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Daily Inspiration Quote by Michel de Montaigne

"No wind serves him who addresses his voyage to no certain port"

About this Quote

Montaigne lands this line like a sailor-philosopher with a skeptic's smile: if you refuse to name your destination, you forfeit the right to complain about the weather. The aphorism is brutally practical, and that practicality is the point. It takes the romance out of drifting and replaces it with a quiet indictment of vagueness. Wind, in other words, is not fate or inspiration; it's raw circumstance. It only becomes "helpful" when a person has admitted, out loud or to themselves, what they want.

The subtext is classic Montaigne: a suspicion of grand theories paired with an almost domestic insistence on self-knowledge. His Essays are built on the idea that the mind is slippery, self-justifying, prone to narrate its own indecision as sophistication. So he offers a corrective that feels less like moralizing than like a diagnostic. Aimlessness isn't freedom; it's a loophole the ego uses to avoid responsibility. If there's no port, every gust can be praised as providence or blamed as sabotage, and nothing is ever your fault.

Context matters. Montaigne writes in a France shaken by the Wars of Religion, where certainties were weaponized and the old cosmic order looked less reliable by the year. Against that backdrop, "a certain port" isn't dogma; it's a chosen, provisional commitment. The line defends intention as an ethical tool: not certainty about the world, but clarity about your own course.

Quote Details

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Source
Verified source: Essais (Livre II, chapitre 1 : « De l'inconstance de nos ... (Michel de Montaigne, 1580)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
Nul vent fait pour celuy qui n’a point de port destiné. (Livre II, chapitre 1). Primary source is Montaigne’s own text in the Essais. The commonly-circulated English wording (“No wind serves him who addresses his voyage to no certain port”) corresponds to this sentence, appearing in Book II, Chapter 1. An English translation at Wikisource (Charles Cotton) renders it as: “No wind serves him who addresses his voyage to no certain, port.” See: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Essays_of_Montaigne/Book_II/Chapter_I . The earliest publication date for the Essais is 1580 (first edition).
Other candidates (1)
Michel de Montaigne. kind ; nor full enough throughout . As peerless as it is , it has yet some blemishes . Of ... No...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Montaigne, Michel de. (2026, February 11). No wind serves him who addresses his voyage to no certain port. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-wind-serves-him-who-addresses-his-voyage-to-no-17410/

Chicago Style
Montaigne, Michel de. "No wind serves him who addresses his voyage to no certain port." FixQuotes. February 11, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-wind-serves-him-who-addresses-his-voyage-to-no-17410/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"No wind serves him who addresses his voyage to no certain port." FixQuotes, 11 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/no-wind-serves-him-who-addresses-his-voyage-to-no-17410/. Accessed 21 Feb. 2026.

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Michel de Montaigne

Michel de Montaigne (February 28, 1533 - September 13, 1592) was a Philosopher from France.

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