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<h1>A SELECTION FROM THE DISCOURSES OF EPICTETUS WITH THE ENCHEIRIDION</h1>
<center>TRANSLATED BY GEORGE LONG</center>
<hr>
<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
<p><SPAN href="#RULE4_1">EPICTETUS (BIOGRAPHICAL NOTE).</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#RULE4_2">A SELECTION FROM THE DISCOURSES OF
EPICTETUS.</SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#RULE4_3">THE ENCHEIRIDION, OR MANUAL.</SPAN></p>
<hr>
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<h2>EPICTETUS.</h2>
<p>Very little is known of the life of Epictetus. It is said that
he was a native of Hierapolis in Phrygia, a town between the
Maeander and a branch of the Maeander named the Lycus. Hierapolis
is mentioned in the epistle of Paul to the people of Colossae
(Coloss. iv., 13); from which it has been concluded that there was
a Christian church in Hierapolis in the time of the apostle. The
date of the birth of Epictetus is unknown. The only recorded fact
of his early life is that he was a slave in Rome, and his master
was Epaphroditus, a profligate freedman of the Emperor Nero. There
is a story that the master broke his slave's leg by torturing him;
but it is better to trust to the evidence of Simplicius, the
commentator on the Encheiridion, or Manual, who says that Epictetus
was weak in body and lame from an early age. It is not said how he
became a slave; but it has been asserted in modern times that the
parents sold the child. I have not, however, found any authority
for this statement.</p>
<p>It may be supposed that the young slave showed intelligence, for
his master sent or permitted him to attend the lectures of C.
Musonius Rufus, an eminent Stoic philosopher. It may seem strange
that such a master should have wished to have his slave made into a
philosopher; but Garnier, the author of a "Mémoire sur les
Ouvrages d'Epictète," explains this matter very well in a
communication to Schweighaeuser. Garnier says: "Epictetus, born at
Hierapolis of Phrygia of poor parents, was indebted apparently for
the advantages of a good education to the whim, which was common at
the end of the Republic and under the first emperors, among the
great of Rome to reckon among their numerous slaves grammarians,
poets, rhetoricians, and philosophers, in the same way as rich
financiers in these later ages have been led to form at a great
cost rich and numerous libraries. This supposition is the only one
which can explain to us how a wretched child, born as poor as Irus,
had received a good education, and how a rigid Stoic was the slave
of Epaphroditus, one of the officers of the imperial guard. For we
cannot suspect that it was through predilection for the Stoic
doctrine, and for his own use, that the confidant and the minister
of the debaucheries of Nero would have desired to possess such a
slave."</p>
<p>Some writers assume that Epictetus was manumitted by his master,
but I can find no evidence for this statement. Epaphroditus
accompanied Nero when he fled from Rome before his enemies, and he
aided the miserable tyrant in killing himself. Domitian (Sueton.,
Domit. 14), afterwards put Epaphroditus to death for this service
to Nero. We may conclude that Epictetus in some way obtained his
freedom, and that he began to teach at Rome; but after the
expulsion of the philosophers from Rome by Domitian, A.D. 89, he
retired to Nicopolis in Epirus, a city built by Augustus to
commemorate the victory at Actium. Epictetus opened a school or
lecture room at Nicopolis, where he taught till he was an old man.
The time of his death is unknown. Epictetus was never married, as
we learn from Lucian (Demonax, c. 55, torn, ii., ed. Hemsterh., p.
393). When Epictetus was finding fault with Demonax, and advising
him to take a wife and beget children, for this also, as Epictetus
said, was a philosopher's duty, to leave in place of himself
another in the universe, Demonax refuted the doctrine by answering:
Give me then, Epictetus, one of your own daughters. Simplicius says
(Comment., c. 46, p. 432, ed. Schweigh.) that Epictetus lived alone
a long time. At last he took a woman into his house as a nurse for
a child, which one of Epictetus' friends was going to expose on
account of his poverty, but Epictetus took the child and brought it
up.</p>
<p>Epictetus wrote nothing; and all that we have under his name was
written</p>
<p>Photius (Biblioth., 58) mentions among Arrian's works
"Conversations with Epictetus," [Greek: Homiliai Epichtaeton], in
twelve books. Upton thinks that this work is only another name for
the Discourses, and that Photius has made the mistake of taking the
Conversations to be a different work from the Discourses. Yet
Photius has enumerated eight books of the Discourses and twelve
books of the Conversations. Schweighaeuser observes that Photius
had not seen these works of Arrian on Epictetus, for so he
concludes from the brief notice of these works by Photius. The fact
is that Photius does not say that he had read these books, as he
generally does when he is speaking of the books which he enumerates
in his Bibliotheca. The conclusion is that we are not certain that
there was a work of Arrian entitled "The Conversations of
Epictetus."</p>
<p>Upton remarks in a note on iii., 23 (p. 184, Trans.), that
"there are many passages in these dissertations which are ambiguous
or rather confused on account of the small questions, and because
the matter is not expanded by oratorical copiousness, not to
mention other causes." The discourses of Epictetus, it is supposed,
were spoken extempore, and so one thing after another would come
into the thoughts of the speaker (Wolf). Schweighaeuser also
observes in a note (ii., 336 of his edition) that the connection of
the discourse is sometimes obscure through the omission of some
words which are necessary to indicate the connection of the
thoughts. The reader then will find that he cannot always
understand Epictetus, if he does not read him very carefully, and
some passages more than once. He must also think and reflect, or he
will miss the meaning. I do not say that the book is worth all this
trouble. Every man must judge for himself. But I should not have
translated the book, if I had not thought it worth study; and I
think that all books of this kind require careful reading, if they
are worth reading at all.</p>
<p>G.L.</p>
<hr>
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<h2>A SELECTION FROM THE DISCOURSES OF EPICTETUS.</h2>
<p>OF THE THINGS WHICH ARE IN OUR POWER AND NOT IN OUR
POWER.—Of all the faculties (except that which I shall soon
mention), you will find not one which is capable of contemplating
itself, and, consequently, not capable either of approving or
disapproving. How far does the grammatic art possess the
contemplating power? As far as forming a judgment about what is
written and spoken. And how far music? As far as judging about
melody. Does either of them then contemplate itself? By no means.
But when you must write something to your friend, grammar will tell
you what words you should write; but whether you should write or
not, grammar will not tell you. And so it is with music as to
musical sounds; but whether you should sing at the present time and
play on the lute, or do neither, music will not tell you. What
faculty then will tell you? That which contemplates both itself and
all other things. And what is this faculty? The rational faculty;
for this is the only faculty that we have received which examines
itself, what it is, and what power it has, and what is the value of
this gift, and examines all other faculties: for what else is there
which tells us that golden things are beautiful, for they do not
say so themselves? Evidently it is the faculty which is capable of
judging of appearances. What else judges of music, grammar, and the
other faculties, proves their uses, and points out the occasions
for using them? Nothing else.</p>
<p>What then should a man have in readiness in such circumstances?
What else than this? What is mine, and what is not mine; and what
is permitted to me, and what is not permitted to me. I must die.
Must I then die lamenting? I must be put in chains. Must I then
also lament? I must go into exile. Does any man then hinder me from
going with smiles and cheerfulness and contentment? Tell me the
secret which you possess. I will not, for this is in my power. But
I will put you in chains. Man, what are you talking about? Me, in
chains? You may fetter my leg, but my will not even Zeus himself
can overpower. I will throw you into prison. My poor body, you
mean. I will cut your head off. When then have I told you that my
head alone cannot be cut off? These are the things which
philosophers should meditate on, which they should write daily, in
which they should exercise themselves.</p>
<p>What then did Agrippinus say? He said, "I am not a hindrance to
myself." When it was reported to him that his trial was going on in
the Senate, he said: "I hope it may turn out well; but it is the
fifth hour of the day"—this was the time when he was used to
exercise himself and then take the cold bath,—"let us go and
take our exercise." After he had taken his exercise, one comes and
tells him, "You have been condemned." "To banishment," he replies,
"or to death?" "To banishment." "What about my property?" "It is
not taken from you." "Let us go to Aricia then," he said, "and
dine."</p>
<hr>
<p>HOW A MAN ON EVERY OCCASION CAN MAINTAIN HIS PROPER
CHARACTER.—To the rational animal only is the irrational
intolerable; but that which is rational is tolerable. Blows are not
naturally intolerable. How is that? See how the Lacedaemonians
endure whipping when they have learned that whipping is consistent
with reason. To hang yourself is not intolerable. When then you
have the opinion that it is rational, you go and hang yourself. In
short, if we observe, we shall find that the animal man is pained
by nothing so much as by that which is irrational; and, on the
contrary, attracted to nothing so much as to that which is
rational.</p>
<p>Only consider at what price you sell your own will: if for no
other reason, at least for this, that you sell it not for a small
sum. But that which is great and superior perhaps belongs to
Socrates and such as are like him. Why then, if we are naturally
such, are not a very great number of us like him? Is it true then
that all horses become swift, that all dogs are skilled in tracking
footprints? What then, since I am naturally dull, shall I, for this
reason, take no pains? I hope not. Epictetus is not superior to
Socrates; but if he is not inferior, this is enough for me; for I
shall never be a Milo, and yet I do not neglect my body; nor shall
I be a Croesus, and yet I do not neglect my property; nor, in a
word, do we neglect looking after anything because we despair of
reaching the highest degree.</p>
<hr>
<p>HOW A MAN SHOULD PROCEED FROM THE PRINCIPLE OF GOD BEING THE
FATHER OF ALL MEN TO THE REST.—If a man should be able to
assent to this doctrine as he ought, that we are all sprung from
God in an especial manner, and that God is the father both of men
and of gods, I suppose that he would never have any ignoble or mean
thoughts about himself. But if Cæsar (the emperor) should
adopt you, no one could endure your arrogance; and if you know that
you are the son of Zeus, will you not be elated? Yet we do not so;
but since these two things are mingled in the generation of man,
body in common with the animals, and reason and intelligence in
common with the gods, many incline to this kinship, which is
miserable and mortal; and some few to that which is divine and
happy. Since then it is of necessity that every man uses everything
according to the opinion which he has about it, those, the few, who
think that they are formed for fidelity and modesty and a sure use
of appearances have no mean or ignoble thoughts about themselves;
but with the many it is quite the contrary. For they say, What am
I? A poor, miserable man, with my wretched bit of flesh. Wretched,
indeed; but you possess something better than your bit of flesh.
Why then do you neglect that which is better, and why do you attach
yourself to this?</p>
<p>Through this kinship with the flesh, some of us inclining to it
become like wolves, faithless and treacherous and mischievous; some
become like lions, savage and bestial and untamed; but the greater
part of us become foxes, and other worse animals. For what else is
a slanderer and malignant man than a fox, or some other more
wretched and meaner animal? See then and take care that you do not
become some one of these miserable things.</p>
<hr>
<p>OF PROGRESS OR IMPROVEMENT.—He who is making progress,
having learned from philosophers that desire means the desire of
good things, and aversion means aversion from bad things; having
learned too that happiness and tranquillity are not attainable by
man otherwise than by not failing to obtain what he desires, and
not falling into that which he would avoid; such a man takes from
himself desire altogether and confers it, but he employs his
aversion only on things which are dependent on his will. For if he
attempts to avoid anything independent of his will, he knows that
sometimes he will fall in with something which he wishes to avoid,
and he will be unhappy. Now if virtue promises good fortune and
tranquillity and happiness, certainly also the progress towards
virtue is progress towards each of these things. For it is always
true that to whatever point the perfecting of anything leads us,
progress is an approach towards this point.</p>
<p>How then do we admit that virtue is such as I have said, and yet
seek progress in other things and make a display of it? What is the
product of virtue? Tranquillity. Who then makes improvement? Is it
he who has read many books of Chrysippus? But does virtue consist
in having understood Chrysippus? If this is so, progress is clearly
nothing else than knowing a great deal of Chrysippus. But now we
admit that virtue produces one thing, and we declare that
approaching near to it is another thing, namely, progress or
improvement. Such a person, says one, is already able to read
Chrysippus by himself. Indeed, sir, you are making great progress.
What kind of progress? But why do you mock the man? Why do you draw
him away from the perception of his own misfortunes? Will you not
show him the effect of virtue that he may learn where to look for
improvement? Seek it there, wretch, where your work lies. And where
is your work? In desire and in aversion, that you may not be
disappointed in your desire, and that you may not fall into that
which you would avoid; in your pursuit and avoiding, that you
commit no error; in assent and suspension of assent, that you be
not deceived. The first things, and the most necessary are those
which I have named. But if with trembling and lamentation you seek
not to fall into that which you avoid, tell me how you are
improving.</p>
<p>Do you then show me your improvement in these things? If I were
talking to an athlete, I should say, Show me your shoulders; and
then he might say, Here are my Halteres. You and your Halteres look
to that. I should reply, I wish to see the effect of the Halteres.
So, when you say: Take the treatise on the active powers ([Greek:
hormea]), and see how I have studied it, I reply: Slave, I am not
inquiring about this, but how you exercise pursuit and avoidance,
desire and aversion, how you design and purpose and prepare
yourself, whether conformably to nature or not. If conformably,
give me evidence of it, and I will say that you are making
progress; but if not conformably, be gone, and not only expound
your books, but write such books yourself; and what will you gain
by it? Do you not know that the whole book costs only five denarii?
Does then the expounder seem to be worth more than five denarii?
Never then look for the matter itself in one place, and progress
towards it in another. Where then is progress? If any of you,
withdrawing himself from externals, turns to his own will ([Greek:
proairesis]) to exercise it and to improve it by labor, so as to
make it conformable to nature, elevated, free, unrestrained,
unimpeded, faithful, modest; and if he has learned that he who
desires or avoids the things which are not in his power can neither
be faithful nor free, but of necessity he must change with them and
be tossed about with them as in a tempest, and of necessity must
subject himself to others who have the power to procure or prevent
what lie desires or would avoid; finally, when he rises in the
morning, if he observes and keeps these rules, bathes as a man of
fidelity, eats as a modest man; in like manner, if in every matter
that occurs he works out his chief principles ([Greek: ta
proaegoumena]) as the runner does with reference to running, and
the trainer of the voice with reference to the voice—this is
the man who truly makes progress, and this is the man who has not
travelled in vain. But if he has strained his efforts to the
practice of reading books, and labors only at this, and has
travelled for this, I tell him to return home immediately, and not
to neglect his affairs there; for this for which he has travelled
is nothing. But the other thing is something, to study how a man
can rid his life of lamentation and groaning, and saying, Woe to
me, and wretched that I am, and to rid it also of misfortune and
disappointment, and to learn what death is, and exile, and prison,
and poison, that he may be able to say when he is in fetters, Dear
Crito, if it is the will of the gods that it be so, let it be so;
and not to say, Wretched am I, an old man: have I kept my gray
hairs for this? Who is it that speaks thus? Do you think that I
shall name some man of no repute and of low condition? Does not
Priam say this? Does not Oedipus say this? Nay, all kings say it!
For what else is tragedy than the perturbations ([Greek: pathae])
of men who value externals exhibited in this kind of poetry? But if
a man must learn by fiction that no external things which are
independent of the will concern us, for my part I should like this
fiction, by the aid of which I should live happily and undisturbed.
But you must consider for yourselves what you wish.</p>
<p>What then does Chrysippus teach us? The reply is, to know that
these things are not false, from which happiness comes and
tranquillity arises. Take my books, and you will learn how true and
conformable to nature are the things which make me free from
perturbations. O great good fortune! O the great benefactor who
points out the way! To Triptolemus all men have erected temples and
altars, because he gave us food by cultivation; but to him who
discovered truth and brought it to light and communicated it to
all, not the truth which shows us how to live, but how to live
well, who of you for this reason has built an altar, or a temple,
or has dedicated a statue, or who worships God for this? Because
the gods have given the vine, or wheat, we sacrifice to them; but
because they have produced in the human mind that fruit by which
they designed to show us the truth which relates to happiness,
shall we not thank God for this?</p>
<hr>
<p>AGAINST THE ACADEMICS.—If a man, said Epictetus, opposes
evident truths, it is not easy to find arguments by which we shall
make him change his opinion. But this does not arise either from
the man's strength or the teacher's weakness; for when the man,
though he has been confuted, is hardened like a stone, how shall we
then be able to deal with him by argument?</p>
<p>Now there are two kinds of hardening, one of the understanding,
the other of the sense of shame, when a man is resolved not to
assent to what is manifest nor to desist from contradictions. Most
of us are afraid of mortification of the body, and would contrive
all means to avoid such a thing, but we care not about the soul's
mortification. And indeed with regard to the soul, if a man be in
such a state as not to apprehend anything, or understand at all, we
think that he is in a bad condition; but if the sense of shame and
modesty are deadened, this we call even power (or strength).</p>
<hr>
<p>OF PROVIDENCE.—From everything, which is or happens in the
world, it is easy to praise Providence, if a man possesses these
two qualities: the faculty of seeing what belongs and happens to
all persons and things, and a grateful disposition. If he does not
possess these two qualities, one man will not see the use of things
which are and which happen: another will not be thankful for them,
even if he does know them. If God had made colors, but had not made
the faculty of seeing them, what would have been their use? None at
all. On the other hand, if he had made the faculty of vision, but
had not made objects such as to fall under the faculty, what in
that case also would have been the use of it? None at all. Well,
suppose that he had made both, but had not made light? In that
case, also, they would have been of no use. Who is it then who has
fitted this to that and that to this?</p>
<p>What, then, are these things done in us only? Many, indeed, in
us only, of which the rational animal had peculiar need; but you
will find many common to us with irrational animals. Do they then
understand what is done? By no means. For use is one thing, and
understanding is another; God had need of irrational animals to
make use of appearances, but of us to understand the use of
appearances. It is therefore enough for them to eat and to drink,
and to copulate, and to do all the other things which they
severally do. But for us, to whom he has given also the
intellectual faculty, these things are not sufficient; for unless
we act in a proper and orderly manner, and conformably to the
nature and constitution of each thing, we shall never attain our
true end. For where the constitutions of living beings are
different, there also the acts and the ends are different. In those
animals then whose constitution is adapted only to use, use alone
is enough; but in an animal (man), which has also the power of
understanding the use, unless there be the due exercise of the
understanding, he will never attain his proper end. Well then God
constitutes every animal, one to be eaten, another to serve for
agriculture, another to supply cheese, and another for some like
use; for which purposes what need is there to understand
appearances and to be able to distinguish them? But God has
introduced man to be a spectator of God and of his works; and not
only a spectator of them, but an interpreter. For this reason it is
shameful for man to begin and to end where irrational animals do;
but rather he ought to begin where they begin, and to end where
nature ends in us; and nature ends in contemplation and
understanding, and in a way of life conformable to nature. Take
care then not to die without having been spectators of these
things.</p>
<p>But you take a journey to Olympia to see the work of Phidias,
and all of you think it a misfortune to die without having seen
such things. But when there is no need to take a journey, and where
a man is, there he has the works (of God) before him, will you not
desire to see and understand them? Will you not perceive either
what you are, or what you were born for, or what this is for which
you have received the faculty of sight? But you may say, There are
some things disagreeable and troublesome in life. And are there
none at Olympia? Are you not scorched? Are you not pressed by a
crowd? Are you not without comfortable means of bathing? Are you
not wet when it rains? Have you not abundance of noise, clamor, and
other disagreeable things? But I suppose that setting all these
things off against the magnificence of the spectacle, you bear and
endure. Well then and have you not received faculties by which you
will be able to bear all that happens? Have you not received
greatness of soul? Have you not received manliness? Have you not
received endurance? And why do I trouble myself about anything that
can happen if I possess greatness of soul? What shall distract my
mind, or disturb me, or appear painful? Shall I not use the power
for the purposes for which I received it, and shall I grieve and
lament over what happens?</p>
<p>Come, then, do you also having observed these things look to the
faculties which you have, and when you have looked at them, say:
Bring now, O Zeus, any difficulty that thou pleasest, for I have
means given to me by thee and powers for honoring myself through
the things which happen. You do not so; but you sit still,
trembling for fear that some things will happen, and weeping, and
lamenting, and groaning for what does happen; and then you blame
the gods. For what is the consequence of such meanness of spirit
but impiety? And yet God has not only given us these faculties, by
which we shall be able to bear everything that happens without
being depressed or broken by it; but, like a good king and a true
father, He has given us these faculties free from hindrance,
subject to no compulsion, unimpeded, and has put them entirely in
our own power, without even having reserved to Himself any power of
hindering or impeding. You, who have received these powers free and
as your own, use them not; you do not even see what you have
received, and from whom; some of you being blinded to the giver,
and not even acknowledging your benefactor, and others, through
meanness of spirit, betaking yourselves to fault-finding and making
charges against God. Yet I will show to you that you have powers
and means for greatness of soul and manliness; but what powers you
have for finding fault making accusations, do you show me.</p>
<hr>
<p>HOW FROM THE FACT THAT WE ARE AKIN TO GOD A MAN MAY PROCEED TO
THE CONSEQUENCES.—I indeed think that the old man ought to be
sitting here, not to contrive how you may have no mean thoughts nor
mean and ignoble talk about yourselves, but to take care that there
be not among us any young men of such a mind, that when they have
recognized their kinship to God, and that we are fettered by these
bonds, the body, I mean, and its possessions, and whatever else on
account of them is necessary to us for the economy and commerce of
life, they should intend to throw off these things as if they were
burdens painful and intolerable, and to depart to their kinsmen.
