Thoughts Of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus by Marcus Aurelius Antoninus (best self help books to read .txt) π
Father, Annius Verus, Died While He Was Praetor. His Mother Was Domitia
Calvilla, Also Named Lucilla. The Emperor T. Antoninus Pius Married
Annia Galeria Faustina, The Sister Of Annius Verus, And Was Consequently
The Uncle Of M. Antoninus. When Hadrian Adopted Antoninus Pius And
Declared Him His Successor In The Empire, Antoninus Pius Adopted Both L.
Ceionius Commodus, The Son Of Aelius Caesar, And M. Antoninus, Whose
Original Name Was M. Annius Verus. Antoninus Then Took The Name Of M.
Aelius Aurelius Verus, To Which Was Added The Title Of Caesar In A.D.
139: The Name Aelius Belonged To Hadrian's Family, And Aurelius Was The
Name Of Antoninus Pius. When M. Antoninus Became Augustus, He Dropped
The Name Of Verus And Took The Name Of Antoninus. Accordingly He Is
Generally Named M. Aurelius Antoninus, Or Simply M. Antoninus.
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Thou Discontented? With The Badness Of Men? Recall To Thy Mind This
Conclusion, That Rational Animals Exist For One Another, And That To
Endure Is A Part Of Justice, And That Men Do Wrong Involuntarily; And
Consider How Many Already, After Mutual Enmity, Suspicion, Hatred, And
Fighting, Have Been Stretched Dead, Reduced To Ashes; And Be Quiet At
Last.--But Perhaps Thou Art Dissatisfied With That Which Is Assigned To
Thee Out Of The Universe.--Recall To Thy Recollection This Alternative;
Either There Is Providence Or Atoms [Fortuitous Concurrence Of Things];
Or Remember The Arguments By Which It Has Been Proved That The World Is
A Kind Of Political Community [And Be Quiet At Last].--But Perhaps
Corporeal Things Will Still Fasten Upon Thee.--Consider Then Further
That The Mind Mingles Not With The Breath, Whether Moving Gently Or
Violently, When It Has Once Drawn Itself Apart And Discovered Its Own
Power, And Think Also Of All That Thou Hast Heard And Assented To About
Pain And Pleasure [And Be Quiet At Last].--But Perhaps The Desire Of The
Thing Called Fame Will Torment Thee.--See How Soon Everything Is
Forgotten, And Look At The Chaos Of Infinite Time On Each Side Of [The
Present], And The Emptiness Of Applause, And The Changeableness And Want
Of Judgment In Those Who Pretend To Give Praise, And The Narrowness Of
The Space Within Which It Is Circumscribed [And Be Quiet At Last]. For
The Whole Earth Is A Point, And How Small A Nook In It Is This Thy
Dwelling, And How Few Are There In It, And What Kind Of People Are They
Who Will Praise Thee.
This Then Remains: Remember To Retire Into This Little Territory Of Thy
Own,[A] And Above All Do Not Distract Or Strain Thyself, But Be Free,
And Look At Things As A Man, As A Human Being, As A Citizen, As A
Story 3 (The Thoughts Of Marcus Aurelius Antonius) Pg 51Mortal. But Among The Things Readiest To Thy Hand To Which Thou Shalt
Turn, Let There Be These, Which Are Two. One Is That Things Do Not Touch
The Soul, For They Are External And Remain Immovable; But Our
Perturbations Come Only From The Opinion Which Is Within. The Other Is
That All These Things, Which Thou Seest, Change Immediately And Will No
Longer Be; And Constantly Bear In Mind How Many Of These Changes Thou
Hast Already Witnessed. The Universe Is Transformation: Life Is Opinion.
[A] Tecum Habita, Noris Quam Sit Tibi Curta
Supellex.--_Perseus_, Iv. 52.
