Seneca's Morals |
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Side v
... vice ; most divinely sententious ; and well worth the reading , if it were only for his morals ; adding , that if his judgment had been answerable to his wit , it had been much the more for his reputation ; but he wrote whatever came ...
... vice ; most divinely sententious ; and well worth the reading , if it were only for his morals ; adding , that if his judgment had been answerable to his wit , it had been much the more for his reputation ; but he wrote whatever came ...
Side viii
... vices and manners , and the smartest repre- hender of them . " Lib . 3. Cap . 9 . In the book that Seneca wrote against Superstitions , treating of images , St. Austin says , he writes thus : " They represent the holy , the immortal ...
... vices and manners , and the smartest repre- hender of them . " Lib . 3. Cap . 9 . In the book that Seneca wrote against Superstitions , treating of images , St. Austin says , he writes thus : " They represent the holy , the immortal ...
Side 11
... vices ) with our pleasures , we are incompetent judges where to place our bounties : but when death presents itself , and that we come to our last will and testament , we leave our fortunes to the most worthy . He that gives nothing ...
... vices ) with our pleasures , we are incompetent judges where to place our bounties : but when death presents itself , and that we come to our last will and testament , we leave our fortunes to the most worthy . He that gives nothing ...
Side 20
... vice in the professions . If we buy things cheap it matters not , so long as it is a bargain : it is no obligation from the seller , if nobody else will give him more for it . What would not a man give to be set ashore in a tempest ...
... vice in the professions . If we buy things cheap it matters not , so long as it is a bargain : it is no obligation from the seller , if nobody else will give him more for it . What would not a man give to be set ashore in a tempest ...
Side 27
... vices ; as on the other side , it is a point of great reputation for a man to command himself . Plato thanked Socrates for what he had learned of him ; and why might not Socrates as well thank Plato for that which he had taught him ...
... vices ; as on the other side , it is a point of great reputation for a man to command himself . Plato thanked Socrates for what he had learned of him ; and why might not Socrates as well thank Plato for that which he had taught him ...
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ambition anger angry Apicius appetites Aristotle avarice banished beasts benefit better blessings body bounty Cæsar Caligula Cambyses Cato cause CHAP comes common condemned conscience contempt counsel covetous death delight desire discourse divine duty enemy Epicurus evil fall fate father fear felicity fortune friendship give grateful greater hand happy Harpagus heaven honest honor hopes and fears human ingratitude injury journey's end Julius Cæsar keep kind liberty live look lusts luxury Lysimachus madness man's mankind matter mind mischief miserable misfortunes Nature necessity never obligation ourselves pain pass passion Philip of Macedon philosophy Plato pleasure Pompey precepts prince profitable punishment quiet reason receive requite Seneca servant sick Socrates soul stancy stand Stilpo Stoics suffer sword temperate thing thirty tyrants Tiberius tion torments trouble truth ungrateful unrighteousness vices virtue whereas whole wisdom wise words
Populære avsnitt
Side xx - The rule is, we are to give, as we would receive, cheerfully, quickly, and without hesitation; for there is no grace in a benefit that sticks to the fingers.
Side 43 - True joy is a serene and sober motion ; and they are miserably out that take laughing for rejoicing ; the seat of it is within, and there is no cheerfulness like the resolution of a brave mind, that has fortune under its feet.
Side 42 - The great blessings of mankind are within us, and within our reach ; but we shut our eyes, and like people in the dark, we fall foul upon the very thing we search for, without finding it. Tranquillity is a certain equality of mind, which no condition of fortune can either exalt or depress.
Side 69 - We have also discoursed the helps of philosophy and precept towards a happy life ; the blessing of a good conscience ; that a good man can never be miserable, nor a wicked man happy ; nor any man unfortunate that cheerfully submits to Providence. We shall now examine, how it comes to pass that, when the certain way to happiness lies so fair before us, men will yet steer their course on the other side, which as manifestly leads to ruin. There are some that live without any design at all, and only...
Side 57 - He that places a man in the possession of himself does a great thing, for wisdom does not show itself so much in precept as in life, in a firmness of mind, and a mastery of appetite ; it teaches us to do as well as to talk, and to make our words and actions all of a colour.
Side xv - ... the misplacing of a benefit is worse than the not receiving of ^t ; for the one is another man's fault; but the other is mine. The error of the giver does oft-times excuse the ingratitude of the receiver : for a favor ill-placed is rather a profusion than a benefit. It is the most shameful of losses, an inconsiderate bounty.
Side xiii - There needs no great subtlety to prove, that both benefits and injuries receive their value from the intention, when even brutes themselves are able to decide this question. Tread upon a dog by chance, or put him to pain upon the dressing of a wound ; the one he passes by as an accident ; and the other, in his fashion, he acknowledges as a kindness: but, offer to strike at him, though you do him no hurt at all, he flies yet in the face of you, even for the mischief that you barely meant him.
Side 43 - ... it is the knowledge both of others and itself, it is an invincible greatness of mind, not to be elevated or dejected with good or ill fortune. It is sociable and gentle, free, steady and fearless, content within itself, full of inexhaustible delights, and it is valued for itself. One may be a good physician, a good governor, a good grammarian, without being a good man ; so that all things from without are only accessories, for the seat of it is a pure and holy mind.
Side 49 - Socrates places all philosophy in morals ; and wisdom in the distinguishing of good and evil. It is the art and law of life, and it teaches us what to do in all cases, and, like good marksmen, to hit the white at any distance.
Side 52 - What does it concern us, which was the elder of the two, Homer or Hesiod ; or which was the taller, Helen or Hecuba ? We take a great deal of pains to trace Ulysses in his wanderings, but, were it not time as well spent to look to ourselves, that we may not wander at all ? are not we ourselves tossed with tempestuous passions; and both assaulted by terrible monsters on the one hand, and tempted by Syrens on the other ? Teach me my duty to my country, to my father, to my wife, to mankind.