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.
Read free book Β«Thoughts Of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus by Marcus Aurelius Antoninus (best self help books to read .txt) πΒ» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Marcus Aurelius Antoninus
Read book online Β«Thoughts Of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus by Marcus Aurelius Antoninus (best self help books to read .txt) πΒ». Author - Marcus Aurelius Antoninus
Thine Then Has No Reference Either Immediately Or Remotely To A Social
End, This Tears Asunder Thy Life, And Does Not Allow It To Be One, And
It Is Of The Nature Of A Mutiny, Just As When In A Popular Assembly A
Man Acting By Himself Stands Apart From The General Agreement.
24. Quarrels Of Little Children And Their Sports, And Poor Spirits
Carrying About Dead Bodies [Such Is Everything]; And So What Is
Exhibited In The Representation Of The Mansions Of The Dead[A] Strikes
Our Eyes More Clearly.
[A] [Greek: To TΓͺs Nekuias] May Be, As Gataker Conjectures, A
Dramatic Representation Of The State Of The Dead. Schultz
Supposes That It May Be Also A Reference To The [Greek: Nekuia]
Of The Odyssey (Lib. Xi.).
25. Examine Into The Quality Of The Form Of An Object, And Detach It
Altogether From Its Material Part, And Then Contemplate It; Then
Determine The Time, The Longest Which A Thing Of This Peculiar Form Is
Naturally Made To Endure.
26. Thou Hast Endured Infinite Troubles Through Not Being Contented With
Thy Ruling Faculty When It Does The Things Which It Is Constituted By
Nature To Do. But Enough + [Of This].
27. When Another Blames Thee Or Hates Thee, Or When Men Say About Thee
Anything Injurious, Approach Their Poor Souls, Penetrate Within, And See
What Kind Of Men They Are. Thou Wilt Discover That There Is No Reason To
Take Any Trouble That These Men May Have This Or That Opinion About
Thee. However, Thou Must Be Well Disposed Towards Them, For By Nature
They Are Friends. And The Gods Too Aid Them In All Ways, By Dreams, By
Signs, Towards The Attainment Of Those Things On Which They Set A Value.+
28. The Periodic Movements Of The Universe Are The Same, Up And Down
From Age To Age. And Either The Universal Intelligence Puts Itself In
Motion For Every Separate Effect, And If This Is So, Be Thou Content
With That Which Is The Result Of Its Activity; Or It Puts Itself In
Motion Once, And Everything Else Comes By Way Of Sequence[A] In A
Manner; Or Indivisible Elements Are The Origin Of All Things.--In A
Word, If There Is A God, All Is Well; And If Chance Rules, Do Not Thou
Also Be Governed By It (Vi. 44; Vii. 75).
[A] The Words Which Immediately Follow [Greek: Kat'
EpakolouthΓͺsin] Are Corrupt. But The Meaning Is Hardly
Doubtful. (Compare Vii. 75.)
Soon Will The Earth Cover Us All: Then The Earth, Too, Will Change, And
The Things Also Which Result From Change Will Continue To Change
Forever, And These Again Forever. For If A Man Reflects On The Changes
And Transformations Which Follow One Another Like Wave After Wave And
Their Rapidity, He Will Despise Everything Which Is Perishable (Xii.
21).
29. The Universal Cause Is Like A Winter Torrent: It Carries Everything
Along With It. But How Worthless Are All These Poor People Who Are
Engaged In Matters Political, And, As They Suppose, Are Playing The
Story 3 (The Thoughts Of Marcus Aurelius Antonius) Pg 96Philosopher! All Drivellers. Well Then, Man: Do What Nature Now
Requires. Set Thyself In Motion, If It Is In Thy Power, And Do Not Look
About Thee To See If Any One Will Observe It; Nor Yet Expect Plato's
Republic:[A] But Be Content If The Smallest Thing Goes On Well, And
Consider Such An Event To Be No Small Matter. For Who Can Change Men's
Opinions? And Without A Change Of Opinions What Else Is There Than The
Slavery Of Men Who Groan While They Pretend To Obey? Come Now And Tell
Me Of Alexander And Philippus And Demetrius Of Phalerum. They Themselves
Shall Judge Whether They Discovered What The Common Nature Required, And
Trained Themselves Accordingly. But If They Acted Like Tragedy Heroes,
No One Has Condemned Me To Imitate Them. Simple And Modest Is The Work
Of Philosophy. Draw Me Not Aside To Insolence And Pride.
[A] Those Who Wish To Know What Plato's Republic Is May Now
Study It In The Accurate Translation Of Davies And Vaughan.
30. Look Down From Above On The Countless Herds Of Men And Their
Countless Solemnities, And The Infinitely Varied Voyagings In Storms And
Calms, And The Differences Among Those Who Are Born, Who Live Together,
And Die. And Consider, Too, The Life Lived By Others In Olden Time, And
The Life Of Those Who Will Live After Thee, And The Life Now Lived Among
Barbarous Nations, And How Many Know Not Even Thy Name, And How Many
Will Soon Forget It, And How They Who Perhaps Now Are Praising Thee Will
Very Soon Blame Thee, And That Neither A Posthumous Name Is Of Any
Value, Nor Reputation, Nor Anything Else.