4. If Our Intellectual Part Is Common, The Reason Also, In Respect Of
Which We Are Rational Beings, Is Common: If This Is So, Common Also Is
The Reason Which Commands Us What To Do, And What Not To Do; If This Is
So, There Is A Common Law Also; If This Is So, We Are Fellow-Citizens;
If This Is So, We Are Members Of Some Political Community; If This Is
So, The World Is In A Manner A State.[A] For Of What Other Common
Political Community Will Any One Say That The Whole Human Race Are
Members? And From Thence, From This Common Political Community, Comes
Also Our Very Intellectual Faculty And Reasoning Faculty And Our
Capacity For Law; Or Whence Do They Come? For As My Earthly Part Is A
Portion Given To Me From Certain Earth, And That Which Is Watery From
Another Element, And That Which Is Hot And Fiery From Some Peculiar
Source (For Nothing Comes Out Of That Which Is Nothing, As Nothing Also
Returns To Non-Existence), So Also The Intellectual Part Comes From Some
Source.
[A] Compare Cicero De Legibus, I. 7.
5. Death Is Such As Generation Is, A Mystery Of Nature; Composition Out
Of The Same Elements, And A Decomposition Into The Same; And Altogether
Not A Thing Of Which Any Man Should Be Ashamed, For It Is Not Contrary
To [The Nature Of] A Reasonable Animal, And Not Contrary To The Reason
Of Our Constitution.
6. It Is Natural That These Things Should Be Done By Such Persons, It Is
A Matter Of Necessity; And If A Man Will Not Have It So, He Will Not
Allow The Fig-Tree To Have Juice. But By All Means Bear This In Mind,
That Within A Very Short Time Both Thou And He Will Be Dead; And Soon
Not Even Your Names Will Be Left Behind.
7. Take Away Thy Opinion, And Then There Is Taken Away The Complaint, "I
Have Been Harmed." Take Away The Complaint, "I Have Been Harmed," And
The Harm Is Taken Away.
8. That Which Does Not Make A Man Worse Than He Was, Also Does Not Make
His Life Worse, Nor Does It Harm Him Either From Without Or From Within.
9. The Nature Of That Which Is [Universally] Useful Has Been Compelled
To Do This.
10. Consider That Everything Which Happens, Happens Justly, And If Thou
Observest Carefully, Thou Wilt Find It To Be So. I Do Not Say Only With
Respect To The Continuity Of The Series Of Things, But With Respect To
What Is Just, And As If It Were Done By One Who Assigns To Each Thing
Its Value. Observe Then As Thou Hast Begun; And Whatever Thou Doest, Do
It In Conjunction With This, The Being Good, And In The Sense In Which A
Man Is Properly Understood To Be Good. Keep To This In Every Action.
11. Do Not Have Such An Opinion Of Things As He Has Who Does Thee Wrong,
Or Such As He Wishes Thee To Have, But Look At Them As They Are In
Truth.
12. A Man Should Always Have These Two Rules In Readiness; The One To Do
Only Whatever The Reason Of The Ruling And Legislating Faculty May
Suggest For The Use Of Men; The Other, To Change Thy Opinion, If There
Is Any One At Hand Who Sets Thee Right And Moves Thee From Any Opinion.
But This Change Of Opinion Must Proceed Only From A Certain Persuasion,
As Of What Is Just Or Of Common Advantage, And The Like, Not Because It
Appears Pleasant Or Brings Reputation.
13. Hast Thou Reason? I Have.--Why Then Dost Not Thou Use It? For If
This Does Its Own Work, What Else Dost Thou Wish?
14. Thou Hast Existed As A Part. Thou Shalt Disappear In That Which
Produced Thee; But Rather Thou Shalt Be Received Back Into Its Seminal
Principle By Transmutation.
15. Many Grains Of Frankincense On The Same Altar: One Falls Before,
Another Falls After; But It Makes No Difference.
16. Within Ten Days Thou Wilt Seem A God To Those To Whom Thou Art Now A
Beast And An Ape, If Thou Wilt Return To Thy Principles And The Worship
Of Reason.
17. Do Not Act As If Thou Wert Going To Live Ten Thousand Years. Death
Hangs Over Thee. While Thou Livest, While It Is In Thy Power, Be Good.
18. How Much Trouble He Avoids Who Does Not Look To See What His
Neighbor Says Or Does Or Thinks, But Only To What He Does Himself, That
It May Be Just And Pure; Or, As Agathon+ Says, Look Not Round At The
Depraved Morals Of Others, But Run Straight Along The Line Without
Deviating From It.