But this is the labor that your teacher and instructor ought to be
employed upon, if he really were what he should be. You should come
to him and say: Epictetus, we can no longer endure being bound to
this poor body, and feeding it, and giving it drink and rest, and
cleaning it, and for the sake of the body complying with the wishes
of these and of those. Are not these things indifferent and nothing
to us; and is not death no evil? And are we not in a manner kinsmen
of God, and did we not come from him? Allow us to depart to the
place from which we came; allow us to be released at last from
these bonds by which we are bound and weighed down. Here there are
robbers and thieves and courts of justice, and those who are named
tyrants, and think that they have some power over us by means of
the body and its possessions. Permit us to show them that they have
no power over any man. And I on my part would say: Friends, wait
for God: when he shall give the signal and release you from this
service, then go to him; but for the present endure to dwell in
this place where he has put you. Short indeed is this time of your
dwelling here, and easy to bear for those who are so disposed; for
what tyrant, or what thief, or what courts of justice are
formidable to those who have thus considered as things of no value
the body and the possessions of the body? Wait then, do not depart
without a reason.</p>
<hr>
<p>OF CONTENTMENT.—With respect to gods, there are some who
say that a divine being does not exist; others say that it exists,
but is inactive and careless, and takes no forethought about
anything; a third class say that such a being exists and exercises
forethought, but only about great things and heavenly things, and
about nothing on the earth; a fourth class say that a divine being
exercises forethought both about things on the earth and heavenly
things, but in a general way only, and not about things severally.
There is a fifth class to whom Ulysses and Socrates belong, who
say:</p>
<p class="poetic">I move not without thy knowledge.—Iliad,
x., 278.</p>
<p>Before all other things then it is necessary to inquire about
each of these opinions, whether it is affirmed truly or not truly.
For if there are no gods, how is it our proper end to follow them?
And if they exist, but take no care of anything, in this case also
how will it be right to follow them? But if indeed they do exist
and look after things, still if there is nothing communicated from
them to men, nor in fact to myself, how even so is it right (to
follow them)? The wise and good man then, after considering all
these things, submits his own mind to him who administers the
whole, as good citizens do to the law of the state. He who is
receiving instruction ought to come to be instructed with this
intention, How shall I follow the gods in all things, how shall I
be contented with the divine administration, and how can I become
free? For he is free to whom everything happens according to his
will, and whom no man can hinder. What then, is freedom madness?
Certainly not; for madness and freedom do not consist. But, you
say, I would have everything result just as I like, and in whatever
way I like. You are mad, you are beside yourself. Do you not know
that freedom is a noble and valuable thing? But for me
inconsiderately to wish for things to happen as I inconsiderately
like, this appears to be not only not noble, but even most base.
For how do we proceed in the matter of writing? Do I wish to write
the name of Dion as I choose? No, but I am taught to choose to
write it as it ought to be written. And how with respect to music?
In the same manner. And what universally in every art or science?
Just the same. If it were not so, it would be of no value to know
anything, if knowledge were adapted to every man's whim. Is it then
in this alone, in this which is the greatest and the chief thing, I
mean freedom, that I am permitted to will inconsiderately? By no
means; but to be instructed is this, to learn to wish that
everything may happen as it does. And how do things happen? As the
disposer has disposed them? And he has appointed summer and winter,
and abundance and scarcity, and virtue and vice, and all such
opposites for the harmony of the whole; and to each of us he has
given a body, and parts of the body, and possessions, and
companions.</p>
<p>What then remains, or what method is discovered of holding
commerce with them? Is there such a method by which they shall do
what seems fit to them, and we not the less shall be in a mood
which is conformable to nature? But you are unwilling to endure,
and are discontented; and if you are alone, you call it solitude;
and if you are with men, you call them knaves and robbers; and you
find fault with your own parents and children, and brothers and
neighbors. But you ought when you are alone to call this condition
by the name of tranquillity and freedom, and to think yourself like
to the gods; and when you are with many, you ought not to call it
crowd, nor trouble, nor uneasiness, but festival and assembly, and
so accept all contentedly.</p>
<p>What then is the punishment of those who do not accept? It is to
be what they are. Is any person dissatisfied with being alone? Let
him be alone. Is a man dissatisfied with his parents? Let him be a
bad son, and lament. Is he dissatisfied with his children? Let him
be a bad father. Cast him into prison. What prison? Where he is
already, for he is there against his will; and where a man is
against his will, there he is in prison. So Socrates was not in
prison, for he was there willingly. Must my leg then be lamed?
Wretch, do you then on account of one poor leg find fault with the
world? Will you not willingly surrender it for the whole? Will you
not withdraw from it? Will you not gladly part with it to him who
gave it? And will you be vexed and discontented with the things
established by Zeus, which he, with the Moirae (fates) who were
present and spinning the thread of your generation, defined and put
in order? Know you not how small a part you are compared with the
whole. I mean with respect to the body, for as to intelligence you
are not inferior to the gods nor less; for the magnitude of
intelligence is not measured by length nor yet by height, but by
thoughts.</p>
<hr>
<p>HOW EVERYTHING MAY BE DONE ACCEPTABLY TO THE GODS.—When
some one asked, How may a man eat acceptably to the gods, he
answered: If he can eat justly and contentedly, and with
equanimity, and temperately, and orderly, will it not be also
acceptable to the gods? But when you have asked for warm water and
the slave has not heard, or if he did hear has brought only tepid
water, or he is not even found to be in the house, then not to be
vexed or to burst with passion, is not this acceptable to the gods?
How then shall a man endure such persons as this slave? Slave
yourself, will you not bear with your own brother, who has Zeus for
his progenitor, and is like a son from the same seeds and of the
same descent from above? But if you have been put in any such
higher place, will you immediately make yourself a tyrant? Will you
not remember who you are, and whom you rule? That they are kinsmen,
that they are brethren by nature, that they are the offspring of
Zeus? But I have purchased them, and they have not purchased me. Do
you see in what direction you are looking, that it is towards the
earth, towards the pit, that it is towards these wretched laws of
dead men? but towards the laws of the gods you are not looking.</p>
<hr>
<p>WHAT PHILOSOPHY PROMISES.—When a man was consulting him
how he should persuade his brother to cease being angry with him,
Epictetus replied: Philosophy does not propose to secure for a man
any external thing. If it did (or if it were not, as I say),
philosophy would be allowing something which is not within its
province. For as the carpenter's material is wood, and that of the
statuary is copper, so the matter of the art of living is each
man's life. When then is my brother's? That again belongs to his
own art; but with respect to yours, it is one of the external
things, like a piece of land, like health, like reputation. But
Philosophy promises none of these. In every circumstance I will
maintain, she says, the governing part conformable to nature. Whose
governing part? His in whom I am, she says.</p>
<p>How then shall my brother cease to be angry with me? Bring him
to me and I will tell him. But I have nothing to say to you about
his anger.</p>
<p>When the man who was consulting him said, I seek to know this,
How, even if my brother is not reconciled to me, shall I maintain
myself in a state conformable to nature? Nothing great, said
Epictetus, is produced suddenly, since not even the grape or the
fig is. If you say to me now that you want a fig, I will answer to
you that it requires time: let it flower first, then put forth
fruit, and then ripen. Is then the fruit of a fig-tree not
perfected suddenly and in one hour, and would you possess the fruit
of a man's mind in so short a time and so easily? Do not expect it,
even if I tell you.</p>
<hr>
<p>THAT WE OUGHT NOT TO BE ANGRY WITH THE ERRORS (FAULTS) OF
OTHERS.—Ought not then this robber and this adulterer to be
destroyed? By no means say so, but speak rather in this way: This
man who has been mistaken and deceived about the most important
things, and blinded, not in the faculty of vision which
distinguishes white and black, but in the faculty which
distinguishes good and bad, should we not destroy him? If you speak
thus you will see how inhuman this is which you say, and that it is
just as if you would say, Ought we not to destroy this blind and
deaf man? But if the greatest harm is the privation of the greatest
things, and the greatest thing in every man is the will or choice
such as it ought to be, and a man is deprived of this will, why are
you also angry with him? Man, you ought not to be affected contrary
to nature by the bad things of another. Pity him rather; drop this
readiness to be offended and to hate, and these words which the
many utter: "These accursed and odious fellows." How have you been
made so wise at once? and how are you so peevish? Why then are we
angry? Is it because we value so much the things of which these men
rob us? Do not admire your clothes, and then you will not be angry
with the thief. Consider this matter thus: you have fine clothes;
your neighbor has not; you have a window; you wish to air the
clothes. The thief does not know wherein man's good consists, but
he thinks that it consist in having fine clothes, the very thing
which you also think. Must he not then come and take them away?
When you show a cake to greedy persons, and swallow it all
yourself, do you expect them not to snatch it from you? Do not
provoke them; do not have a window; do not air your clothes. I also
lately had an iron lamp placed by the side of my household gods;
hearing a noise at the door, I ran down, and found that the lamp
had been carried off. I reflected that he who had taken the lamp
had done nothing strange. What then? To-morrow, I said, you will
find an earthen lamp; for a man only loses that which he has. I
have lost my garment. The reason is that you had a garment. I have
a pain in my head. Have you any pain in your horns? Why then are
you troubled? For we only lose those things, we have only pains
about those things, which we possess.</p>
<p>But the tyrant will chain—what? The leg. He will take
away—what? The neck. What then will he not chain and not take
away? The will. This is why the ancients taught the maxim, Know
thyself. Therefore we ought to exercise ourselves in small things,
and beginning with them to proceed to the greater. I have pain in
the head. Do not say, Alas! I have pain in the ear. Do not say
alas! And I do not say that you are not allowed to groan, but do
not groan inwardly; and if your slave is slow in bringing a
bandage, do not cry out and torment yourself, and say, Every body
hates me; for who would not hate such a man? For the future,
relying on these opinions, walk about upright, free; not trusting
to the size of your body, as an athlete, for a man ought not to be
invincible in the way that an ass is.</p>
<hr>
<p>HOW WE SHOULD BEHAVE TO TYRANTS.—If a man possesses any
superiority, or thinks that he does when he does not, such a man,
if he is uninstructed, will of necessity be puffed up through it.
For instance, the tyrant says, I am master of all! And what can you
do for me? Can you give me desire which shall have no hindrance?
How can you? Have you the infallible power of avoiding what you
would avoid? Have you the power of moving towards an object without
error? And how do you possess this power? Come, when you are in a
ship, do you trust to yourself or to the helmsman? And when you are
in a chariot, to whom do you trust but to the driver? And how is it
in all other arts? Just the same. In what, then, lies your power?
All men pay respect to me. Well, I also pay respect to my platter,
and I wash it and wipe it; and for the sake of my oil-flask, I
drive a peg into the wall. Well, then, are these things superior to
me? No, but they supply some of my wants, and for this reason I
take care of them. Well, do I not attend to my ass? Do I not wash
his feet? Do I not clean him? Do you not know that every man has
regard to himself, and to you just the same as he has regard to his
ass? For who has regard to you as a man? Show me. Who wishes to
become like you? Who imitates you, as he imitates Socrates? But I
can cut off your head. You say right. I had forgotten that I must
have regard to you, as I would to a fever and the bile, and raise
an altar to you, as there is at Rome an altar to fever.</p>
<p>What is it then that disturbs and terrifies the multitude? Is it
the tyrant and his guards? (By no means.) I hope that it is not so.
It is not possible that what is by nature free can be disturbed by
anything else, or hindered by any other thing than by itself. But
it is a man's own opinions which disturb him. For when the tyrant
says to a man, I will chain your leg, he who values his leg says,
Do not; have pity. But he who values his own will says, If it
appears more advantageous to you, chain it. Do you not care? I do
not care. I will show you that I am master. You cannot do that.
Zeus has set me free; do you think that he intended to allow his
own son to be enslaved? But you are master of my carcase; take it.
So when you approach me, you have no regard to me? No, but I have
regard to myself; and if you wish me to say that I have regard to
you also, I tell you that I have the same regard to you that I have
to my pipkin.</p>
<p>What then? When absurd notions about things independent of our
will, as if they were good and (or) bad, lie at the bottom of our
opinions, we must of necessity pay regard to tyrants: for I wish
that men would pay regard to tyrants only, and not also to the
bedchamber men. How is it that the man becomes all at once wise,
when Cæsar has made him superintendent of the close stool?
How is it that we say immediately, Felicion spoke sensibly to me? I
wish he were ejected from the bedchamber, that he might again
appear to you to be a fool.</p>
<p>Has a man been exalted to the tribuneship? All who meet him
offer their congratulations; one kisses his eyes, another the neck,
and the slaves kiss his hands. He goes to his house, he finds
torches lighted. He ascends the Capitol; he offers a sacrifice on
the occasion. Now who ever sacrificed for having had good desires?
for having acted conformably to nature? For in fact we thank the
gods for those things in which we place our good.</p>
<p>A person was talking to me to-day about the priesthood of
Augustus. I say to him: Man, let the thing alone; you will spend
much for no purpose. But he replies, Those who draw up agreements
will write my name. Do you then stand by those who read them, and
say to such persons, It is I whose name is written there? And if
you can now be present on ail such occasions, what will you do when
you are dead? My name will remain. Write it on a stone, and it will
remain. But come, what remembrance of you will there be beyond
Nicopolis? But I shall wear a crown of gold. If you desire a crown
at all, take a crown of roses and put it on, for it will be more
elegant in appearance.</p>
<hr>
<p>AGAINST THOSE WHO WISH TO BE ADMIRED.—When a man holds his
proper station in life, he does not gape after things beyond it.
Man, what do you wish to happen to you? I am satisfied if I desire
and avoid conformably to nature, if I employ movements towards and
from an object as I am by nature formed to do, and purpose and
design and assent. Why then do you strut before us as if you had
swallowed a spit? My wish has always been that those who meet me
should admire me, and those who follow me should exclaim, O the
great philosopher! Who are they by whom you wish to be admired? Are
they not those of whom you are used to say that they are mad? Well,
then, do you wish to be admired by madmen?</p>
<hr>
<p>ON PRÆCOGNITIONS.—Præcognitions are common to
all men, and præcognition is not contradictory to
præcognition. For who of us does not assume that Good is
useful and eligible, and in all circumstances that we ought to
follow and pursue it? And who of us does not assume that Justice is
beautiful and becoming? When then does the contradiction arise? It
arises in the adaptation of the præcognitions to the
particular cases. When one man says, "He has done well; he is a
brave man," and another says, "Not so; but he has acted foolishly,"
then the disputes arise among men. This is the dispute among the
Jews and the Syrians and the Egyptians and the Romans; not whether
holiness should be preferred to all things and in all cases should
be pursued, but whether it is holy to eat pig's flesh or not holy.
You will find this dispute also between Agamemnon and Achilles; for
call them forth. What do you say, Agamemnon? ought not that to be
done which is proper and right? "Certainly." Well, what do you say,
Achilles? do you not admit that what is good ought to be done? "I
do most certainly." Adapt your præcognitions then to the
present matter. Here the dispute begins. Agamemnon says, "I ought
not to give up Chryseis to her father." Achilles says, "You ought."
