounters sentences whose reach exceeds conscious intention. Some remain opaque; others act without being entirely understood. What occurs then is not the acquisition of information, but a silent modification of the inner structures that make understanding possible.
This is why reading does not consist in accumulating contents, but in allowing oneself to be affected. The Latin word expertus, which gave rise to “expert,” designates one who has passed through. The true reader is the one who has been traversed by what he reads. The text is not simply before him; it acts within him like a slow, sometimes imperceptible force that displaces old equilibria, brings separated elements into relation, and opens passages between regions that were previously isolated.
This transformation is not always conscious. It often manifests itself afterward. A sentence read long ago returns unexpectedly in an unforeseen situation. It does not return as an exact memory, but as an active form capable of illuminating what had not yet been visible. Reading has then continued its work in silence. The experience was not limited to the moment when the eyes moved across the page; it extended into memory, into perception, into the very way of inhabiting the world.