19. He Who Has A Vehement Desire For Posthumous Fame Does Not Consider
That Every One Of Those Who Remember Him Will Himself Also Die Very
Soon; Then Again Also They Who Have Succeeded Them, Until The Whole
Remembrance Shall Have Been Extinguished As It Is Transmitted Through
Men Who Foolishly Admire And Perish. But Suppose That Those Who Will
Remember Are Even Immortal, And That The Remembrance Will Be Immortal,
What Then Is This To Thee? And I Say Not What Is It To The Dead, But
What Is It To The Living? What Is Praise, Except + Indeed So Far As It
Has + A Certain Utility? For Thou Now Rejectest Unseasonably The Gift
Of Nature, Clinging To Something Else ... +.
20. Everything Which Is In Any Way Beautiful Is Beautiful In Itself, And
Terminates In Itself, Not Having Praise As Part Of Itself. Neither Worse
Then Nor Better Is A Thing Made By Being Praised. I Affirm This Also Of
The Things Which Are Called Beautiful By The Vulgar, For Example,
Material Things And Works Of Art. That Which Is Really Beautiful Has No
Need Of Anything; Not More Than Law, Not More Than Truth, Not More Than
Benevolence Or Modesty. Which Of These Things Is Beautiful Because It
Is Praised, Or Spoiled By Being Blamed? Is Such A Thing As An Emerald
Story 3 (The Thoughts Of Marcus Aurelius Antonius) Pg 52Made Worse Than It Was, If It Is Not Praised? Or Gold, Ivory, Purple, A
Lyre, A Little Knife, A Flower, A Shrub?
[Illustration: Interior Of The Parthenon]
21. If Souls Continue To Exist, How Does The Air Contain Them From
Eternity?--But How Does The Earth Contain The Bodies Of Those Who Have
Been Buried From Time So Remote? For As Here The Mutation Of These
Bodies After A Certain Continuance, Whatever It May Be, And Their
Dissolution, Make Room For Other Dead Bodies, So The Souls Which Are
Removed Into The Air After Subsisting For Some Time Are Transmuted And
Diffused, And Assume A Fiery Nature By Being Received Into The Seminal
Intelligence Of The Universe, And In This Way Make Room For The Fresh
Souls Which Come To Dwell There. And This Is The Answer Which A Man
Might Give On The Hypothesis Of Souls Continuing To Exist. But We Must
Not Only Think Of The Number Of Bodies Which Are Thus Buried, But Also
Of The Number Of Animals Which Are Daily Eaten By Us And The Other
Animals. For What A Number Is Consumed, And Thus In A Manner Buried In
The Bodies Of Those Who Feed On Them! And Nevertheless This Earth
Receives Them By Reason Of The Changes [Of These Bodies] Into Blood, And
The Transformations Into The Aerial Or The Fiery Element.
What Is The Investigation Into The Truth In This Matter? The Division
Into That Which Is Material And That Which Is The Cause Of Form [The
Formal], (Vii. 29.)
22. Do Not Be Whirled About, But In Every Movement Have Respect To
Justice, And On The Occasion Of Every Impression Maintain The Faculty Of
Comprehension [Or Understanding].
23. Everything Harmonizes With Me, Which Is Harmonious To Thee, O
Universe. Nothing For Me Is Too Early Nor Too Late, Which Is In Due Time
For Thee. Everything Is Fruit To Me Which Thy Seasons Bring, O Nature:
From Thee Are All Things, In Thee Are All Things, To Thee All Things
Return. The Poet Says, Dear City Of Cecrops; And Wilt Not Thou Say, Dear
City Of Zeus?
24. Occupy Thyself With Few Things, Says The Philosopher, If Thou
Wouldst Be Tranquil.--But Consider If It Would Not Be Better To Say, Do
What Is Necessary, And Whatever The Reason Of The Animal Which Is
Naturally Social Requires, And As It Requires. For This Brings Not Only
The Tranquillity Which Comes From Doing Well, But Also That Which Comes
From Doing Few Things. For The Greatest Part Of What We Say And Do Being
Unnecessary, If A Man Takes This Away, He Will Have More Leisure And
Less Uneasiness. Accordingly, On Every Occasion A
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