It is certain that one of the two makes a wrong adaptation of the
præcognition of "ought" or "duty." Further, Agamemnon says,
"Then if I ought to restore Chryseis, it is fit that I take his
prize from some of you." Achilles replies, "Would you then take her
whom I love?" "Yes, her whom you love." "Must I then be the only
man who goes without a prize? and must I be the only man who has no
prize?" Thus the dispute begins.</p>
<p>What then is education? Education is the learning how to adapt
the natural præcognitions to the particular things
conformably to nature; and then to distinguish that of things some
are in our power, but others are not. In our power are will and all
acts which depend on the will; things not in our power are the
body, the parts of the body, possessions, parents, brothers,
children, country, and, generally, all with whom we live in
society. In what then should we place the good? To what kind of
things ([Greek: ousia]) shall we adapt it? To the things which are
in our power? Is not health then a good thing, and soundness of
limb, and life, and are not children and parents and country? Who
will tolerate you if you deny this?</p>
<p>Let us then transfer the notion of good to these things. Is it
possible, then, when a man sustains damage and does not obtain good
things, that he can be happy? It is not possible. And can he
maintain towards society a proper behavior? He can not. For I am
naturally formed to look after my own interest. If it is my
interest to have an estate in land, it is my interest also to take
it from my neighbor. If it is my interest to have a garment, it is
my interest also to steal it from the bath. This is the origin of
wars, civil commotions, tyrannies, conspiracies. And how shall I be
still able to maintain my duty towards Zeus? For if I sustain
damage and am unlucky, he takes no care of me. And what is he to me
if he cannot help me? And further, what is he to me if he allows me
to be in the condition in which I am? I now begin to hate him. Why
then do we build temples, why setup statues to Zeus, as well as to
evil demons, such as to Fever; and how is Zeus the Saviour, and how
the giver of rain, and the giver of fruits? And in truth if we
place the nature of Good in any such things, all this follows.</p>
<p>What should we do then? This is the inquiry of the true
philosopher who is in labor. Now I do not see what the good is nor
the bad. Am I not mad? Yes. But suppose that I place the good
somewhere among the things which depend on the will; all will laugh
at me. There will come some greyhead wearing many gold rings on his
fingers, and he will shake his head and say: "Hear, my child. It is
right that you should philosophize; but you ought to have some
brains also; all this that you are doing is silly. You learn the
syllogism from philosophers; but you know how to act better than
philosophers do." Man why then do you blame me, if I know? What
shall I say to this slave? If I am silent, he will burst. I must
speak in this way: "Excuse me, as you would excuse lovers; I am not
my own master; I am mad."</p>
<hr>
<p>HOW WE SHOULD STRUGGLE WITH CIRCUMSTANCES.—It is
circumstances (difficulties) which show what men are. Therefore
when a difficulty falls upon you, remember that God, like a trainer
of wrestlers, has matched you with a rough young man. For what
purpose? you may say. Why, that you may become an Olympic
conqueror; but it is not accomplished without sweat. In my opinion
no man has had a more profitable difficulty than you have had, if
you choose to make use of it as an athlete would deal with a young
antagonist. We are now sending a scout to Rome; but no man sends a
cowardly scout, who, if he only hears a noise and sees a shadow
anywhere, comes running back in terror and reports that the enemy
is close at hand. So now if you should come and tell us: "Fearful
is the state of affairs at Rome; terrible is death; terrible is
exile; terrible is calumny; terrible is poverty; fly, my friends,
the enemy is near," we shall answer: "Begone, prophesy for
yourself; we have committed only one fault, that we sent such a
scout."</p>
<p>Diogenes, who was sent as a scout before you, made a different
report to us. He says that death is no evil, for neither is it
base; he says that fame (reputation) is the noise of madmen. And
what has this spy said about pain, about pleasure, and about
poverty? He says that to be naked is better than any purple robe,
and to sleep on the bare ground is the softest bed; and he gives as
a proof of each thing that he affirms his own courage, his
tranquillity, his freedom, and the healthy appearance and
compactness of his body. There is no enemy near, he says; all is
peace. How so, Diogenes? "See," he replies, "if I am struck, if I
have been wounded, if I have fled from any man." This is what a
scout ought to be. But you come to us and tell us one thing after
another. Will you not go back, and you will see clearer when you
have laid aside fear?</p>
<hr>
<p>ON THE SAME.—If these things are true, and if we are not
silly, and are not acting hypocritically when we say that the good
of man is in the will, and the evil too, and that everything else
does not concern us, why are we still disturbed, why are we still
afraid? The things about which we have been busied are in no man's
power; and the things which are in the power of others, we care not
for. What kind of trouble have we still?</p>
<p>But give me directions. Why should I give you directions? Has
not Zeus given you directions? Has he not given to you what is your
own free from hindrance and free from impediment, and what is not
your own subject to hindrance and impediment? What directions then,
what kind of orders did you bring when you came from him? Keep by
every means what is your own; do not desire what belongs to others.
Fidelity (integrity) is your own, virtuous shame is your own; who
then can take these things from you? who else than yourself will
hinder you from using them? But how do you act? When you seek what
is not your own, you lose that which is your own. Having such
promptings and commands from Zeus, what kind do you still ask from
me? Am I more powerful than he, am I more worthy of confidence? But
if you observe these, do you want any others besides? "Well, but he
has not given these orders," you will say. Produce your
præcognitions ([Greek: prolaepseis]), produce these proofs of
philosophers, produce what you have often heard, and produce what
you have said yourself, produce what you have read, produce what
you have meditated on; and you will then see that all these things
are from God.</p>
<p>If I have set my admiration on the poor body, I have given
myself up to be a slave; if on my poor possessions, I also make
myself a slave. For I immediately make it plain with what I may be
caught; as if the snake draws in his head, I tell you to strike
that part of him which he guards; and do you be assured that
whatever part you choose to guard, that part your master will
attack. Remembering this, whom will you still flatter or fear?</p>
<p>But I should like to sit where the Senators sit. Do you see that
you are putting yourself in straits, you are squeezing yourself?
How then shall I see well in any other way in the amphitheatre?
Man, do not be a spectator at all, and you will not be squeezed.
Why do you give yourself trouble? Or wait a little, and when the
spectacle is over, seat yourself in the place reserved for the
Senators and sun yourself. For remember this general truth, that it
is we who squeeze ourselves, who put ourselves in straits; that is,
our opinions squeeze us and put us in straits. For what is it to be
reviled? Stand by a stone and revile it, and what will you gain? If
then a man listens like a stone, what profit is there to the
reviler? But if the reviler has as a stepping-stone (or ladder) the
weakness of him who is reviled, then he accomplishes something.
Strip him. What do you mean by him? Lay hold of his garment, strip
it off. I have insulted you. Much good may it do you.</p>
<p>This was the practice of Socrates; this was the reason why he
always had one face. But we choose to practise and study anything
rather than the means by which we shall be unimpeded and free. You
say: "Philosophers talk paradoxes." But are there no paradoxes in
the other arts? And what is more paradoxical than to puncture a
man's eye in order that he may see? If any one said this to a man
ignorant of the surgical art, would he not ridicule the speaker?
Where is the wonder, then, if in philosophy also many things which
are true appear paradoxical to the inexperienced?</p>
<hr>
<p>IN HOW MANY WAYS APPEARANCES EXIST, AND WHAT AIDS WE SHOULD
PROVIDE AGAINST THEM.—Appearances are to us in four ways. For
either things appear as they are; or they are not, and do not even
appear to be; or they are, and do not appear to be; or they are
not, and yet appear to be. Further, in all these cases to form a
right judgment (to hit the mark) is the office of an educated man.
But whatever it is that annoys (troubles) us, to that we ought to
apply a remedy. If the sophisms of Pyrrho and of the Academics are
what annoys (troubles), we must apply the remedy to them. If it is
the persuasion of appearances, by which some things appear to be
good, when they are not good, let us seek a remedy for this. If it
is habit which annoys us, we must try to seek aid against habit.
What aid, then, can we find against habit? The contrary habit. You
hear the ignorant say: "That unfortunate person is dead; his father
and mother are overpowered with sorrow; he was cut off by an
untimely death and in a foreign land." Hear the contrary way of
speaking. Tear yourself from these expressions; oppose to one habit
the contrary habit; to sophistry oppose reason, and the exercise
and discipline of reason; against persuasive (deceitful)
appearances we ought to have manifest præcognitions ([Greek:
prolaepseis]), cleared of all impurities and ready to hand.</p>
<p>When death appears an evil, we ought to have this rule in
readiness, that it is fit to avoid evil things, and that death is a
necessary thing. For what shall I do, and where shall I escape it?
Suppose that I am not Sarpedon, the son of Zeus, nor able to speak
in this noble way. I will go and I am resolved either to behave
bravely myself or to give to another the opportunity of doing so;
if I cannot succeed in doing anything myself, I will not grudge
another the doing of something noble. Suppose that it is above our
power to act thus; is it not in our power to reason thus? Tell me
where I can escape death; discover for me the country, show me the
men to whom I must go, whom death does not visit. Discover to me a
charm against death. If I have not one, what do you wish me to do?
I cannot escape from death. Shall I not escape from the fear of
death, but shall I die lamenting and trembling? For the origin of
perturbation is this, to wish for something, and that this should
not happen. Therefore if I am able to change externals according to
my wish, I change them; but if I cannot, I am ready to tear out the
eyes of him who hinders me. For the nature of man is not to endure
to be deprived of the good, and not to endure the falling into the
evil. Then at last, when I am neither able to change circumstances
nor to tear out the eyes of him who hinders me, I sit down and
groan, and abuse whom I can, Zeus and the rest of the gods. For if
they do not care for me, what are they to me? Yes, but you will be
an impious man. In what respect, then, will it be worse for me than
it is now? To sum up, remember that unless piety and your interest
be in the same thing, piety cannot be maintained in any man. Do not
these things seem necessary (true)?</p>
<hr>
<p>THAT WE OUGHT NOT TO BE ANGRY WITH MEN; AND WHAT ARE THE SMALL
AND THE GREAT THINGS AMONG MEN.—What is the cause of
assenting to anything? The fact that it appears to be true. It is
not possible then to assent to that which appears not to be true.
Why? Because this is the nature of the understanding, to incline to
the true, to be dissatisfied with the false, and in matters
uncertain to withhold assent. What is the proof of this? Imagine
(persuade yourself), if you can, that it is now night. It is not
possible. Take away your persuasion that it is day. It is not
possible. Persuade yourself or take away your persuasion that the
stars are even in number. It is impossible. When then any man
assents to that which is false, be assured that he did not intend
to assent to it as false, for every soul is unwillingly deprived of
the truth, as Plato says; but the falsity seemed to him to be true.
Well, in acts what have we of the like kind as we have here truth
or falsehood? We have the fit and the not fit (duty and not duty),
the profitable and the unprofitable, that which is suitable to a
person and that which is not, and whatever is like these. Can then
a man think that a thing is useful to him and not choose it? He
cannot. How says Medea?</p>
<p class="poetic">"'Tis true I know what evil I shall do,<br/>
But passion overpowers the better counsel."</p>
<p>She thought that to indulge her passion and take vengeance on
her husband was more profitable than to spare her children. It was
so; but she was deceived. Show her plainly that she is deceived,
and she will not do it; but so long as you do not show it, what can
she follow except that which appears to herself (her opinion)?
Nothing else. Why then are you angry with the unhappy woman that
she has been bewildered about the most important things, and is
become a viper instead of a human creature? And why not, if it is
possible, rather pity, as we pity the blind and the lame, so those
who are blinded and maimed in the faculties which are supreme?</p>
<p>Whoever then clearly remembers this, that to man the measure of
every act is the appearance (the opinion), whether the thing
appears good or bad. If good, he is free from blame; if bad,
himself suffers the penalty, for it is impossible that he who is
deceived can be one person, and he who suffers another
person—whoever remembers this will not be angry with any man,
will not be vexed at any man, will not revile or blame any man, nor
hate, nor quarrel with any man.</p>
<p>So then all these great and dreadful deeds have this origin, in
the appearance (opinion)? Yes, this origin and no other. The Iliad
is nothing else than appearance and the use of appearances. It
appeared to Alexander to carry off the wife of Menelaus. It
appeared to Helene to follow him. If then it had appeared to
Menelaus to feel that it was a gain to be deprived of such a wife,
what would have happened? Not only would the Iliad have been lost,
but the Odyssey also. On so small a matter then did such great
things depend? But what do you mean by such great things? Wars and
civil commotions, and the destruction of many men and cities. And
what great matter is this? Is it nothing? But what great matter is
the death of many oxen, and many sheep, and many nests of swallows
or storks being burnt or destroyed? Are these things then like
those? Very like. Bodies of men are destroyed, and the bodies of
oxen and sheep; the dwellings of men are burnt, and the nests of
storks. What is there in this great or dreadful? Or show me what is
the difference between a man's house and a stork's nest, as far as
each is a dwelling; except that man builds his little houses of
beams and tiles and bricks, and the stork builds them of sticks and
mud. Are a stork and a man then like things? What say you? In body
they are very much alike.</p>
<p>Does a man then differ in no respect from a stork? Don't suppose
that I say so; but there is no difference in these matters (which I
have mentioned). In what then is the difference? Seek and you will
find that there is a difference in another matter. See whether it
is not in a man the understanding of what he does, see if it is not
in social community, in fidelity, in modesty, in steadfastness, in
intelligence. Where then is the great good and evil in men? It is
where the difference is. If the difference is preserved and remains
fenced round, and neither modesty is destroyed, nor fidelity, nor
intelligence, then the man also is preserved; but if any of these
things is destroyed and stormed like a city, then the man too
perishes: and in this consist the great things. Alexander, you say,
sustained great damage then when the Hellenes invaded and when they
ravaged Troy, and when his brothers perished. By no means; for no
man is damaged by an action which is not his own; but what happened
at that time was only the destruction of stork's nests. Now the
ruin of Alexander was when he lost the character of modesty,
fidelity, regard to hospitality, and to decency. When was Achilles
ruined? Was it when Patroclus died? Not so. But it happened when he
began to be angry, when he wept for a girl, when he forgot that he
was at Troy not to get mistresses, but to fight. These things are
the ruin of men, this is being besieged, this is the destruction of
cities, when right opinions are destroyed, when they are
corrupted.</p>
<hr>
<p>ON CONSTANCY (OR FIRMNESS).—The being (nature) of the good
is a certain will; the being of the bad is a certain kind of will.
What, then, are externals? Materials for the will, about which the
will being conversant shall obtain its own good or evil. How shall
it obtain the good? If it does not admire (over-value) the
materials; for the opinions about the materials, if the opinions
are right, make the will good: but perverse and distorted opinions
make the will bad. God has fixed this law, and says, "If you would
have anything good, receive it from yourself." You say, No, but I
will have it from another. Do not so: but receive it from yourself.
Therefore when the tyrant threatens and calls me, I say, Whom do
you threaten? If he says, I will put you in chains, I say, You
threaten my hands and my feet. If he says, I will cut off your
head, I reply, You threaten my head. If he says, I will throw you
into prison, I say, You threaten the whole of this poor body. If he
threatens me with banishment, I say the same. Does he then not
threaten you at all? If I feel that all these things do not concern
me, he does not threaten me at all; but if I fear any of them, it
is I whom he threatens. Whom then do I fear? the master of what?
The master of things which are in my own power? There is no such
master. Do I fear the master of things which are not in my power?
And what are these things to me?</p>
<p>Do you philosophers then teach us to despise kings? I hope not.
Who among us teaches to claim against them the power over things
which they possess? Take my poor body, take my property, take my
reputation, take those who are about me. If I advise any persons to
claim these things, they may truly accuse me. Yes, but I intend to
command your opinions also. And who has given you this power? How
can you conquer the opinion of another man? By applying terror to
it, he replies, I will conquer it. Do you not know that opinion
conquers itself, and is not conquered by another? But nothing else
can conquer will except the will itself. For this reason too the
law of God is most powerful and most just, which is this: Let the
stronger always be superior to the weaker. Ten are stronger than
one. For what? For putting in chains, for killing, for dragging
whither they choose, for taking away what a man has. The ten
therefore conquer the one in this in which they are stronger. In
what then are the ten weaker? If the one possesses right opinions
and the others do not. Well then, can the ten conquer in this
matter? How is it possible? If we were placed in the scales, must
not the heavier draw down the scale in which it is.</p>
<p>How strange then that Socrates should have been so treated by
the Athenians. Slave, why do you say Socrates? Speak of the thing
as it is: how strange that the poor body of Socrates should have
been carried off and dragged to prison by stronger men, and that
anyone should have given hemlock to the poor body of Socrates, and
that it should breathe out the life. Do these things seem strange,
do they seem unjust, do you on account of these things blame God?
Had Socrates then no equivalent for these things? Where then for
him was the nature of good? Whom shall we listen to, you or him?
And what does Socrates say? "Anytus and Melitus can kill me, but
they cannot hurt me." And further, he says, "If it so pleases God,
so let it be."</p>
<p>But show me that he who has the inferior principles overpowers
him who is superior in principles. You will never show this, nor
come near showing it; for this is the law of nature and of God that
the superior shall always overpower the inferior. In what? In that
in which it is superior. One body is stronger than another: many
are stronger than one: the thief is stronger than he who is not a
thief. This is the reason why I also lost my lamp, because in
wakefulness the thief was superior to me. But the man bought the
lamp at this price: for a lamp he became a thief, a faithless
fellow, and like a wild beast. This seemed to him a good bargain.
