Thoughts Of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus - Marcus Aurelius Antoninus (novels to read for beginners .TXT) 📗
- Author: Marcus Aurelius Antoninus
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Such Men As These. It Remains Then For Thee To Understand Among What
Kind Of Workmen Thou Placest Thyself; For He Who Rules All Things Will
Certainly Make A Right Use Of Thee, And He Will Receive Thee Among Some
Part Of The Co-Operators And Of Those Whose Labors Conduce To One End.
But Be Not Thou Such A Part As The Mean And Ridiculous Verse In The
Play, Which Chrysippus Speaks Of.[A]
[A] Plutarch, Adversus Stoicos, C. 14.
43. Does The Sun Undertake To Do The Work Of The Rain, Or Aesculapius
The Work Of The Fruit-Bearer [The Earth]? And How Is It With Respect To
Each Of The Stars--Are They Not Different And Yet They Work Together To
The Same End?
44. If The Gods Have Determined About Me And About The Things Which Must
Happen To Me, They Have Determined Well, For It Is Not Easy Even To
Imagine A Deity Without Forethought; And As To Doing Me Harm, Why
Story 3 (The Thoughts Of Marcus Aurelius Antonius) Pg 71Should They Have Any Desire Towards That? For What Advantage Would
Result To Them From This Or To The Whole, Which Is The Special Object Of
Their Providence? But If They Have Not Determined About Me Individually,
They Have Certainly Determined About The Whole At Least, And The Things
Which Happen By Way Of Sequence In This General Arrangement I Ought To
Accept With Pleasure And To Be Content With Them. But If They Determine
About Nothing,--Which It Is Wicked To Believe, Or If We Do Believe It,
Let Us Neither Sacrifice Nor Pray Nor Swear By Them, Nor Do Anything
Else Which We Do As If The Gods Were Present And Lived With Us,--But If
However The Gods Determine About None Of The Things Which Concern Us, I
Am Able To Determine About Myself, And I Can Inquire About That Which Is
Useful; And That Is Useful To Every Man Which Is Conformable To His Own
Constitution And Nature. But My Nature Is Rational And Social; And My
City And Country, So Far As I Am Antoninus, Is Rome, But So Far As I Am
A Man, It Is The World. The Things Then Which Are Useful To These Cities
Are Alone Useful To Me.
45. Whatever Happens To Every Man, This Is For The Interest Of The
Universal: This Might Be Sufficient. But Further Thou Wilt Observe This
Also As A General Truth, If Thou Dost Observe, That Whatever Is
Profitable To Any Man Is Profitable Also To Other Men. But Let The Word
Profitable Be Taken Here In The Common Sense As Said Of Things Of The
Middle Kind [Neither Good Nor Bad].
46. As It Happens To Thee In The Amphitheatre And Such Places, That The
Continual Sight Of The Same Things, And The Uniformity, Make The
Spectacle Wearisome, So It Is In The Whole Of Life; For All Things
Above, Below, Are The Same And From The Same. How Long Then?
47. Think Continually That All Kinds Of Men And All Kinds Of Pursuits
And Of All Nations Are Dead, So That Thy Thoughts Come Down Even To
Philistion And Phoebus And Origanion. Now Turn Thy Thoughts To The Other
Kinds [Of Men]. To That Place Then We Must Remove, Where There Are So
Many Great Orators, And So Many Noble Philosophers, Heraclitus,
Pythagoras, Socrates; So Many Heroes Of Former Days, And So Many
Generals After Them, And Tyrants; Besides These, Eudoxus, Hipparchus,
Archimedes, And Other Men Of Acute Natural Talents, Great Minds, Lovers
Of Labor, Versatile, Confident, Mockers Even Of The Perishable And
Ephemeral Life Of Man, As Menippus And Such As Are Like Him. As To All
These Consider That They Have Long Been In The Dust. What Harm Then Is
This To Them; And What To Those Whose Names Are Altogether Unknown? One
Thing Here Is Worth A Great Deal, To Pass Thy Life In Truth And Justice,
With A Benevolent Disposition Even To Liars And Unjust Men.
48. When Thou Wishest To Delight Thyself, Think Of The Virtues Of Those
Who Live With Thee; For Instance, The Activity Of One, And The Modesty
Of Another, And The Liberality Of A Third, And Some Other Good Quality
Of A Fourth. For Nothing Delights So Much As The Examples Of The
Virtues, When They Are Exhibited In The Morals Of Those Who Live With Us
And Present Themselves In Abundance, As Far As Is Possible. Wherefore We
Must Keep Them Before Us.
49. Thou Art Not Dissatisfied. I Suppose, Because Thou Weighest Only So
Many Litrae And Not Three Hundred. Be Not Dissatisfied Then That Thou
Must Live Only So Many Years And Not More; For As Thou Art Satisfied
With The Amount Of Substance Which Has Been Assigned To Thee, So Be
Story 3 (The Thoughts Of Marcus Aurelius Antonius) Pg 72Content With The Time.
