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Faith & Spirit Quote by Michel de Montaigne

"The soul which has no fixed purpose in life is lost; to be everywhere, is to be nowhere"

About this Quote

Montaigne’s line lands like a reprimand to the distracted mind, and it’s sharpened by a sly paradox: “to be everywhere” sounds like abundance, curiosity, freedom. He flips it into a diagnosis of emptiness. The trick is that he isn’t condemning variety; he’s condemning drift. A self that never chooses a direction becomes porous, defined by whatever it bumps into next, mistaking motion for meaning.

The subtext is unmistakably Renaissance: Europe is swelling with new maps, new books, new arguments about what a person is allowed to be. Montaigne, writing his Essays from the turbulence of the French Wars of Religion, watches certainties fracture in public and private. In that world, fixed purpose isn’t a motivational slogan; it’s ballast. Without it, you don’t just fail to “achieve” things - you become easy to commandeer by faction, fashion, fear, or appetite. Lost, here, is moral as much as psychological.

What makes the quote work is its quiet attack on the glamour of omnivorousness. Montaigne anticipates the modern pathology of “keeping options open” until your life is one long preface. Purpose functions less like a destination than a center of gravity: it lets you range widely without dissolving into trivia. His warning is humane, not puritanical. He’s arguing for a self sturdy enough to wander without vanishing.

Quote Details

TopicMeaning of Life
Source
Verified source: Essays (Book I, Chapter 8: "Of Idleness") (Michel de Montaigne, 1580)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
The soul that has no established aim loses itself, for, as it is said, “Quisquis ubique habitat, Maxime, nusquam habitat.” (Book I, Chapter 8 (1.8), "De l’Oisiveté" / "Of Idleness"). This is the primary-source location in Montaigne’s own work: the sentence occurs in Montaigne’s Essais, Book I, chapter 8 ("De l’Oisiveté" / "Of Idleness"). The wording commonly circulating online (“The soul which has no fixed purpose in life is lost; to be everywhere, is to be nowhere”) is a modernized/variant English rendering of this passage. The Latin line Montaigne quotes is from Martial (Epigrams 7.73), which Montaigne introduces as a proverbial saying ("as it is said"). This chapter was first published in the first edition of the Essais (1580).
Other candidates (1)
Mantras of Peace (Moin Qazi, 2022) compilation95.0%
... The soul which has no fixed purpose in life is lost ; to be everywhere , is to be nowhere . Michel de Montaigne T...
Cite

Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Montaigne, Michel de. (2026, February 16). The soul which has no fixed purpose in life is lost; to be everywhere, is to be nowhere. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-soul-which-has-no-fixed-purpose-in-life-is-17417/

Chicago Style
Montaigne, Michel de. "The soul which has no fixed purpose in life is lost; to be everywhere, is to be nowhere." FixQuotes. February 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-soul-which-has-no-fixed-purpose-in-life-is-17417/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"The soul which has no fixed purpose in life is lost; to be everywhere, is to be nowhere." FixQuotes, 16 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/the-soul-which-has-no-fixed-purpose-in-life-is-17417/. Accessed 20 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Michel de Montaigne

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

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