Be it so. But a man has seized me by the cloak, and is drawing me
to the public place: then others bawl out, Philosopher, what has
been the use of your opinions? see, you are dragged to prison, you
are going to be beheaded. And what system of philosophy ([Greek:
eisagogaen)] could I have made so that, if a stronger man should
have laid hold of my cloak, I should not be dragged off; that if
ten men should have laid hold of me and cast me into prison, I
should not be cast in? Have I learned nothing else then? I have
learned to see that everything which happens, if it be independent
of my will, is nothing to me. I may ask, if you have not gained by
this. Why then do you seek advantage in anything else than in that
in which you have learned that advantage is?</p>
<p>Will you not leave the small arguments ([Greek: logaria]) about
these matters to others, to lazy fellows, that they may sit in a
corner and receive their sorry pay, or grumble that no one gives
them anything; and will you not come forward and make use of what
you have learned? For it is not these small arguments that are
wanted now; the writings of the Stoics are full of them. What then
is the thing which is wanted? A man who shall apply them, one who
by his acts shall bear testimony to his words. Assume, I intreat
you, this character, that we may no longer use in the schools the
examples of the ancients, but may have some example of our own.</p>
<p>To whom then does the contemplation of these matters
(philosophical inquiries) belong? To him who has leisure, for man
is an animal that loves contemplation. But it is shameful to
contemplate these things as runaway slaves do; we should sit, as in
a theatre, free from distraction, and listen at one time to the
tragic actor, at another time to the lute-player; and not do as
slaves do. As soon as the slave has taken his station he praises
the actor and at the same time looks round; then if any one calls
out his master's name, the slave is immediately frightened and
disturbed. It is shameful for philosophers thus to contemplate the
works of nature. For what is a master? Man is not the master of
man; but death is, and life and pleasure and pain; for if he comes
without these things, bring Cæsar to me and you will see how
firm I am. But when he shall come with these things, thundering and
lightning, and when I am afraid of them, what do I do then except
to recognize my master like the runaway slave? But so long as I
have any respite from these terrors, as a runaway slave stands in
the theatre, so do I. I bathe, I drink, I sing; but all this I do
with terror and uneasiness. But if I shall release myself from my
masters, that is from those things by means of which masters are
formidable, what further trouble have I, what master have I
still?</p>
<p>What then, ought we to publish these things to all men? No, but
we ought to accommodate ourselves to the ignorant ([Greek: tois
idiotais]) and to say: "This man recommends to me that which he
thinks good for himself. I excuse him." For Socrates also excused
the jailer who had the charge of him in prison and was weeping when
Socrates was going to drink the poison, and said, "How generously
he laments over us." Does he then say to the jailer that for this
reason we have sent away the women? No, but he says it to his
friends who were able to hear (understand) it; and he treats the
jailer as a child.</p>
<hr>
<p>THAT CONFIDENCE (COURAGE) IS NOT INCONSISTENT WITH
CAUTION.—The opinion of the philosophers perhaps seem to some
to be a paradox; but still let us examine as well as we can, if it
is true that it is possible to do everything both with caution and
with confidence. For caution seems to be in a manner contrary to
confidence, and contraries are in no way consistent. That which
seems to many to be a paradox in the matter under consideration in
my opinion is of this kind; if we asserted that we ought to employ
caution and confidence in the same things, men might justly accuse
us of bringing together things which cannot be united. But now
where is the difficulty in what is said? for if these things are
true, which have been often said and often proved, that the nature
of good is in the use of appearances, and the nature of evil
likewise, and that things independent of our will do not admit
either the nature of evil or of good, what paradox do the
philosophers assert if they say that where things are not dependent
on the will, there you should employ confidence, but where they are
dependent on the will, there you should employ caution? For if the
bad consists in the bad exercise of the will, caution ought only to
be used where things are dependent on the will. But if things
independent of the will and not in our power are nothing to us,
with respect to these we must employ confidence; and thus we shall
both be cautious and confident, and indeed confident because of our
caution. For by employing caution towards things which are really
bad, it will result that we shall have confidence with respect to
things which are not so.</p>
<p>We are then in the condition of deer; when they flee from the
huntsmen's feathers in fright, whither do they turn and in what do
they seek refuge as safe? They turn to the nets, and thus they
perish by confounding things which are objects of fear with things
that they ought not to fear. Thus we also act: in what cases do we
fear? In things which are independent of the will. In what cases on
the contrary do we behave with confidence, as if there were no
danger? In things dependent on the will. To be deceived then, or to
act rashly, or shamelessly, or with base desire to seek something,
does not concern us at all, if we only hit the mark in things which
are independent of our will. But where there is death or exile or
pain or infamy, there we attempt to run away, there we are struck
with terror. Therefore, as we may expect it to happen with those
who err in the greatest matters, we convert natural confidence
(that is, according to nature) into audacity, desperation,
rashness, shamelessness; and we convert natural caution and modesty
into cowardice and meanness, which are full of fear and confusion.
For if a man should transfer caution to those things in which the
will may be exercised and the acts of the will, he will immediately
by willing to be cautious have also the power of avoiding what he
chooses; but if he transfer it to the things which are not in his
power and will, and attempt to avoid the things which are in the
power of others, he will of necessity fear, he will be unstable, he
will be disturbed; for death or pain is not formidable, but the
fear of pain or death. For this reason we commend the poet, who
said:</p>
<p class="poetic">"Not death is evil, but a shameful death."</p>
<p>Confidence (courage) then ought to be employed against death,
and caution against the fear of death. But now we do the contrary,
and employ against death the attempt to escape; and to our opinion
about it we employ carelessness, rashness, and indifference. These
things Socrates properly used to call tragic masks; for as to
children masks appear terrible and fearful from inexperience, we
also are affected in like manner by events (the things which happen
in life) for no other reason than children are by masks. For what
is a child? Ignorance. What is a child? Want of knowledge. For when
a child knows these things, he is in no way inferior to us. What is
death? A tragic mask. Turn it and examine it. See, it does not
bite. The poor body must be separated from the spirit either now or
later as it was separated from it before. Why then are you troubled
if it be separated now? for if it is not separated now, it will be
separated afterwards. Why? That the period of the universe may be
completed, for it has need of the present, and of the future, and
of the past. What is pain? A mask. Turn it and examine it. The poor
flesh is moved roughly, then on the contrary smoothly. If this does
not satisfy (please) you, the door is open; if it does, bear (with
things). For the door ought to be open for all occasions; and so we
have no trouble.</p>
<p>What then is the fruit of these opinions? It is that which ought
to be the most noble and the most becoming to those who are really
educated, release from perturbation, release from fear. Freedom.
For in these matters we must not believe the many, who say that
free persons only ought to be educated, but we should rather
believe the philosophers who say that the educated only are free.
How is this? In this manner: Is freedom anything else than the
power of living as we choose? Nothing else. Tell me then, ye men,
do you wish to live in error? We do not. No one then who lives in
error is free. Do you wish to live in fear? Do you wish to live in
sorrow? Do you wish to live in perturbation? By no means. No one
then who is in a state of fear or sorrow or perturbation is free;
but whoever is delivered from sorrows and fears and perturbations,
he is at the same time also delivered from servitude. How then can
we continue to believe you, most dear legislators, when you say, We
only allow free persons to be educated? For philosophers say we
allow none to be free except the educated; that is, God does not
allow it. When then a man has turned round before the prætor
his own slave, has he done nothing? He has done something. What? He
has turned round his own slave before the prætor. Has he done
nothing more? Yes: he is also bound to pay for him the tax called
the twentieth. Well then, is not the man who has gone through this
ceremony become free? No more than he is become free from
perturbations. Have you who are able to turn round (free) others no
master? is not money your master, or a girl or a boy, or some
tyrant or some friend of the tyrant? Why do you trouble then when
you are going off to any trial (danger) of this kind? It is for
this reason that I often say, study and hold in readiness these
principles by which you may determine what those things are with
reference to which you ought to be cautious, courageous in that
which does not depend on your will, cautious in that which does
depend on it.</p>
<hr>
<p>OF TRANQUILLITY (FREEDOM FROM PERTURBATION).—Consider, you
who are going into court, what you wish to maintain and what you
wish to succeed in. For if you wish to maintain a will conformable
to nature, you have every security, every facility, you have no
troubles. For if you wish to maintain what is in your own power and
is naturally free, and if you are content with these, what else do
you care for? For who is the master of such things? Who can take
them away? If you choose to be modest and faithful, who shall not
allow you to be so? If you choose not to be restrained or
compelled, who shall compel you to desire what you think that you
ought not to desire? who shall compel you to avoid what you do not
think fit to avoid? But what do you say? The judge will determine
against you something that appears formidable; but that you should
also suffer in trying to avoid it, how can he do that? When then
the pursuit of objects and the avoiding of them are in your power,
what else do you care for? Let this be your preface, this your
narrative, this your confirmation, this your victory, this your
peroration, this your applause (or the approbation which you will
receive).</p>
<p>Therefore Socrates said to one who was reminding him to prepare
for his trial, Do you not think then that I have been preparing for
it all my life? By what kind of preparation? I have maintained that
which was in my own power. How then? I have never done anything
unjust either in my private or in my public life.</p>
<p>But if you wish to maintain externals also, your poor body, your
little property, and your little estimation, I advise you to make
from this moment all possible preparation, and then consider both
the nature of your judge and your adversary. If it is necessary to
embrace his knees, embrace his knees; if to weep, weep; if to
groan, groan. For when you have subjected to externals what is your
own, then be a slave and do not resist, and do not sometimes choose
to be a slave, and sometimes not choose, but with all your mind be
one or the other, either free or a slave, either instructed or
uninstructed, either a well-bred cock or a mean one, either endure
to be beaten until you die or yield at once; and let it not happen
to you to receive many stripes and then to yield. But if these
things are base, determine immediately. Where is the nature of evil
and good? It is where truth is: where truth is and where nature is,
there is caution: where truth is, there is courage where nature
is.</p>
<p>For this reason also it is ridiculous to say, Suggest something
to me (tell me what to do). What should I suggest to you? Well,
form my mind so as to accommodate itself to any event. Why that is
just the same as if a man who is ignorant of letters should say,
Tell me what to write when any name is proposed to me. For if I
should tell him to write Dion, and then another should come and
propose to him not the name of Dion but that of Theon, what will be
done? what will he write? But if you have practised writing, you
are also prepared to write (or to do) anything that is required. If
you are not, what can I now suggest? For if circumstances require
something else, what will you say, or what will you do? Remember
then this general precept and you will need no suggestion. But if
you gape after externals, you must of necessity ramble up and down
in obedience to the will of your master. And who is the master? He
who has the power over the things which you seek to gain or try to
avoid.</p>
<hr>
<p>HOW MAGNANIMITY IS CONSISTENT WITH CARE.—Things themselves
(materials) are indifferent; but the use of them is not
indifferent. How then shall a man preserve firmness and
tranquillity, and at the same time be careful and neither rash nor
negligent? If he imitates those who play at dice. The counters are
indifferent; the dice are indifferent. How do I know what the cast
will be? But to use carefully and dexterously the cast of the dice,
this is my business. Thus then in life also the chief business is
this: distinguish and separate things, and say: Externals are not
in my power: will is in my power. Where shall I seek the good and
the bad? Within, in the things which are my own. But in what does
not belong to you call nothing either good or bad, or profit or
damage or anything of the kind.</p>
<p>What then? Should we use such things carelessly? In no way: for
this on the other hand is bad for the faculty of the will, and
consequently against nature; but we should act carefully because
the use is not indifferent, and we should also act with firmness
and freedom from perturbations because the material is indifferent.
For where the material is not indifferent, there no man can hinder
me or compel me. Where I can be hindered and compelled, the
obtaining of those things is not in my power, nor is it good or
bad; but the use is either bad or good, and the use is in my power.
But it is difficult to mingle and to bring together these two
things—the carefulness of him who is affected by the matter
(or things about him), and the firmness of him who has no regard
for it; but it is not impossible: and if it is, happiness is
impossible. But we should act as we do in the case of a voyage.
What can I do? I can choose the master of the ship, the sailors,
the day, the opportunity. Then comes a storm. What more have I to
care for? for my part is done. The business belongs to another, the
master. But the ship is sinking—what then have I to do? I do
the only thing that I can, not to be drowned full of fear, nor
screaming nor blaming God, but knowing that what has been produced
must also perish: for I am not an immortal being, but a man, a part
of the whole, as an hour is a part of the day: I must be present
like the hour, and past like the hour. What difference then does it
make to me how I pass away, whether by being suffocated or by a
fever, for I must pass through some such means.</p>
<p>How then is it said that some external things are according to
nature and others contrary to nature? It is said as it might be
said if we were separated from union (or society): for to the foot
I shall say that it is according to nature for it to be clean; but
if you take it as a foot and as a thing not detached (independent),
it will befit it both to step into the mud and tread on thorns, and
sometimes to be cut off for the good of the whole body; otherwise
it is no longer a foot. We should think in some such way about
ourselves also. What are you? A man. If you consider yourself as
detached from other men, it is according to nature to live to old
age, to be rich, to be healthy. But if you consider yourself as a
man and a part of a certain whole, it is for the sake of that whole
that at one time you should be sick, at another time take a voyage
and run into danger, and at another time be in want, and in some
cases die prematurely. Why then are you troubled? Do you not know,
that as a foot is no longer a foot if it is detached from the body,
so you are no longer a man if you are separated from other men. For
what is a man? A part of a state, of that first which consists of
gods and of men; then of that which is called next to it, which is
a small image of the universal state. What then must I be brought
to trial; must another have a fever, another sail on the sea,
another die, and another be condemned? Yes, for it is impossible in
such a universe of things, among so many living together, that such
things should not happen, some to one and others to others. It is
your duty then since you are come here, to say what you ought, to
arrange these things as it is fit. Then some one says, "I shall
charge you with doing me wrong." Much good may it do you: I have
done my part; but whether you also have done yours, you must look
to that; for there is some danger of this too, that it may escape
your notice.</p>
<hr>
<p>OF INDIFFERENCE.—The hypothetical proposition is
indifferent: the judgment about it is not indifferent, but it is
either knowledge or opinion or error. Thus life is indifferent: the
use is not indifferent. When any man then tells you that these
things also are indifferent, do not become negligent; and when a
man invites you to be careful (about such things), do not become
abject and struck with admiration of material things. And it is
good for you to know your own preparation and power, that in those
matters where you have not been prepared, you may keep quiet, and
not be vexed, if others have the advantage over you. For you too in
syllogisms will claim to have the advantage over them; and if
others should be vexed at this, you will console them by saying, "I
have learned them, and you have not." Thus also where there is need
of any practice, seek not that which is acquired from the need (of
such practice), but yield in that matter to those who have had
practice, and be yourself content with firmness of mind.</p>
<p>Go and salute a certain person. How? Not meanly. But I have been
shut out, for I have not learned to make my way through the window;
and when I have found the door shut, I must either come back or
enter through the window. But still speak to him. In what way? Not
meanly. But suppose that you have not got what you wanted. Was this
your business, and not his? Why then do you claim that which
belongs to another? Always remember what is your own, and what
belongs to another; and you will not be disturbed. Chrysippus
therefore said well, So long as future things are uncertain, I
always cling to those which are more adapted to the conservation of
that which is according to nature; for God himself has given me the
faculty of such choice. But if I knew that it was fated (in the
order of things) for me to be sick, I would even move towards it;
for the foot also, if it had intelligence, would move to go into
the mud. For why are ears of corn produced? Is it not that they may
become dry? And do they not become dry that they may be reaped? for
they are not separated from communion with other things. If then
they had perception, ought they to wish never to be reaped? But
this is a curse upon ears of corn to be never reaped. So we must
know that in the case of men too it is a curse not to die, just the
same as not to be ripened and not to be reaped. But since we must
be reaped, and we also know that we are reaped, we are vexed at it;
for we neither know what we are nor have we studied what belongs to
man, as those who have studied horses know what belongs to horses.
But Chrysantas when he was going to strike the enemy checked
himself when he heard the trumpet sounding a retreat: so it seemed
better to him to obey the general's command than to follow his own
inclination. But not one of us chooses, even when necessity
summons, readily to obey it, but weeping and groaning we suffer
what we do suffer, and we call them "circumstances." What kind of
circumstances, man? If you give the name of circumstances to the
things which are around you, all things are circumstances; but if
you call hardships by this name, what hardship is there in the
dying of that which has been produced? But that which destroys is
either a sword, or a wheel, or the sea, or a tile, or a tyrant. Why
do you care about the way of going down to Hades? All ways are
equal. But if you will listen to the truth, the way which the
tyrant sends you is shorter. A tyrant never killed a man in six
months: but a fever is often a year about it. All these things are
only sound and the noise of empty names.</p>
<hr>
<p>HOW WE OUGHT TO USE DIVINATION.—Through an unreasonable
regard to divination many of us omit many duties. For what more can
the diviner see than death or danger or disease, or generally
things of that kind? If then I must expose myself to danger for a
friend, and if it is my duty even to die for him, what need have I
then for divination? Have I not within me a diviner who has told me
the nature of good and of evil, and has explained to me the signs
(or marks) of both? What need have I then to consult the viscera of
victims or the flight of birds, and why do I submit when he says,
It is for your interest? For does he know what is for my interest,
does he know what is good; and as he has learned the signs of the
viscera, has he also learned the signs of good and evil? For if he
knows the signs of these, he knows the signs both of the beautiful
and of the ugly, and of the just and of the unjust. Do you tell me,
man, what is the thing which is signified for me: is it life or
death, poverty or wealth? But whether these things are for my
interest or whether they are not, I do not intend to ask you. Why
don't you give your opinion on matters of grammar, and why do you
give it here about things on which we are all in error and
disputing with one another?</p>
<p>What then leads us to frequent use of divination? Cowardice, the
dread of what will happen. This is the reason why we flatter the
diviners. Pray, master, shall I succeed to the property of my
father? Let us see: let us sacrifice on the occasion. Yes, master,
as fortune chooses. When he has said, You shall succeed to the
inheritance, we thank him as if we received the inheritance from
him. The consequence is that they play upon us.</p>
<p>Will you not then seek the nature of good in the rational
animal? for if it is not there, you will not choose to say that it
exists in any other thing (plant or animal). What then? are not
plants and animals also the works of God? They are; but they are
not superior things, nor yet parts of the gods. But you are a
superior thing; you are a portion separated from the Deity; you
have in yourself a certain portion of him. Why then are you
ignorant of your own noble descent? Why do you not know whence you
came? will you not remember when you are eating who you are who eat
and whom you feed? When you are in social intercourse, when you are
exercising yourself, when you are engaged in discussion, know you
not that you are nourishing a god, that you are exercising a god?
Wretch, you are carrying about a god with you, and you know it not.