50. Let Us Try To Persuade Them [Men]. But Act Even Against Their Will,
When The Principles Of Justice Lead That Way. If However Any Man By
Using Force Stands In Thy Way, Betake Thyself To Contentment And
Tranquillity, And At The Same Time Employ The Hindrance Towards The
Exercise Of Some Other Virtue; And Remember That Thy Attempt Was With A
Reservation [Conditionally], That Thou Didst Not Desire To Do
Impossibilities. What Then Didst Thou Desire?--Some Such Effort As
This.--But Thou Attainest Thy Object, If The Things To Which Thou Wast
Moved Are [Not] Accomplished. +
51. He Who Loves Fame Considers Another Man's Activity To Be His Own
Good; And He Who Loves Pleasure, His Own Sensations; But He Who Has
Understanding Considers His Own Acts To Be His Own Good.
52. It Is In Our Power To Have No Opinion About A Thing, And Not To Be
Disturbed In Our Soul; For Things Themselves Have No Natural Power To
Form Our Judgments.
53. Accustom Thyself To Attend Carefully To What Is Said By Another, And
As Much As It Is Possible, Be In The Speaker's Mind.
54. That Which Is Not Good For The Swarm, Neither Is It Good For The
Bee.
55. If Sailors Abused The Helmsman, Or The Sick The Doctor, Would They
Listen To Anybody Else? Or How Could The Helmsman Secure The Safety Of
Those In The Ship, Or The Doctor The Health Of Those Whom He Attends?
56. How Many Together With Whom I Came Into The World Are Already Gone
Out Of It.
57. To The Jaundiced Honey Tastes Bitter, And To Those Bitten By Mad
Dogs Water Causes Fear; And To Little Children The Ball Is A Fine Thing.
Why Then Am I Angry? Dost Thou Think That A False Opinion Has Less Power
Than The Bile In The Jaundiced Or The Poison In Him Who Is Bitten By A
Mad Dog?
58. No Man Will Hinder Thee From Living According To The Reason Of Thy
Own Nature: Nothing Will Happen To Thee Contrary To The Reason Of The
Universal Nature.
59. What Kind Of People Are Those Whom Men Wish To Please, And For What
Objects, And By What Kind Of Acts? How Soon Will Time Cover All Things,
And How Many It Has Covered Already.
Vii.
What Is Badness? It Is That Which Thou Hast Often Seen. And On The
Story 3 (The Thoughts Of Marcus Aurelius Antonius) Pg 73Occasion Of Everything Which Happens Keep This In Mind, That It Is That
Which Thou Hast Often Seen. Everywhere Up And Down Thou Wilt Find The
Same Things, With Which The Old Histories Are Filled, Those Of The
Middle Ages And Those Of Our Own Day; With Which Cities And Houses Are
Filled Now. There Is Nothing New: All Things Are Both Familiar And
Short-Lived.
2. How Can Our Principles Become Dead, Unless The Impressions [Thoughts]
Which Correspond To Them Are Extinguished? But It Is In Thy Power
Continuously To Fan These Thoughts Into A Flame. I Can Have That Opinion
About Anything Which I Ought To Have. If I Can, Why Am I Disturbed? The
Things Which Are External To My Mind Have No Relation At All To My
Mind.--Let This Be The State Of Thy Affects, And Thou Standest Erect. To
Recover Thy Life Is In Thy Power. Look At Things Again As Thou Didst Use
To Look At Them; For In This Consists The Recovery Of Thy Life.
3. The Idle Business Of Show, Plays On The Stage, Flocks Of Sheep,
Herds, Exercises With Spears, A Bone Cast To Little Dogs, A Bit Of Bread
Into Fishponds, Laborings Of Ants And Burden-Carrying, Runnings About
Of Frightened Little Mice, Puppets Pulled By Strings--[All Alike]. It Is
Thy Duty Then In The Midst Of Such Things To Show Good Humor And Not A
Proud Air; To Understand However That Every Man Is Worth Just So Much As
The Things Are Worth About Which He Busies Himself.
4. In Discourse Thou Must Attend To What Is Said, And In Every Movement
Thou Must Observe What Is Doing. And In The One Thou Shouldst See
Immediately To What End It Refers, But In The Other Watch Carefully What
Is The Thing Signified.
5. Is My Understanding Sufficient For This Or Not? If It Is Sufficient,
I Use It For The Work As An Instrument Given By The Universal Nature.
But If It Is Not Sufficient, Then Either I Retire From The Work And Give
Way To Him Who Is Able To Do It Better, Unless There Be Some Reason Why
I Ought Not To Do So; Or I Do It As Well As I Can, Taking To Help Me The
Man Who With The Aid Of My Ruling Principle Can Do What Is Now Fit And
Useful For The General Good. For What-Soever Either By Myself Or With
Another I Can Do, Ought To Be Directed To This Only, To That Which Is
Useful And Well Suited To Society.
6. How Many After Being Celebrated By Fame Have Been Given Up To
Oblivion; And How Many Who Have Celebrated The Fame Of Others Have Long
Been Dead.
7. Be Not Ashamed To Be Helped; For It Is Thy Business To Do Thy Duty
Like A Soldier In The Assault On A Town. How Then, If Being Lame Thou
Canst Not Mount Up On The Battlements Alone, But With The Help Of
Another It Is Possible?
8. Let Not Future Things Disturb Thee, For Thou Wilt Come To Them, If It
Shall Be Necessary, Having With Thee The Same Reason
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