31. Let There Be Freedom From Perturbations With Respect To The Things
Which Come From The External Cause; And Let There Be Justice In The
Things Done By Virtue Of The Internal Cause, That Is, Let There Be
Movement And Action Terminating In This, In Social Acts, For This Is
According To Thy Nature.
32. Thou Canst Remove Out Of The Way Many Useless Things Among Those
Which Disturb Thee, For They Lie Entirely In Thy Opinion; And Thou Wilt
Then Gain For Thyself Ample Space By Comprehending The Whole Universe In
Thy Mind, And By Contemplating The Eternity Of Time, And Observing The
Rapid Change Of Every Several Thing, How Short Is The Time From Birth To
Dissolution, And The Illimitable Time Before Birth As Well As The
Equally Boundless Time After Dissolution!
33. All That Thou Seest Will Quickly Perish, And Those Who Have Been
Spectators Of Its Dissolution Will Very Soon Perish Too. And He Who Dies
At The Extremest Old Age Will Be Brought Into The Same Condition With
Him Who Died Prematurely.
34. What Are These Men's Leading Principles, And About What Kind Of
Things Are They Busy, And For What Kind Of Reasons Do They Love And
Honor? Imagine That Thou Seest Their Pool Souls Laid Bare. When They
Think That They Do Harm By Their Blame Or Good By Their Praise, What An
Idea!
35. Loss Is Nothing Else Than Change. But The Universal Nature Delights
In Change, And In Obedience To Her All Things Are Now Done Well, And
From Eternity Have Been In Like Form, And Will Be Such To Time Without
End. What, Then, Dost Thou Say,--That All Things Have Been And All
Things Always Will Be Bad, And That No Power Has Ever Been Found In So
Many Gods To Rectify These Things, But The World Has Been Condemned To
Story 3 (The Thoughts Of Marcus Aurelius Antonius) Pg 97Be Bound In Never Ceasing Evil (Iv. 45, Vii. 18)?
36. The Rottenness Of The Matter Which Is The Foundation Of Everything!
Water, Dust, Bones, Filth: Or Again, Marble Rocks, The Callosities Of
The Earth; And Gold And Silver, The Sediments; And Garments, Only Bits
Of Hair; And Purple Dye, Blood; And Everything Else Is Of The Same Kind.
And That Which Is Of The Nature Of Breath Is Also Another Thing Of The
Same Kind, Changing From This To That.
37. Enough Of This Wretched Life And Murmuring And Apish Tricks. Why Art
Thou Disturbed? What Is There New In This? What Unsettles Thee? Is It
The Form Of The Thing? Look At It. Or Is It The Matter? Look At It. But
Besides These There Is Nothing. Towards The Gods Then, Now Become At
Last More Simple And Better. It Is The Same Whether We Examine These
Things For A Hundred Years Or Three.
38. If A Man Has Done Wrong The Harm Is His Own. But Perhaps He Has Not
Done Wrong.
39. Either All Things Proceed From One Intelligent Source And Come
Together As In One Body, And The Part Ought Not To Find Fault With What
Is Done For The Benefit Of The Whole; Or There Are Only Atoms, And
Nothing Else Than Mixture And Dispersion. Why, Then, Art Thou Disturbed?
Say To The Ruling Faculty, Art Thou Dead, Art Thou Corrupted, Art Thou
Playing The Hypocrite, Art Thou Become A Beast, Dost Thou Herd And Feed
With The Rest?[A]
[A] There Is Some Corruption At The End Of This Section, But I
Think That The Translation Expresses The Emperor's Meaning.
Whether Intelligence Rules All Things Or Chance Rules, A Man
Must Not Be Disturbed. He Must Use The Power That He Has And Be
Tranquil.
40. Either The Gods Have No Power Or They Have Power. If, Then, They
Have No Power, Why Dost Thou Pray To Them? But If They Have Power, Why
Dost Thou Not Pray For Them To Give Thee The Faculty Of Not Fearing Any
Of The Things Which Thou Fearest, Or Of Not Desiring Any Of The Things
Which Thou Desirest, Or Not Being Pained At Anything, Rather Than Pray
That Any Of These Things Should Not Happen Or Happen? For Certainly If
They Can Co-Operate With Men, They Can Co-Operate For These Purposes.
But Perhaps Thou Wilt Say The Gods Have Placed Them In Thy Power. Well,
Then, Is It Not Better To Use What Is In Thy Power Like A Free Man Than
To Desire In A Slavish And Abject Way What Is Not In Thy Power? And Who
Has Told Thee That The Gods Do Not Aid Us, Even In The Things Which Are
In Our Power? Begin, Then, To Pray For Such Things, And Thou Wilt See.
One Man Prays Thus: How Shall I Be Able To Lie With That Woman? Do Thou
Pray Thus: How Shall I Not Desire To Lie With Her? Another Prays Thus:
How Shall I Be Released From This? Pray Thou: How Shall I Not Desire To
Be Released? Another Thus: How Shall I Not Lose My Little Son? Thou
Thus: How Shall I Not Be Afraid To Lose Him? In Fine, Turn Thy Prayers
This Way, And See What Comes.
41. Epicurus Says, In My Sickness My Conversation Was Not About My
Bodily Sufferings, Nor, Says He, Did I Talk On Such Subjects To Those
Who Visited Me; But I Continued To Discourse On The Nature Of Things As
Comments (0)