Do you think that I mean some god of silver or of gold, and
external? You carry him within yourself, and you perceive not that
you are polluting him by impure thoughts and dirty deeds. And if an
image of God were present, you would not dare to do any of the
things which you are doing; but when God himself is present within
and sees all and hears all, you are not ashamed of thinking such
things and doing such things, ignorant as you are of your own
nature and subject to the anger of God. Then why do we fear when we
are sending a young man from the school into active life, lest he
should do anything improperly, eat improperly, have improper
intercourse with women; and lest the rags in which he is wrapped
should debase him, lest fine garments should make him proud. This
youth (if he acts thus) does not know his own God; he knows not
with whom he sets out (into the world). But can we endure when he
says, "I wish I had you (God) with me." Have you not God with you?
and do you seek for any other when you have him? or will God tell
you anything else than this? If you were a statue of Phidias,
either Athena or Zeus, you would think both of yourself and of the
artist, and if you had any understanding (power of perception) you
would try to do nothing unworthy of him who made you or of
yourself, and try not to appear in an unbecoming dress (attitude)
to those who look upon you. But now because Zeus has made you, for
this reason do you care not how you shall appear? And yet is the
artist (in the one case) like the artist in the other? or the work
in the one case like the other? And what work of an artist, for
instance, has in itself the faculties, which the artist shows in
making it? Is it not marble or bronze, or gold or ivory? and the
Athena of Phidias, when she has once extended the hand and received
in it the figure of Victory, stands in that attitude for ever. But
the works of God have power of motion, they breathe, they have the
faculty of using the appearances of things and the power of
examining them. Being the work of such an artist do you dishonor
him? And what shall I say, not only that he made you, but also
entrusted you to yourself and made you a deposit to yourself? Will
you not think of this too, but do you also dishonor your
guardianship? But if God had entrusted an orphan to you, would you
thus neglect him? He has delivered yourself to your own care, and
says: "I had no one fitter to entrust him to than yourself; keep
him for me such as he is by nature, modest, faithful, erect,
unterrified, free from passion and perturbation." And then you do
not keep him such.</p>
<p>But some will say, Whence has this fellow got the arrogance
which he displays and these supercilious looks? I have not yet so
much gravity as befits a philosopher; for I do not yet feel
confidence in what I have learned and in what I have assented to. I
still fear my own weakness. Let me get confidence and then you
shall see a countenance such as I ought to have and an attitude
such as I ought to have; then I will show to you the statue, when
it is perfected, when it is polished. What do you expect? a
supercilious countenance? Does the Zeus at Olympia lift up his
brow? No, his look is fixed as becomes him who is ready to say:</p>
<p class="poetic">Irrevocable is my word and shall not
fail.—Iliad, i., 526.</p>
<p>Such will I show myself to you, faithful, modest, noble, free
from perturbation. What, and immortal, too, except from old age,
and from sickness? No, but dying as becomes a god, sickening as
becomes a god. This power I possess; this I can do. But the rest I
do not possess, nor can I do. I will show the nerves (strength) of
a philosopher. What nerves are these? A desire never disappointed,
an aversion which never falls on that which it would avoid, a
proper pursuit ([Greek: hormaen]), a diligent purpose, an assent
which is not rash. These you shall see.</p>
<hr>
<p>THAT WHEN WE CANNOT FULFIL THAT WHICH THE CHARACTER OF A MAN
PROMISES, WE ASSUME THE CHARACTER OF A PHILOSOPHER.—It is no
common (easy) thing to do this only, to fulfil the promise of a
man's nature. For what is a man? The answer is, A rational and
mortal being. Then by the rational faculty from whom are we
separated? From wild beasts. And from what others? From sheep and
like animals. Take care then to do nothing like a wild beast; but
if you do, you have lost the character of a man; you have not
fulfilled your promise. See that you do nothing like a sheep; but
if you do, in this case also the man is lost. What then do we do as
sheep? When we act gluttonously, when we act lewdly, when we act
rashly, filthily, inconsiderately, to what have we declined? To
sheep. What have we lost? The rational faculty. When we act
contentiously and harmfully and passionately and violently, to what
have we declined? To wild beasts. Consequently some of us are great
wild beasts, and others little beasts, of a bad disposition and
small, whence we may say, Let me be eaten by a lion. But in all
these ways the promise of a man acting as a man is destroyed. For
when is a conjunctive (complex) proposition maintained? When it
fulfils what its nature promises; so that the preservation of a
complex proposition is when it is a conjunction of truths. When is
a disjunctive maintained? When it fulfils what it promises. When
are flutes, a lyre, a horse, a dog, preserved? (When they severally
keep their promise.) What is the wonder then if man also in like
manner is preserved, and in like manner is lost? Each man is
improved and preserved by corresponding acts, the carpenter by acts
of carpentry, the grammarian by acts of grammar. But if a man
accustoms himself to write ungrammatically, of necessity his art
will be corrupted and destroyed. Thus modest actions preserve the
modest man, and immodest actions destroy him; and actions of
fidelity preserve the faithful man, and the contrary actions
destroy him. And on the other hand contrary actions strengthen
contrary characters: shamelessness strengthens the shameless man,
faithlessness the faithless man, abusive words the abusive man,
anger the man of an angry temper, and unequal receiving and giving
make the avaricious man more avaricious.</p>
<p>For this reason philosophers admonish us not to be satisfied
with learning only, but also to add study, and then practice. For
we have long been accustomed to do contrary things, and we put in
practice opinions which are contrary to true opinions. If then we
shall not also put in practice right opinions, we shall be nothing
more than the expositors of the opinions of others. For now who
among us is not able to discourse according to the rules of art
about good and evil things (in this fashion)? That of things some
are good, and some are bad, and some are indifferent: the good then
are virtues, and the things which participate in virtues; and the
bad are the contrary; and the indifferent are wealth, health,
reputation. Then, if in the midst of our talk there should happen
some greater noise than usual, or some of those who are present
should laugh at us, we are disturbed. Philosopher, where are the
things which you were talking about? Whence did you produce and
utter them? From the lips, and thence only. Why then do you corrupt
the aids provided by others? Why do you treat the weightiest
matters as if you were playing a game of dice? For it is one thing
to lay up bread and wine as in a storehouse, and another thing to
eat. That which has been eaten, is digested, distributed, and is
become sinews, flesh, bones, blood, healthy color, healthy breath.
Whatever is stored up, when you choose you can readily take and
show it; but you have no other advantage from it except so far as
to appear to possess it. For what is the difference between
explaining these doctrines and those of men who have different
opinions? Sit down now and explain according to the rules of art
the opinions of Epicurus, and perhaps you will explain his opinions
in a more useful manner than Epicurus himself. Why then do you call
yourself a Stoic? Why do you deceive the many? Why do you act the
part of a Jew, when you are a Greek? Do you not see how (why) each
is called a Jew, or a Syrian, or an Egyptian? and when we see a man
inclining to two sides, we are accustomed to say, This man is not a
Jew, but he acts as one. But when he has assumed the affects of one
who has been imbued with Jewish doctrine and has adopted that sect,
then he is in fact and he is named a Jew.</p>
<hr>
<p>HOW WE MAY DISCOVER THE DUTIES OF LIFE FROM
NAMES.—Consider who you are. In the first place, you are a
man; and this is one who has nothing superior to the faculty of the
will, but all other things subjected to it; and the faculty itself
he possesses unenslaved and free from subjection. Consider then
from what things you have been separated by reason. You have been
separated from wild beasts; you have been separated from domestic
animals ([Greek: probaton]). Further, you are a citizen of the
world, and a part of it, not one of the subservient (serving), but
one of the principal (ruling) parts, for you are capable of
comprehending the divine administration and of considering the
connection of things. What then does the character of a citizen
promise (profess)? To hold nothing as profitable to himself; to
deliberate about nothing as if he were detached from the community,
but to act as the hand or foot would do, if they had reason and
understood the constitution of nature, for they would never put
themselves in motion nor desire anything otherwise than with
reference to the whole. Therefore, the philosophers say well, that
if the good man had foreknowledge of what would happen, he would
co-operate towards his own sickness and death and mutilation, since
he knows that these things are assigned to him according to the
universal arrangement, and that the whole is superior to the part,
and the state to the citizen. But now because we do not know the
future, it is our duty to stick to the things which are in their
nature more suitable for our choice, for we were made among other
things for this.</p>
<p>After this, remember that you are a son. What does this
character promise? To consider that everything which is the son's
belongs to the father, to obey him in all things, never to blame
him to another, nor to say or do anything which does him injury, to
yield to him in all things and give way, co-operating with him as
far as you can. After this know that you are a brother also, and
that to this character it is due to make concessions; to be easily
persuaded, to speak good of your brother, never to claim in
opposition to him any of the things which are independent of the
will, but readily to give them up, that you may have the larger
share in what is dependent on the will. For see what a thing it is,
in place of a lettuce, if it should so happen, or a seat, to gain
for yourself goodness of disposition. How great is the
advantage.</p>
<p>Next to this, if you are a senator of any state, remember that
you are a senator; if a youth, that you are a youth; if an old man,
that you are an old man; for each of such names, if it comes to be
examined, marks out the proper duties. But if you go and blame your
brother, I say to you, You have forgotten who you are and what is
your name. In the next place, if you were a smith and made a wrong
use of the hammer, you would have forgotten the smith; and if you
have forgotten the brother and instead of a brother have become an
enemy, would you appear not to have changed one thing for another
in that case? And if instead of a man, who is a tame animal and
social, you are become a mischievous wild beast, treacherous, and
biting, have you lost nothing? But (I suppose) you must lose a bit
of money that you may suffer damage? And does the loss of nothing
else do a man damage? If you had lost the art of grammar or music,
would you think the loss of it a damage? and if you shall lose
modesty, moderation ([Greek: chtastolaen]) and gentleness, do you
think the loss nothing? And yet the things first mentioned are lost
by some cause external and independent of the will, and the second
by our own fault; and as to the first neither to have them nor to
lose them is shameful; but as to the second, not to have them and
to lose them is shameful and matter of reproach and a
misfortune.</p>
<p>What then? shall I not hurt him who has hurt me? In the first
place consider what hurt ([Greek: blabae]) is, and remember what
you have heard from the philosophers. For if the good consists in
the will (purpose, intention, [Greek: proaireeis]), and the evil
also in the will, see if what you say is not this: What then, since
that man has hurt himself by doing an unjust act to me, shall I not
hurt myself by doing some unjust act to him? Why do we not imagine
to ourselves (mentally think of) something of this kind? But where
there is any detriment to the body or to our possession, there is
harm there; and where the same thing happens to the faculty of the
will, there is (you suppose) no harm; for he who has been deceived
or he who has done an unjust act neither suffers in the head nor in
the eye nor in the hip, nor does he lose his estate; and we wish
for nothing else than (security to) these things. But whether we
shall have the will modest and faithful or shameless and faithless,
we care not the least, except only in the school so far as a few
words are concerned. Therefore our proficiency is limited to these
few words; but beyond them it does not exist even in the slightest
degree.</p>
<hr>
<p>WHAT THE BEGINNING OF PHILOSOPHY IS.—The beginning of
philosophy, to him at least who enters on it in the right way and
by the door is a consciousness of his own weakness and inability
about necessary things; for we come into the world with no natural
notion of a right-angled triangle, or of a diesis (a quarter tone),
or of a half-tone; but we learn each of these things by a certain
transmission according to art; and for this reason those who do not
know them do not think that they know them. But as to good and
evil, and beautiful and ugly, and becoming and unbecoming, and
happiness and misfortune, and proper and improper, and what we
ought to do and what we ought not to do, who ever came into the
world without having an innate idea of them? Wherefore we all use
these names, and we endeavor to fit the preconceptions to the
several cases (things) thus: he has done well; he has not done
well; he has done as he ought, not as he ought; he has been
unfortunate, he has been fortunate; he is unjust, he is just; who
does not use these names? who among us defers the use of them till
he has learned them, as he defers the use of the words about lines
(geometrical figures) or sounds? And the cause of this is that we
come into the world already taught as it were by nature some things
on this matter ([Greek: topon]), and proceeding from these we have
added to them self-conceit ([Greek: oiaesin]). For why, a man says,
do I not know the beautiful and the ugly? Have I not the notion of
it? You have. Do I not adapt it to particulars? You do. Do I not
then adapt it properly? In that lies the whole question; and
conceit is added here; for beginning from these things which are
admitted men proceed to that which is matter of dispute by means of
unsuitable adaptation; for if they possessed this power of
adaptation in addition to those things, what would hinder them from
being perfect? But now since you think that you properly adapt the
preconceptions to the particulars, tell me whence you derive this
(assume that you do so). Because I think so. But it does not seem
so to another, and he thinks that he also makes a proper
adaptation; or does he not think so? He does think so. Is it
possible then that both of you can properly apply the
preconceptions to things about which you have contrary opinions? It
is not possible. Can you then show us anything better towards
adapting the preconceptions beyond your thinking that you do? Does
the madman do any other things than the things which seem to him
right? Is then this criterion sufficient for him also? It is not
sufficient. Come then to something which is superior to seeming
([Greek: tou dochein]). What is this?</p>
<p>Observe, this is the beginning of philosophy, a perception of
the disagreement of men with one another, and an inquiry into the
cause of the disagreement, and a condemnation and distrust of that
which only "seems," and a certain investigation of that which
"seems" whether it "seems" rightly, and a discovery of some rule
([Greek: chanonos]), as we have discovered a balance in the
determination of weights, and a carpenter's rule (or square) in the
case of straight and crooked things.—This is the beginning of
philosophy. Must we say that all things are right which seem so to
all? And how is it possible that contradictions can be
right?—Not all then, but all which seem to us to be
right.—How more to you than those which seem right to the
Syrians? why more than what seem right to the Egyptians? why more
than what seems right to me or to any other man? Not at all more.
What then "seems" to every man is not sufficient for determining
what "is"; for neither in the case of weights nor measures are we
satisfied with the bare appearance, but in each case we have
discovered a certain rule. In this matter then is there no rule
superior to what "seems"? And how is it possible that the most
necessary things among men should have no sign (mark), and be
incapable of being discovered? There is then some rule. And why
then do we not seek the rule and discover it, and afterwards use it
without varying from it, not even stretching out the finger without
it? For this, I think, is that which when it is discovered cures of
their madness those who use mere "seeming" as a measure, and misuse
it; so that for the future proceeding from certain things
(principles) known and made clear we may use in the case of
particular things the preconceptions which are distinctly
fixed.</p>
<p>What is the matter presented to us about which we are inquiring?
Pleasure (for example). Subject it to the rule, throw it into the
balance. Ought the good to be such a thing that it is fit that we
have confidence in it? Yes. And in which we ought to confide? It
ought to be. Is it fit to trust to anything which is insecure? No.
Is then pleasure anything secure? No. Take it then and throw it out
of the scale, and drive it far away from the place of good things.
But if you are not sharp-sighted, and one balance is not enough for
you, bring another. Is it fit to be elated over what is good? Yes.
Is it proper then to be elated over present pleasure? See that you
do not say that it is proper; but if you do, I shall then not think
you worthy even of the balance. Thus things are tested and weighed
when the rules are ready. And to philosophize is this, to examine
and confirm the rules; and then to use them when they are known is
the act of a wise and good man.</p>
<hr>
<p>OF DISPUTATION OR DISCUSSION.—What things a man must learn
in order to be able to apply the art of disputation, has been
accurately shown by our philosophers (the Stoics); but with respect
to the proper use of the things, we are entirely without practice.
Only give to any of us, whom you please, an illiterate man to
discuss with, and he cannot discover how to deal with the man. But
when he has moved the man a little, if he answers beside the
purpose, he does not know how to treat him, but he then either
abuses or ridicules him, and says, He is an illiterate man; it is
not possible to do anything with him. Now a guide, when he has
found a man out of the road, leads him into the right way; he does
not ridicule or abuse him and then leave him. Do you also show the
illiterate man the truth, and you will see that he follows. But so
long as you do not show him the truth, do not ridicule him, but
rather feel your own incapacity.</p>
<p>Now this was the first and chief peculiarity of Socrates, never
to be irritated in argument, never to utter anything abusive,
anything insulting, but to bear with abusive persons and to put an
end to the quarrel. If you would know what great power he had in
this way, read the Symposium of Xenophon, and you will see how many
quarrels he put an end to. Hence with good reason in the poets also
this power is most highly praised:</p>
<p class="poetic">Quickly with skill he settles great disputes.<br/>
Hesiod, Theogony, v. 87.</p>
<p>ON ANXIETY (SOLICITUDE).—When I see a man anxious, I say,
What does this man want? If he did not want something which is not
in his power, how could he be anxious? For this reason a lute
player when he is singing by himself has no anxiety, but when he
enters the theatre, he is anxious, even if he has a good voice and
plays well on the lute; for he not only wishes to sing well, but
also to obtain applause: but this is not in his power. Accordingly,
where he has skill, there he has confidence. Bring any single
person who knows nothing of music, and the musician does not care
for him. But in the matter where a man knows nothing and has not
been practised, there he is anxious. What matter is this? He knows
not what a crowd is or what the praise of a crowd is. However, he
has learned to strike the lowest chord and the highest; but what
the praise of the many is, and what power it has in life, he
neither knows nor has he thought about it. Hence he must of
necessity tremble and grow pale. Is any man then afraid about
things which are not evils? No. Is he afraid about things which are
evils, but still so far within his power that they may not happen?
Certainly he is not. If then the things which are independent of
the will are neither good nor bad, and all things which do depend
on the will are within our power, and no man can either take them
from us or give them to us, if we do not choose, where is room left
for anxiety? But we are anxious about our poor body, our little
property, about the will of Cæsar; but not anxious about
things internal. Are we anxious about not forming a false opinion?
No, for this is in my power. About not exerting our movements
contrary to nature? No, not even about this. When then you see a
man pale, as the physician says, judging from the complexion, this
man's spleen is disordered, that man's liver; so also say, this
man's desire and aversion are disordered, he is not in the right
way, he is in a fever. For nothing else changes the color, or
causes trembling or chattering of the teeth, or causes a man to</p>
<p class="poetic">Sink in his knees and shift from foot to
foot.<br/>
Iliad, xiii., 281.</p>
<p>For this reason, when Zeno was going to meet Antigonus, he was
not anxious, for Antigonus had no power over any of the things
which Zeno admired; and Zeno did not care for those things over
which Antigonus had power. But Antigonus was anxious when he was
going to meet Zeno, for he wished to please Zeno; but this was a
thing external (out of his power). But Zeno did not want to please
Antigonus; for no man who is skilled in any art wishes to please
one who has no such skill.</p>
<p>Should I try to please you? Why? I suppose, you know the measure
by which one man is estimated by another. Have you taken pains to
learn what is a good man and what is a bad man, and how a man
becomes one or the other? Why then are you not good yourself? How,
he replies, am I not good? Because no good man laments or groans or
weeps, no good man is pale and trembles, or says, How will he
receive me, how will he listen to me? Slave, just as it pleases
him. Why do you care about what belongs to others? Is it now his
fault if he receives badly what proceeds from you? Certainly. And
is it possible that a fault should be one man's, and the evil in
another? No. Why then are you anxious about that which belongs to
others? Your question is reasonable; but I am anxious how I shall
speak to him. Cannot you then speak to him as you choose? But I
fear that I may be disconcerted? If you are going to write the name
of Dion, are you afraid that you would be disconcerted? By no
means. Why? is it not because you have practised writing the name?
Certainly. Well, if you were going to read the name, would you not
feel the same? and why? Because every art has a certain strength
and confidence in the things which belong to it. Have you then not
practised speaking? and what else did you learn in the school?
Syllogisms and sophistical propositions? For what purpose? was it
not for the purpose of discoursing skilfully? and is not
discoursing skilfully the same as discoursing seasonably and
cautiously and with intelligence, and also without making mistakes
and without hindrance, and besides all this with confidence? Yes.
