float is indeed the right property to achieve this. However, the example given by bmatthews68 can be improved. The most important thing about floating boxes is that they must specify an explicit width. This can be rather inconvenient but this is the way CSS works. However, notice that px is a unit of measure that has no place in the world of HTML/CSS, at least not to specify widths.
Always resort to measures that will work with different font sizes, i.e. either use em or %. Now, if the menu is implemented as a floating body, then this means that the main content floats “around” it. If the main content is higher than the menu, this might not be what you want:

<div style="width: 10em; float: left;">Left</div>
<div>Right, spanning<br/> multiple lines</div>
You can correct this behaviour by giving the main content a margin-left equal to the width of the menu:

<div style="width: 10em; float: left;">Left</div>
<div style="margin-left: 10em;">Right, spanning<br/> multiple lines</div>
In most cases you also want to give the main content a padding-left so it doesn't “stick” to the menu too closely.
By the way, it's trivial to change the above so that the menu is on the right side instead of the left: simply change every occurrence of the word “left” to “right”.
Ah, one last thing. If the menu's content is higher than the main content, it will render oddly because float does some odd things. In that case, you will have to clear the box that comes below the floating body, as in bmatthews68's example.
/EDIT: Damn, HTML doesn't work the way the preview showed it. Well, I've included pictures instead.