When then you are mounted on a horse and go into a plain, are you
anxious at being matched against a man who is on foot, and anxious
in a matter in which you are practised, and he is not? Yes, but
that person (to whom I am going to speak) has power to kill me.
Speak the truth, then, unhappy man, and do not brag, nor claim to
be a philosopher, nor refuse to acknowledge your masters, but so
long as you present this handle in your body, follow every man who
is stronger than yourself. Socrates used to practice speaking, he
who talked as he did to the tyrants, to the dicasts (judges), he
who talked in his prison. Diogenes had practised speaking, he who
spoke as he did to Alexander, to the pirates, to the person who
bought him. These men were confident in the things which they
practised. But do you walk off to your own affairs and never leave
them: go and sit in a corner, and weave syllogisms, and propose
them to another. There is not in you the man who can rule a
state.</p>
<hr>
<p>TO NASO.—When a certain Roman entered with his son and
listened to one reading, Epictetus said, This is the method of
instruction; and he stopped. When the Roman asked him to go on,
Epictetus said, Every art when it is taught causes labor to him who
is unacquainted with it and is unskilled in it, and indeed the
things which proceed from the arts immediately show their use in
the purpose for which they were made; and most of them contain
something attractive and pleasing. For indeed to be present and to
observe how a shoemaker learns is not a pleasant thing; but the
shoe is useful and also not disagreeable to look at. And the
discipline of a smith when he is learning is very disagreeable to
one who chances to be present and is a stranger to the art: but the
work shows the use of the art. But you will see this much more in
music; for if you are present while a person is learning, the
discipline will appear most disagreeable; and yet the results of
music are pleasing and delightful to those who know nothing of
music. And here we conceive the work of a philosopher to be
something of this kind: he must adapt his wish ([Greek: boulaesin])
to what is going on, so that neither any of the things which are
taking place shall take place contrary to our wish, nor any of the
things which do not take place shall not take place when we wish
that they should. From this the result is to those who have so
arranged the work of philosophy, not to fail in the desire, nor to
fall in with that which they would avoid; without uneasiness,
without fear, without perturbation to pass through life themselves,
together with their associates maintaining the relations both
natural and acquired, as the relation of son, of father, of
brother, of citizen, of man, of wife, of neighbor, of
fellow-traveller, of ruler, of ruled. The work of a philosopher we
conceive to be something like this. It remains next to inquire how
this must be accomplished.</p>
<p>We see then that the carpenter ([Greek: techton]) when he has
learned certain things becomes a carpenter; the pilot by learning
certain things becomes a pilot. May it not then in philosophy also
not be sufficient to wish to be wise and good, and that there is
also a necessity to learn certain things? We inquire then what
these things are. The philosophers say that we ought first to learn
that there is a God and that he provides for all things; also that
it is not possible to conceal from him our acts, or even our
intentions and thoughts. The next thing is to learn what is the
nature of the gods; for such as they are discovered to be, he, who
would please and obey them, must try with all his power to be like
them. If the divine is faithful, man also must be faithful; if it
is free, man also must be free; if beneficent, man also must be
beneficent; if magnanimous, man also must be magnanimous; as being
then an imitator of God he must do and say everything consistently
with this fact.</p>
<hr>
<p>TO OR AGAINST THOSE WHO OBSTINATELY PERSIST IN WHAT THEY HAVE
DETERMINED.—When some persons have heard these words, that a
man ought to be constant (firm), and that the will is naturally
free and not subject to compulsion, but that all other things are
subject to hindrance, to slavery, and are in the power of others,
they suppose that they ought without deviation to abide by
everything which they have determined. But in the first place that
which has been determined ought to be sound (true). I require tone
(sinews) in the body, but such as exists in a healthy body, in an
athletic body; but if it is plain to me that you have the tone of a
frenzied man and you boast of it, I shall say to you, Man, seek the
physician; this is not tone, but atony (deficiency in right tone).
In a different way something of the same kind is felt by those who
listen to these discourses in a wrong manner; which was the case
with one of my companions, who for no reason resolved to starve
himself to death. I heard of it when it was the third day of his
abstinence from food, and I went to inquire what had happened. "I
have resolved," he said. "But still tell me what it was which
induced you to resolve; for if you have resolved rightly, we shall
sit with you and assist you to depart, but if you have made an
unreasonable resolution, change your mind." "We ought to keep to
our determinations." "What are you doing, man? We ought to keep not
to all our determinations, but to those which are right; for if you
are now persuaded that it is right, do not change your mind, if you
think fit, but persist and say, We ought to abide by our
determinations. Will you not make the beginning and lay the
foundation in an inquiry whether the determination is sound or not
sound, and so then build on it firmness and security? But if you
lay a rotten and ruinous foundation, will not your miserable little
building fall down the sooner, the more and the stronger are the
materials which you shall lay on it? Without any reason would you
withdraw from us out of life a man who is a friend and a companion,
a citizen of the same city, both the great and the small city? Then
while you are committing murder and destroying a man who has done
no wrong, do you say that you ought to abide by your
determinations? And if it ever in any way came into your head to
kill me, ought you to abide by your determinations?"</p>
<p>Now this man was with difficulty persuaded to change his mind.
But it is impossible to convince some persons at present; so that I
seem now to know what I did not know before, the meaning of the
common saying, that you can neither persuade nor break a fool. May
it never be my lot to have a wise fool for my friend; nothing is
more untractable. "I am determined," the man says. Madmen are also,
but the more firmly they form a judgment on things which do not
exist, the more hellebore they require. Will you not act like a
sick man and call in the physician?—I am sick, master, help
me; consider what I must do: it is my duty to obey you. So it is
here also: I know not what I ought to do, but I am come to
learn.—Not so; but speak to me about other things: upon this
I have determined.—What other things? for what is greater and
more useful than for you to be persuaded that it is not sufficient
to have made your determination and not to change it. This is the
tone (energy) of madness, not of health.—I will die, if you
compel me to this.—Why, man? What has happened?—I have
determined—I have had a lucky escape that you have not
determined to kill me—I take no money. Why?—I have
determined—Be assured that with the very tone (energy) which
you now use in refusing to take, there is nothing to hinder you at
some time from inclining without reason to take money, and then
saying, I have determined. As in a distempered body, subject to
defluxions, the humor inclines sometimes to these parts, and then
to those, so too a sickly soul knows not which way to incline; but
if to this inclination and movement there is added a tone
(obstinate resolution), then the evil becomes past help and
cure.</p>
<hr>
<p>THAT WE DO NOT STRIVE TO USE OUR OPINIONS ABOUT GOOD AND
EVIL.—Where is the good? In the will. Where is the evil? In
the will. Where is neither of them? In those things which are
independent of the will. Well then? Does any one among us think of
these lessons out of the schools? Does any one meditate (strive) by
himself to give an answer to things as in the case of
questions?—Is it day?—Yes.—Is it
night?—No.—Well, is the number of stars even?—I
cannot say.—When money is shown (offered) to you, have you
studied to make the proper answer, that money is not a good thing?
Have you practised yourself in these answers, or only against
sophisms? Why do you wonder then if in the cases which you have
studied, in those you have improved; but in those which you have
not studied, in those you remain the same? When the rhetorician
knows that he has written well, that he has committed to memory
what he has written, and brings an agreeable voice, why is he still
anxious? Because he is not satisfied with having studied. What then
does he want? To be praised by the audience? For the purpose then
of being able to practise declamation he has been disciplined; but
with respect to praise and blame he has not been disciplined. For
when did he hear from any one what praise is, what blame is, what
the nature of each is, what kind of praise should be sought, or
what kind of blame should be shunned? And when did he practise this
discipline which follows these words (things)? Why then do you
still wonder, if in the matters which a man has learned, there he
surpasses others, and in those in which he has not been
disciplined, there he is the same with the many. So the lute player
knows how to play, sings well, and has a fine dress, and yet he
trembles when he enters on the stage; for these matters he
understands, but he does not know what a crowd is, nor the shouts
of a crowd, nor what ridicule is. Neither does he know what anxiety
is, whether it is our work or the work of another, whether it is
possible to stop it or not. For this reason if he has been praised,
he leaves the theatre puffed up, but if he has been ridiculed, the
swollen bladder has been punctured and subsides.</p>
<p>This is the case also with ourselves. What do we admire?
Externals. About what things are we busy? Externals. And have we
any doubt then why we fear or why we are anxious? What then happens
when we think the things, which are coming on us, to be evils? It
is not in our power not to be afraid, it is not in our power not to
be anxious. Then we say, Lord God, how shall I not be anxious?
Fool, have you not hands, did not God make them for you? Sit down
now and pray that your nose may not run. Wipe yourself rather and
do not blame him. Well then, has he given to you nothing in the
present case? Has he not given to you endurance? Has he not given
to you magnanimity? Has he not given to you manliness? When you
have such hands do you still look for one who shall wipe your nose?
But we neither study these things nor care for them. Give me a man
who cares how he shall do anything, not for the obtaining of a
thing, but who cares about his own energy. What man, when he is
walking about, cares for his own energy? Who, when he is
deliberating, cares about his own deliberation, and not about
obtaining that about which he deliberates? And if he succeeds, he
is elated and says, How well we have deliberated; did I not tell
you, brother, that it is impossible, when we have thought about
anything, that it should not turn out thus? But if the thing should
turn out otherwise, the wretched man is humbled; he knows not even
what to say about what has taken place. Who among us for the sake
of this matter has consulted a seer? Who among us as to his actions
has not slept in indifference? Who? Give (name) to me one that I
may see the man whom I have long been looking for, who is truly
noble and ingenuous, whether young or old; name him.</p>
<p>What then are the things which are heavy on us and disturb us?
What else than opinions? What else than opinions lies heavy upon
him who goes away and leaves his companions and friends and places
and habits of life? Now little children, for instance, when they
cry on the nurse leaving them for a short time, forget their sorrow
if they receive a small cake. Do you choose then that we should
compare you to little children? No, by Zeus, for I do not wish to
be pacified by a small cake, but by right opinions. And what are
these? Such as a man ought to study all day, and not to be affected
by anything that is not his own, neither by companion nor place nor
gymnasia, and not even by his own body, but to remember the law and
to have it before his eyes. And what is the divine law? To keep a
man's own, not to claim that which belongs to others, but to use
what is given, and when it is not given, not to desire it; and when
a thing is taken away, to give it up readily and immediately, and
to be thankful for the time that a man has had the use of it, if
you would not cry for your nurse and mamma. For what matter does it
make by what thing a man is subdued, and on what he depends? In
what respect are you better than he who cries for a girl, if you
grieve for a little gymnasium, and little porticos, and young men,
and such places of amusement? Another comes and laments that he
shall no longer drink the water of Dirce. Is the Marcian water
worse than that of Dirce? But I was used to the water of Dirce. And
you in turn will be used to the other. Then if you become attached
to this also, cry for this too, and try to make a verse like the
verse of Euripides,</p>
<p class="poetic">The hot baths of Nero and the Marcian water.</p>
<p>See how tragedy is made when common things happen to silly
men.</p>
<p>When then shall I see Athens again and the Acropolis? Wretch,
are you not content with what you see daily? Have you anything
better or greater to see than the sun, the moon, the stars, the
whole earth, the sea? But if indeed you comprehend Him who
administers the whole, and carry him about in yourself, do you
still desire small stones and a beautiful rock?</p>
<hr>
<p>HOW WE MUST ADAPT PRECONCEPTIONS TO PARTICULAR CASES.—What
is the first business of him who philosophizes? To throw away
self-conceit ([Greek: oiaesis]). For it is impossible for a man to
begin to learn that which he thinks that he knows. As to things
then which ought to be done and ought not to be done, and good and
bad, and beautiful and ugly, all of us talking of them at random go
to the philosophers; and on these matters we praise, we censure, we
accuse, we blame, we judge and determine about principles honorable
and dishonorable. But why do we go to the philosophers? Because we
wish to learn what we do not think that we know. And what is this?
Theorems. For we wish to learn what philosophers say as being
something elegant and acute; and some wish to learn that they may
get profit from what they learn. It is ridiculous then to think
that a person wishes to learn one thing, and will learn another; or
further, that a man will make proficiency in that which he does not
learn. But the many are deceived by this which deceived also the
rhetorician Theopompus, when he blames even Plato for wishing
everything to be defined. For what does he say? Did none of us
before you use the words good or just, or do we utter the sounds in
an unmeaning and empty way without understanding what they
severally signify? Now who tells you, Theopompus, that we had not
natural notions of each of these things and preconceptions ([Greek:
prolaepseis])? But it is not possible to adapt preconceptions to
their correspondent objects if we have not distinguished (analyzed)
them, and inquired what object must be subjected to each
preconception. You may make the same charge against physicians
also. For who among us did not use the words healthy and unhealthy
before Hippocrates lived, or did we utter these words as empty
sounds? For we have also a certain preconception of health, but we
are not able to adapt it. For this reason one says, Abstain from
food; another says, Give food; another says, Bleed; and another
says, Use cupping. What is the reason? is it any other than that a
man cannot properly adapt the preconceptions of health to
particulars?</p>
<hr>
<p>HOW WE SHOULD STRUGGLE AGAINST APPEARANCES.—Every habit
and faculty is maintained and increased by the corresponding
actions: the habit of walking by walking, the habit of running by
running. If you would be a good reader, read; if a writer, write.
But when you shall not have read for thirty days in succession, but
have done something else, you will know the consequence. In the
same way, if you shall have lain down ten days, get up and attempt
to make a long walk, and you will see how your legs are weakened.
Generally then if you would make anything a habit, do it; if you
would not make it a habit, do not do it, but accustom yourself to
do something else in place of it.</p>
<p>So it is with respect to the affections of the soul: when you
have been angry, you must know that not only has this evil befallen
you, but that you have also increased the habit, and in a manner
thrown fuel upon fire.</p>
<p>In this manner certainly, as philosophers say, also diseases of
the mind grow up. For when you have once desired money, if reason
be applied to lead to a perception of the evil, the desire is
stopped, and the ruling faculty of our mind is restored to the
original authority. But if you apply no means of cure, it no longer
returns to the same state, but being again excited by the
corresponding appearance, it is inflamed to desire quicker than
before: and when this takes place continually, it is henceforth
hardened (made callous), and the disease of the mind confirms the
love of money. For he who has had a fever, and has been relieved
from it, is not in the same state that he was before, unless he has
been completely cured. Something of the kind happens also in
diseases of the soul. Certain traces and blisters are left in it,
and unless a man shall completely efface them, when he is again
lashed on the same places, the lash will produce not blisters
(weals) but sores. If then you wish not to be of an angry temper,
do not feed the habit: throw nothing on it which will increase it:
at first keep quiet, and count the days on which you have not been
angry. I used to be in passion every day; now every second day;
then every third, then every fourth. But if you have intermitted
thirty days, make a sacrifice to God. For the habit at first begins
to be weakened, and then is completely destroyed. "I have not been
vexed to-day, nor the day after, nor yet on any succeeding day
during two or three months; but I took care when some exciting
things happened." Be assured that you are in a good way.</p>
<p>How then shall this be done? Be willing at length to be approved
by yourself, be willing to appear beautiful to God, desire to be in
purity with your own pure self and with God. Then when any such
appearance visits you, Plato says, Have recourse to expiations, go
a suppliant to the temples of the averting deities. It is even
sufficient if you resort to the society of noble and just men, and
compare yourself with them, whether you find one who is living or
dead.</p>
<p>But in the first place, be not hurried away by the rapidity of
the appearance, but say, Appearances, wait for me a little; let me
see who you are, and what you are about; let me put you to the
test. And then do not allow the appearance to lead you on and draw
lively pictures of the things which will follow; for if you do, it
will carry you off wherever it pleases. But rather bring in to
oppose it some other beautiful and noble appearance, and cast out
this base appearance. And if you are accustomed to be exercised in
this way, you will see what shoulders, what sinews, what strength
you have. But now it is only trifling words, and nothing more.</p>
<p>This is the true athlete, the man who exercises himself against
such appearances. Stay, wretch, do not be carried away. Great is
the combat, divine is the work; it is for kingship, for freedom,
for happiness, for freedom from perturbation. Remember God; call on
him as a helper and protector, as men at sea call on the Dioscuri
in a storm. For what is a greater storm than that which comes from
appearances which are violent and drive away the reason? For the
storm itself, what else is it but an appearance? For take away the
fear of death, and suppose as many thunders and lightnings as you
please, and you will know what calm and serenity there is in the
ruling faculty. But if you have once been defeated and say that you
will conquer hereafter, and then say the same again, be assured
that you will at last be in so wretched a condition and so weak
that you will not even know afterwards that you are doing wrong,
but you will even begin to make apologies (defences) for your
wrong-doing, and then you will confirm the saying of Hesiod to be
true,</p>
<p class="poetic">With constant ills the dilatory strives.</p>
<hr>
<p>OF INCONSISTENCY.—Some things men readily confess, and
other things they do not. No one then will confess that he is a
fool or without understanding; but quite the contrary you will hear
all men saying, I wish that I had fortune equal to my
understanding. But men readily confess that they are timid, and
they say: I am rather timid, I confess; but as to other respects
you will not find me to be foolish. A man will not readily confess
that he is intemperate; and that he is unjust, he will not confess
at all. He will by no means confess that he is envious or a
busybody. Most men will confess that they are compassionate. What
then is the reason?</p>
<p>The chief thing (the ruling thing) is inconsistency and
confusion in the things which relate to good and evil. But
different men have different reasons; and generally what they
imagine to be base, they do not confess at all. But they suppose
timidity to be a characteristic of a good disposition, and
compassion also; but silliness to be the absolute characteristic of
a slave. And they do not at all admit (confess) the things which
are offences against society. But in the case of most errors for
this reason chiefly they are induced to confess them, because they
imagine that there is something involuntary in them as in timidity
and compassion; and if a man confess that he is in any respect
intemperate, he alleges love (or passion) as an excuse for what is
involuntary. But men do not imagine injustice to be at all
involuntary. There is also in jealousy, as they suppose, something
involuntary; and for this reason they confess to jealousy also.</p>
<p>Living then among such men, who are so confused, so ignorant of
what they say, and of the evils which they have or have not, and
why they have them, or how they shall be relieved of them, I think
it is worth the trouble for a man to watch constantly (and to ask)
whether I also am one of them, what imagination I have about
myself, how I conduct myself, whether I conduct myself as a prudent
man, whether I conduct myself as a temperate man, whether I ever
say this, that I have been taught to be prepared for everything
that may happen. Have I the consciousness, which a man who knows
nothing ought to have, that I know nothing? Do I go to my teacher
as men go to oracles, prepared to obey? or do I like a snivelling
boy go to my school to learn history and understand the books which
I did not understand before, and, if it should happen so, to
explain them also to others? Man, you have had a fight in the house
with a poor slave, you have turned the family upside down, you have
frightened the neighbors, and you come to me as if you were a wise
man, and you take your seat and judge how I have explained some
word, and how I have babbled whatever came into my head. You come
full of envy, and humbled, because you bring nothing from home; and
you sit during the discussion thinking of nothing else than how
your father is disposed towards you and your brother. What are they
saying about me there? now they think that I am improving, and are
saying, He will return with all knowledge. I wish I could learn
everything before I return; but much labor is necessary, and no one
sends me anything, and the baths at Nicopolis are dirty; everything
is bad at home, and bad here.</p>
<hr>
<p>ON FRIENDSHIP.—What a man applies himself to earnestly,
that he naturally loves. Do men then apply themselves earnestly to
the things which are bad? By no means. Well, do they apply
themselves to things which in no way concern themselves? Not to
these either. It remains then that they employ themselves earnestly
only about things which are good; and if they are earnestly
employed about things, they love such things also. Whoever then
understands what is good can also know how to love; but he who
cannot distinguish good from bad, and things which are neither good
nor bad from both, how can he possess the power of loving? To love,
then, is only in the power of the wise.</p>
<p>For universally, be not deceived, every animal is attached to
nothing so much as to its own interests. Whatever then appears to
it an impediment to this interest, whether this be a brother, or a
father, or a child, or beloved, or lover, it hates, spurns, curses;
for its nature is to love nothing so much as its own interests:
this is father, and brother, and kinsman, and country, and God.
When then the gods appear to us to be an impediment to this, we
abuse them and throw down their statues and burn their temples, as
Alexander ordered the temples of Aesculapius to be burned when his
dear friend died.</p>
<p>For this reason, if a man put in the same place his interest,
sanctity, goodness, and country, and parents, and friends, all
these are secured: but if he puts in one place his interest, in
another his friends, and his country and his kinsmen and justice
itself, all these give way, being borne down by the weight of
interest. For where the I and the Mine are placed, to that place of
necessity the animal inclines; if in the flesh, there is the ruling
power; if in the will, it is there; and if it is in externals, it
is there. If then I am there where my will is, then only shall I be
a friend such as I ought to be, and son, and father; for this will
be my interest, to maintain the character of fidelity, of modesty,
of patience, of abstinence, of active co-operation, of observing my
relations (towards all). But if I put myself in one place, and
honesty in another, then the doctrine of Epicurus becomes strong,
which asserts either that there is no honesty or it is that which
opinion holds to be honest (virtuous).</p>
<p>It was through this ignorance that the Athenians and the
Lacedaemonians quarrelled, and the Thebans with both; and the great
king quarrelled with Hellas, and the Macedonians with both: and the
Romans with the Getae. And still earlier the Trojan war happened
for these reasons. Alexander was the guest of Menelaus, and if any
man had seen their friendly disposition, he would not have believed
any one who said that they were not friends. But there was cast
between them (as between dogs) a bit of meat, a handsome woman, and
about her war arose. And now when you see brothers to be friends
appearing to have one mind, do not conclude from this anything
about their friendship, not even if they swear it and say that it
is impossible for them to be separated from one another. For the
ruling principle of a bad man cannot be trusted; it is insecure,
has no certain rule by which it is directed, and is overpowered at
different times by different appearances. But examine, not what
other men examine, if they are born of the same parents and brought
up together, and under the same pedagogue; but examine this only,
wherein they place their interest, whether in externals or in the
will. If in externals, do not name them friends, no more than name
them trustworthy or constant, or brave or free; do not name them
even men, if you have any judgment. For that is not a principle of
human nature which makes them bite one another, and abuse one
another, and occupy deserted places or public places, as if they
were mountains, and in the courts of justice display the acts of
robbers; nor yet that which makes them intemperate and adulterers
and corrupters, nor that which makes them do whatever else men do
against one another through this one opinion only, that of placing
themselves and their interests in the things which are not within
the power of their will. But if you hear that in truth these men
think the good to be only there, where will is, and where there is
a right use of appearances, no longer trouble yourself whether they
are father or son, or brothers, or have associated a long time and
are companions, but when you have ascertained this only,
confidently declare that they are friends, as you declare that they
are faithful, that they are just. For where else is friendship than
where there is fidelity, and modesty, where there is a communion of
honest things and of nothing else.</p>
<p>But you may say, Such a one treated me with regard so long; and
did he not love me? How do you know, slave, if he did not regard
you in the same way as he wipes his shoes with a sponge, or as he
takes care of his beast? How do you know, when you have ceased to
be useful as a vessel, he will not throw you away like a broken
platter? But this woman is my wife, and we have lived together so
long. And how long did Eriphyle live with Amphiaraus, and was the
mother of children and of many? But a necklace came between them:
and what is a necklace? It is the opinion about such things. That
was the bestial principle, that was the thing which broke asunder
the friendship between husband and wife, that which did not allow
the woman to be a wife nor the mother to be a mother. And let every
man among you who has seriously resolved either to be a friend
himself or to have another for his friend, cut out these opinions,
hate them, drive them from his soul. And thus first of all he will
not reproach himself, he will not be at variance with himself, he
will not change his mind, he will not torture himself. In the next
place, to another also, who is like himself, he will be altogether
and completely a friend. But he will bear with the man who is
unlike himself, he will be kind to him, gentle, ready to pardon on
account of his ignorance, on account of his being mistaken in
things of the greatest importance; but he will be harsh to no man,
being well convinced of Plato's doctrine that every mind is
deprived of truth unwillingly. If you cannot do this, yet you can
do in all other respects as friends do, drink together, and lodge
together, and sail together, and you may be born of the same
parents, for snakes also are: but neither will they be friends, nor
you, so long as you retain these bestial and cursed opinions.</p>
<hr>
<p>ON THE POWER OF SPEAKING.—Every man will read a book with
more pleasure or even with more ease, if it is written in fairer
characters. Therefore every man will also listen more readily to
what is spoken, if it is signified by appropriate and becoming
words. We must not say then that there is no faculty of expression:
for this affirmation is the characteristic of an impious and also
of a timid man. Of an impious man, because he undervalues the gifts
which come from God, just as if he would take away the commodity of
the power of vision, or hearing, or of seeing. Has then God given
you eyes to no purpose? and to no purpose has he infused into them
a spirit so strong and of such skilful contrivance as to reach a
long way and to fashion the forms of things which are seen? What
messenger is so swift and vigilant? And to no purpose has he made
the interjacent atmosphere so efficacious and elastic that the
vision penetrates through the atmosphere which is in a manner
moved? And to no purpose has he made light, without the presence of
which there would be no use in any other thing?</p>
<p>Man, be neither ungrateful for these gifts nor yet forget the
things which are superior to them. But indeed for the power of
seeing and hearing, and indeed for life itself, and for the things
which contribute to support it, for the fruits which are dry, and
for wine and oil give thanks to God: but remember that he has given
you something else better than all these, I mean the power of using
them, proving them, and estimating the value of each. For what is
that which gives information about each of these powers, what each
of them is worth? Is it each faculty itself? Did you ever hear the
faculty of vision saying anything about itself? or the faculty of
hearing? or wheat, or barley, or a horse, or a dog? No; but they
are appointed as ministers and slaves to serve the faculty which
has the power of making use of the appearances of things. And if
you inquire what is the value of each thing, of whom do you
inquire? who answers you? How then can any other faculty be more
powerful than this, which uses the rest as ministers and itself
proves each and pronounces about them? for which of them knows what
itself is, and what is its own value? which of them knows when it
ought to employ itself and when not? what faculty is it which opens
and closes the eyes, and turns them away from objects to which it
ought not to apply them and does apply them to other objects? Is it
the faculty of vision? No, but it is the faculty of the will. What
is that faculty which closes and opens the ears? what is that by
which they are curious and inquisitive, or on the contrary unmoved
by what is said? is it the faculty of hearing? It is no other than
the faculty of the will. Will this faculty then, seeing that it is
amidst all the other faculties which are blind and dumb and unable
to see anything else except the very acts for which they are
appointed in order to minister to this (faculty) and serve it, but
this faculty alone sees sharp and sees what is the value of each of
the rest; will this faculty declare to us that anything else is the
best, or that itself is? And what else does the eye do when it is
opened than see? But whether we ought to look on the wife of a
certain person, and in what manner, who tells us? The faculty of
the will. And whether we ought to believe what is said or not to
believe it, and if we do believe, whether we ought to be moved by
it or not, who tells us? Is it not the faculty of the will?</p>
<p>But if you ask me what then is the most excellent of all things,
what must I say? I cannot say the power of speaking, but the power
of the will, when it is right ([Greek: orthae]). For it is this
which uses the other (the power of speaking), and all the other
faculties both small and great. For when this faculty of the will
is set right, a man who is not good becomes good: but when it
fails, a man becomes bad. It is through this that we are
unfortunate, that we are fortunate, that we blame one another, are
pleased with one another. In a word, it is this which if we neglect
it makes unhappiness, and if we carefully look after it, makes
happiness.</p>
<p>What then is usually done? Men generally act as a traveller
would do on his way to his own country, when he enters a good inn,
and being pleased with it should remain there. Man, you have
forgotten your purpose: you were not travelling to this inn, but
you were passing through it. But this is a pleasant inn. And how
many other inns are pleasant? and how many meadows are pleasant?
yet only for passing through. But your purpose is this, to return
to your country, to relieve your kinsmen of anxiety, to discharge
the duties of a citizen, to marry, to beget children, to fill the
usual magistracies. For you are not come to select more pleasant
places, but to live in these where you were born and of which you
were made a citizen. Something of the kind takes place in the
matter which we are considering. Since by the aid of speech and
such communication as you receive here you must advance to
perfection, and purge your will and correct the faculty which makes
use of the appearances of things; and since it is necessary also
for the teaching (delivery) of theorems to be effected by a certain
mode of expression and with a certain variety and sharpness, some
persons captivated by these very things abide in them, one
captivated by the expression, another by syllogisms, another again
by sophisms, and still another by some other inn ([Greek:
paudocheiou]) of the kind; and there they stay and waste away as
they were among sirens.</p>
<p>Man, your purpose (business) was to make yourself capable of
using conformably to nature the appearances presented to you, in
your desires not to be frustrated, in your aversion from things not
to fall into that which you would avoid, never to have no luck (as
one may say), nor ever to have bad luck, to be free, not hindered,
not compelled, conforming yourself to the administration of Zeus,
obeying it, well satisfied with this, blaming no one, charging no
one with fault, able from your whole soul to utter these
verses:</p>
<p class="poetic">Lead me, O Zeus, and thou too Destiny.</p>
<hr>
<p>TO (OR AGAINST) A PERSON WHO WAS ONE OF THOSE WHO WERE NOT
VALUED (ESTEEMED) BY HIM.—A certain person said to him
(Epictetus): Frequently I desired to hear you and came to you, and
you never gave me any answer; and now, if it is possible, I entreat
you to say something to me. Do you think, said Epictetus, that as
there is an art in anything else, so there is also an art in
speaking, and that he who has the art, will speak skilfully, and he
who has not, will speak unskilfully?—I do think so.—He
then who by speaking receives benefit himself, and is able to
benefit others, will speak skilfully; but he who is rather damaged
by speaking and does damage to others, will he be unskilled in this
art of speaking? And you may find that some are damaged and others
benefited by speaking. And are all who hear benefited by what they
hear? Or will you find that among them also some are benefited and
some damaged? There are both among these also, he said. In this
case also then those who hear skilfully are benefited, and those
who hear unskilfully are damaged? He admitted this. Is there then a
skill in hearing also, as there is in speaking? It seems so. If you
choose, consider the matter in this way also. The practice of
music, to whom does it belong? To a musician. And the proper making
of a statue, to whom do you think that it belongs? To a statuary.
And the looking at a statue skilfully, does this appear to you to
require the aid of no art? This also requires the aid of art. Then
if speaking properly is the business of the skilful man, do you see
that to hear also with benefit is the business of the skilful man?
Now as to speaking and hearing perfectly, and usefully, let us for
the present, if you please, say no more, for both of us are a long
way from everything of the kind. But I think that every man will
allow this, that he who is going to hear philosophers requires some
amount of practice in hearing. Is it not so?</p>
<p>Why then do you say nothing to me? I can only say this to you,
that he who knows not who he is, and for what purpose he exists,
and what is this world, and with whom he is associated, and what
things are the good and the bad, and the beautiful and the ugly,
and who neither understands discourse nor demonstration, nor what
is true nor what is false, and who is not able to distinguish them,
will neither desire according to nature nor turn away nor move
towards, nor intend (to act), nor assent, nor dissent, nor suspend
his judgment: to say all in a few words, he will go about dumb and
blind, thinking that he is somebody, but being nobody. Is this so
now for the first time? Is it not the fact that ever since the
human race existed, all errors and misfortunes have arisen through
this ignorance?</p>
<p>This is all that I have to say to you; and I say even this not
willingly. Why? Because you have not roused me. For what must I
look to in order to be roused, as men who are expert in riding are
roused by generous horses? Must I look to your body? You treat it
disgracefully. To your dress? That is luxurious. To your behavior,
to your look? That is the same as nothing. When you would listen to
a philosopher, do not say to him, You tell me nothing; but only
show yourself worthy of hearing or fit for hearing; and you will
see how you will move the speaker.</p>
<hr>
<p>THAT LOGIC IS NECESSARY.—When one of those who were
present said, Persuade me that logic is necessary, he replied, Do
you wish me to prove this to you? The answer was, Yes. Then I must
use a demonstrative form of speech. This was granted. How then will
you know if I am cheating you by my argument? The man was silent.
Do you see, said Epictetus, that you yourself are admitting that
logic is necessary, if without it you cannot know so much as this,
whether logic is necessary or not necessary?</p>
<hr>
<p>OF FINERY IN DRESS.—A certain young man, a rhetorician,
came to see Epictetus, with his hair dressed more carefully than
was usual and his attire in an ornamental style; whereupon
Epictetus said, Tell me if you do not think that some dogs are
beautiful and some horses, and so of all other animals. I do think
so, the youth replied. Are not then some men also beautiful and
others ugly? Certainly. Do we then for the same reason call each of
them in the same kind beautiful, or each beautiful for something
peculiar? And you will judge of this matter thus. Since we see a
dog naturally formed for one thing, and a horse for another, and
for another still, as an example, a nightingale, we may generally
and not improperly declare each of them to be beautiful then when
it is most excellent according to its nature; but since the nature
of each is different, each of them seems to me to be beautiful in a
different way. Is it not so? He admitted that it was. That then
which makes a dog beautiful, makes a horse ugly; and that which
makes a horse beautiful, makes a dog ugly, if it is true that their
natures are different. It seems to be so. For I think that what
makes a Pancratiast beautiful, makes a wrestler to be not good, and
a runner to be most ridiculous; and he who is beautiful for the
Pentathlon, is very ugly for wrestling. It is so, said he. What
then makes a man beautiful? Is it that which in its kind makes both
a dog and a horse beautiful? It is, he said. What then makes a dog
beautiful? The possession of the excellence of a dog. And what
makes a horse beautiful? The possession of the excellence of a
horse. What then makes a man beautiful? Is it not the possession of
the excellence of a man? And do you then, if you wish to be
beautiful, young man, labor at this, the acquisition of human
excellence? But what is this? Observe whom you yourself praise,
when you praise many persons without partiality: do you praise the
just or the unjust? The just. Whether do you praise the moderate or
the immoderate? The moderate. And the temperate or the intemperate?
The temperate. If then you make yourself such a person, you will
know that you will make yourself beautiful; but so long as you
neglect these things, you must be ugly ([Greek: aischron]), even
though you contrive all you can to appear beautiful.</p>
<hr>
<p>IN WHAT A MAN OUGHT TO BE EXERCISED WHO HAS MADE PROFICIENCY;
AND THAT WE NEGLECT THE CHIEF THINGS.—There are three things
(topics, [Greek: topoi]) in which a man ought to exercise himself
who would be wise and good. The first concerns the desires and the
aversions, that a man may not fail to get what he desires, and that
he may not fall into that which he does not desire. The second
concerns the movements towards an object and the movements from an
object, and generally in doing what a man ought to do, that he may
act according to order, to reason, and not carelessly. The third
thing concerns freedom from deception and rashness in judgment, and
generally it concerns the assents ([Greek: sugchatatheseis]). Of
these topics the chief and the most urgent is that which relates to
the affects ([Greek: ta pathae] perturbations); for an affect is
produced in no other way than by a failing to obtain that which a
man desires or falling into that which a man would wish to avoid.
This is that which brings in perturbations, disorders, bad fortune,
misfortunes, sorrows, lamentations, and envy; that which makes men
envious and jealous; and by these causes we are unable even to
listen to the precepts of reason. The second topic concerns the
duties of a man; for I ought not to be free from affects ([Greek:
apathae]) like a statue, but I ought to maintain the relations
([Greek: scheseis]) natural and acquired, as a pious man, as a son,
as a father, as a citizen.</p>
<p>The third topic is that which immediately concerns those who are
making proficiency, that which concerns the security of the other
two, so that not even in sleep any appearance unexamined may
surprise us, nor in intoxication, nor in melancholy. This, it may
be said, is above our power. But the present philosophers
neglecting the first topic and the second (the affects and duties),
employ themselves on the third, using sophistical arguments
([Greek: metapiptontas]), making conclusions from questioning,
employing hypotheses, lying. For a man must, it is said, when
employed on these matters, take care that he is not deceived. Who
must? The wise and good man. This then is all that is wanting to
you. Have you successfully worked out the rest? Are you free from
deception in the matter of money? If you see a beautiful girl do
you resist the appearance? If your neighbor obtains an estate by
will, are you not vexed? Now is there nothing else wanting to you
except unchangeable firmness of mind ([Greek: ametaptosia])?
Wretch, you hear these very things with fear and anxiety that some
person may despise you, and with inquiries about what any person
may say about you. And if a man come and tell you that in a certain
conversation in which the question was, Who is the best
philosopher, a man who was present said that a certain person was
the chief philosopher, your little soul which was only a finger's
length stretches out to two cubits. But if another who is present
says, You are mistaken; it is not worth while to listen to a
certain person, for what does he know? he has only the first
principles, and no more? then you are confounded, you grow pale,
you cry out immediately, I will show him who I am, that I am a
great philosopher. It is seen by these very things: why do you wish
to show it by others? Do you not know that Diogenes pointed out one
of the sophists in this way by stretching out his middle finger?
And then when the man was wild with rage, This, he said, is the
certain person: I have pointed him out to you. For a man is not
shown by the finger, as a stone or a piece of wood; but when any
person shows the man's principles, then he shows him as a man.</p>
<p>Let us look at your principles also. For is it not plain that
you value not at all your own will ([Greek: proairesis]), but you
look externally to things which are independent of your will? For
instance, what will a certain person say? and what will people
think of you? Will you be considered a man of learning; have you
read Chrysippus or Antipater? for if you have read Archedamus also,
you have every thing (that you can desire). Why you are still
uneasy lest you should not show us who you are? Would you let me
tell you what manner of man you have shown us that you are? You
have exhibited yourself to us as a mean fellow, querulous,
passionate, cowardly, finding fault with everything, blaming
everybody, never quiet, vain: this is what you have exhibited to
us. Go away now and read Archedamus; then if a mouse should leap
down and make a noise, you are a dead man. For such a death awaits
you as it did—what was the man's name—Crinis; and he
too was proud, because he understood Archedamus. Wretch, will you
not dismiss these things that do not concern you at all? These
things are suitable to those who are able to learn them without
perturbation, to those who can say: "I am not subject to anger, to
grief, to envy: I am not hindered, I am not restrained. What
remains for me? I have leisure, I am tranquil: let us see how we
must deal with sophistical arguments; let us see how when a man has
accepted an hypothesis he shall not be led away to any thing
absurd." To them such things belong. To those who are happy it is
appropriate to light a fire, to dine; if they choose, both to sing
and to dance. But when the vessel is sinking, you come to me and
hoist the sails.</p>
<hr>
<p>WHAT IS THE MATTER ON WHICH A GOOD MAN SHOULD BE EMPLOYED, AND
IN WHAT WE OUGHT CHIEFLY TO PRACTISE OURSELVES.—The material
for the wise and good man is his own ruling faculty: and the body
is the material for the physician and the aliptes (the man who oils
persons); the land is the matter for the husbandman. The business
of the wise and good man is to use appearances conformably to
nature: and as it is the nature of every soul to assent to the
truth, to dissent from the false, and to remain in suspense as to
that which is uncertain; so it is its nature to be moved towards
the desire for the good, and to aversion from the evil; and with
respect to that which is neither good nor bad it feels indifferent.
For as the money-changer (banker) is not allowed to reject
Cæsar's coin, nor the seller of herbs, but if you show the
coin, whether he chooses or not, he must give up what is sold for
the coin; so it is also in the matter of the soul. When the good
appears, it immediately attracts to itself; the evil repels from
itself. But the soul will never reject the manifest appearance of
the good, any more than persons will reject Cæsar's coin. On
this principle depends every movement both of man and God.</p>
<p>Against (or with respect to) this kind of thing chiefly a man
should exercise himself. As soon as you go out in the morning,
examine every man whom you see, every man whom you hear; answer as
to a question, What have you seen? A handsome man or woman? Apply
the rule. Is this independent of the will, or dependent?
Independent. Take it away. What have you seen? A man lamenting over
the death of a child. Apply the rule. Death is a thing independent
of the will. Take it away. Has the proconsul met you? Apply the
rule. What kind of a thing is a proconsul's office? Independent of
the will or dependent on it? Independent. Take this away also; it
does not stand examination; cast it away; it is nothing to you.</p>
<p>If we practised this and exercised ourselves in it daily from
morning to night, something indeed would be done. But now we are
forthwith caught half asleep by every appearance, and it is only,
if ever, that in the school we are roused a little. Then when we go
out, if we see a man lamenting, we say, He is undone. If we see a
consul, we say, He is happy. If we see an exiled man, we say, He is
miserable. If we see a poor man, we say, He is wretched; he has
nothing to eat.</p>
<p>We ought then to eradicate these bad opinions, and to this end
we should direct all our efforts. For what is weeping and
lamenting? Opinion. What is bad fortune? Opinion. What is civil
sedition, what is divided opinion, what is blame, what is
accusation, what is impiety, what is trifling? All these things are
opinions, and nothing more, and opinions about things independent
of the will, as if they were good and bad. Let a man transfer these
opinions to things dependent on the will, and I engage for him that
he will be firm and constant, whatever may be the state of things
around him. Such as is a dish of water, such is the soul. Such as
is the ray of light which falls on the water, such are the
appearances. When the water is moved, the ray also seems to be
moved, yet it is not moved. And when then a man is seized with
giddiness, it is not the arts and the virtues which are confounded,
but the spirit (the nervous power) on which they are impressed; but
if the spirit be restored to its settled state, those things also
are restored.</p>
<hr>
<p>MISCELLANEOUS.—When some person asked him how it happened
that since reason has been more cultivated by the men of the
present age, the progress made in former times was greater. In what
respect, he answered, has it been more cultivated now, and in what
respect was the progress greater then? For in that in which it has
now been more cultivated, in that also the progress will now be
found. At present it has been cultivated for the purpose of
resolving syllogisms, and progress is made. But in former times it
was cultivated for the purpose of maintaining the governing faculty
in a condition conformable to nature, and progress was made. Do not
then mix things which are different, and do not expect, when you
are laboring at one thing to make progress in another. But see if
any man among us when he is intent upon this, the keeping himself
in a state conformable to nature and living so always, does not
make progress. For you will not find such a man.</p>
<p>It is not easy to exhort weak young men; for neither is it easy
to hold (soft) cheese with a hook. But those who have a good
natural disposition, even if you try to turn them aside, cling
still more to reason.</p>
<hr>
<p>TO THE ADMINISTRATOR OF THE FREE CITIES WHO WAS AN
EPICUREAN.—When the administrator came to visit him, and the
man was an Epicurean, Epictetus said, It is proper for us who are
not philosophers to inquire of you who are philosophers, as those
who come to a strange city inquire of the citizens and those who
are acquainted with it, what is the best thing in the world, in
order that we also after inquiry may go in quest of that which is
best and look at it, as strangers do with the things in cities. For
that there are three things which relate to man—soul, body,
and things external, scarcely any man denies. It remains for you
philosophers to answer what is the best. What shall we say to men?
Is the flesh the best? and was it for this that Maximus sailed as
far as Cassiope in winter (or bad weather) with his son, and
accompanied him that he might be gratified in the flesh? When the
man said that it was not, and added, Far be that from him. Is it
not fit then, Epictetus said, to be actively employed about the
best? It is certainly of all things the most fit. What then do we
possess which is better than the flesh? The soul, he replied. And
the good things of the best, are they better, or the good things of
the worse? The good things of the best. And are the good things of
the best within the power of the will or not within the power of
the will? They are within the power of the will. Is then the
pleasure of the soul a thing within the power of the will? It is,
he replied. And on what shall this pleasure depend? On itself? But
that cannot be conceived; for there must first exist a certain
substance or nature ([Greek: ousia]) of good, by obtaining which we
shall have pleasure in the soul. He assented to this also. On what
then shall we depend for this pleasure of the soul? for if it shall
depend on things of the soul, the substance (nature) of the good is
discovered; for good cannot be one thing, and that at which we are
rationally delighted another thing; nor if that which precedes is
not good, can that which comes after be good, for in order that the
thing which comes after may be good, that which precedes must be
good. But you would not affirm this, if you are in your right mind,
for you would then say what is inconsistent both with Epicurus and
the rest of your doctrines. It remains then that the pleasure of
the soul is in the pleasure from things of the body; and again that
those bodily things must be the things which precede and the
substance (nature) of the good.</p>
<p>Seek for doctrines which are consistent with what I say, and by
making them your guide you will with pleasure abstain from things
which have such persuasive power to lead us and overpower us. But
if to the persuasive power of these things, we also devise such a
philosophy as this which helps to push us on towards them and
strengthens us to this end, what will be the consequence? In a
piece of toreutic art which is the best part? the silver or the
workmanship? The substance of the hand is the flesh; but the work
of the hand is the principal part (that which precedes and leads
the rest). The duties then are also three: those which are directed
towards the existence of a thing; those which are directed towards
its existence in a particular kind; and third, the chief or leading
things themselves. So also in man we ought not to value the
material, the poor flesh, but the principal (leading things,
[Greek: ta proaegoumena]). What are these? Engaging in public
business, marrying, begetting children, venerating God, taking care
of parents, and generally, having desires, aversions ([Greek:
echchlinein]), pursuits of things and avoidances, in the way in
which we ought to do these things, and according to our nature. And
how are we constituted by nature? Free, noble, modest; for what
other animal blushes? what other is capable of receiving the
appearance (the impression) of shame? and we are so constituted by
nature as to subject pleasure to these things, as a minister, a
servant, in order that it may call forth our activity, in order
that it may keep us constant in acts which are conformable to
nature.</p>
<hr>
<p>HOW WE MUST EXERCISE OURSELVES AGAINST APPEARANCES ([Greek:
phantasias]).—As we exercise ourselves against sophistical
questions, so we ought to exercise ourselves daily against
appearances; for these appearances also propose questions to us. A
certain person's son is dead. Answer; the thing is not within the
power of the will: it is not an evil. A father has disinherited a
certain son. What do you think of it? It is a thing beyond the
power of the will, not an evil. Cæsar has condemned a person.
It is a thing beyond the power of the will, not an evil. The man is
afflicted at this. Affliction is a thing which depends on the will:
it is an evil. He has borne the condemnation bravely. That is a
thing within the power of the will: it is a good. If we train
ourselves in this manner, we shall make progress; for we shall
never assent to anything of which there is not an appearance
capable of being comprehended. Your son is dead. What has happened?
Your son is dead. Nothing more? Nothing. Your ship is lost. What
has happened? Your ship is lost. A man has been led to prison. What
has happened? He has been led to prison. But that herein he has
fared badly, every man adds from his own opinion. But Zeus, you
say, does not do right in these matters. Why? because he has made
you capable of endurance? because he has made you magnanimous?
because he has taken from that which befalls you the power of being
evils? because it is in your power to be happy while you are
suffering what you suffer? because he has opened the door to you,
when things do not please you? Man, go out and do not complain!</p>
<p>Hear how the Romans feel towards philosophers, if you would like
to know. Italicus, who was the most in repute of the philosophers,
once when I was present, being vexed with his own friends and as if
he was suffering something intolerable, said: "I cannot bear it,
you are killing me; you will make me such as that man is," pointing
to me.</p>
<hr>
<p>TO A CERTAIN RHETORICIAN WHO WAS GOING UP TO ROME ON A
SUIT.—When a certain person came to him, who was going up to
Rome on account of a suit which had regard to his rank, Epictetus
inquired the reason of his going to Rome, and the man then asked
what he thought about the matter. Epictetus replied: If you ask me
what you will do in Rome, whether you will succeed or fail, I have
no rule ([Greek: theoraema]) about this. But if you ask me how you
will fare, I can tell you: if you have right opinions ([Greek:
dogmata]), you will fare well; if they are false, you will fare
ill. For to every man the cause of his acting is opinion. For what
is the reason why you desired to be elected governor of the
Cnossians? Your opinion. What is the reason that you are now going
up to Rome? Your opinion. And going in winter, and with danger and
expense? I must go. What tells you this? Your opinion. Then if
opinions are the causes of all actions, and a man has bad opinions,
such as the cause may be, such also is the effect! Have we then all
sound opinions, both you and your adversary? And how do you differ?
But have you sounder opinions than your adversary? Why? You think
so. And so does he think that his opinions are better; and so do
madmen. This is a bad criterion. But show to me that you have made
some inquiry into your opinions and have taken some pains about
them. And as now you are sailing to Rome in order to become
governor of the Cnossians, and you are not content to stay at home
with the honors which you had, but you desire something greater and
more conspicuous, so when did you ever make a voyage for the
purpose of examining your own opinions, and casting them out, if
you have any that are bad? Whom have you approached for this
purpose? What time have you fixed for it? What age? Go over the
times of your life by yourself, if you are ashamed of me (knowing
the fact) when you were a boy, did you examine your own opinions?
and did you not then, as you do all things now, do as you did do?
and when you were become a youth and attended the rhetoricians, and
yourself practised rhetoric, what did you imagine that you were
deficient in? And when you were a young man and engaged in public
matters, and pleaded causes yourself, and were gaining reputation,
who then seemed your equal? And when would you have submitted to
any man examining and showing that your opinions are bad? What then
do you wish me to say to you? Help me in this matter. I have no
theorem (rule) for this. Nor have you, if you came to me for this
purpose, come to me as a philosopher, but as to a seller of
vegetables or a shoemaker. For what purpose then have philosophers
theorems? For this purpose, that whatever may happen, our ruling
faculty may be and continue to be conformable to nature. Does this
seem to you a small thing? No; but the greatest. What then? does it
need only a short time? and is it possible to seize it as you pass
by? If you can, seize it.</p>
<p>Then you will say, I met with Epictetus as I should meet with a
stone or a statue: for you saw me and nothing more. But he meets
with a man as a man, who learns his opinions, and in his turn shows
his own. Learn my opinions: show me yours; and then say that you
have visited me. Let us examine one another: if I have any bad
opinion, take it away; if you have any, show it. This is the
meaning of meeting with a philosopher. Not so (you say): but this
is only a passing visit, and while we are hiring the vessel, we can
also see Epictetus. Let us see what he says. Then you go away and
say: Epictetus was nothing; he used solecisms and spoke in a
barbarous way. For of what else do you come as judges? Well, but a
man may say to me, if I attend to such matters (as you do), I shall
have no land as you have none; I shall have no silver cups as you
have none, nor fine beasts as you have none. In answer to tins it
is perhaps sufficient to say: I have no need of such things; but if
you possess many things you have need of others: whether you choose
or not, you are poorer than I am. What then have I need of? Of that
which you have not? of firmness, of a mind which is conformable to
nature, of being free from perturbation.</p>
<hr>
<p>IN WHAT MANNER WE OUGHT TO BEAR SICKNESS.—When the need of
each opinion comes, we ought to have it in readiness: on the
occasion of breakfast, such opinions as relate to breakfast; in the
bath, those that concern the bath; in bed, those that concern
bed.</p>
<p class="poetic">Let sleep not come upon thy languid eyes<br/>
Before each daily action thou hast scann'd;<br/>
What's done amiss, what done, what left undone;<br/>
From first to last examine all, and then<br/>
Blame what is wrong, in what is right rejoice.</p>
<p>And we ought to retain these verses in such way that we may use
them, not that we may utter them aloud, as when we exclaim, "Paean
Apollo." Again in fever we should have ready such opinions as
concern a fever; and we ought not, as soon as the fever begins, to
lose and forget all. A man who has a fever may say: If I
philosophize any longer, may I be hanged: wherever I go, I must
take care of the poor body, that a fever may not come. But what is
philosophizing? Is it not a preparation against events which may
happen? Do you not understand that you are saying something of this
kind? "If I shall still prepare myself to bear with patience what
happens, may I be hanged." But this is just as if a man after
receiving blows should give up the Pancratium. In the Pancratium it
is in our power to desist and not to receive blows.</p>
<p>But in the other matter if we give up philosophy, what shall we
gain? What then should a man say on the occasion of each painful
thing? It was for this that I exercised myself, for this I
disciplined myself. God says to you: Give me a proof that you have
duly practised athletics, that you have eaten what you ought, that
you have been exercised, that you have obeyed the aliptes (the
oiler and rubber). Then do you show yourself weak when the time for
action comes? Now is the time for the fever. Let it be borne well.
Now is the time for thirst, bear it well. Now is the time for
hunger, bear it well. Is it not in your power? Who shall hinder
you? The physician will hinder you from drinking; but he cannot
prevent you from bearing thirst well: and he will hinder you from
eating; but he cannot prevent you from bearing hunger well.</p>
<p>But I cannot attend to my philosophical studies. And for what
purpose do you follow them? Slave, is it not that you may be happy,
that you may be constant, is it not that you may be in a state
conformable to nature and live so? What hinders you when you have a
fever from having your ruling faculty conformable to nature? Here
is the proof of the thing, here is the test of the philosopher. For
this also is a part of life, like walking, like sailing, like
journeying by land, so also is fever. Do you read when you are
walking? No. Nor do you when you have a fever. But if you walk
about well, you have all that belongs to a man who walks. If you
bear a fever well, you have all that belongs to a man in a fever.
What is it to bear a fever well? Not to blame God or man; not to be
afflicted at that which happens, to expect death well and nobly, to
do what must be done: when the physician comes in, not to be
frightened at what he says; nor if he says you are doing well, to
be overjoyed. For what good has he told you? and when you were in
health, what good was that to you? And even if he says you are in a
bad way, do not despond. For what is it to be ill? is it that you
are near the severance of the soul and the body? what harm is there
in this? If you are not near now, will you not afterwards be near?
Is the world going to be turned upside down when you are dead? Why
then do you flatter the physician? Why do you say if you please,
master, I shall be well? Why do you give him an opportunity of
raising his eyebrows (being proud; or showing his importance)? Do
you not value a physician, as you do a shoemaker when he is
measuring your foot, or a carpenter when he is building your house,
and so treat the physician as to the body which is not yours, but
by nature dead? He who has a fever has an opportunity of doing
this: if he does these things, he has what belongs to him. For it
is not the business of a philosopher to look after these externals,
neither his wine nor his oil nor his poor body, but his own ruling
power. But as to externals how must he act? so far as not to be
careless about them. Where then is there reason for fear? where is
there then still reason for anger, and of fear about what belongs
to others, about things which are of no value? For we ought to have
these two principles in readiness, that except the will nothing is
good nor bad; and that we ought not to lead events, but to follow
them. My brother ought not to have behaved thus to me. No, but he
will see to that; and, however he may behave, I will conduct myself
towards him as I ought. For this is my own business; that belongs
to another: no man can prevent this, the other thing can be
hindered.</p>
<hr>
<p>ABOUT EXERCISE.—We ought not to make our exercises consist
in means contrary to nature and adapted to cause admiration, for if
we do so, we who call ourselves philosophers, shall not differ at
all from jugglers. For it is difficult even to walk on a rope; and
not only difficult, but it is also dangerous. Ought we for this
reason to practice walking on a rope, or setting up a palm-tree, or
embracing statues? By no means. Every thing which is difficult and
dangerous is not suitable for practice; but that is suitable which
conduces to the working out of that which is proposed to us. And
what is that which is proposed to us as a thing to be worked out?
To live with desire and aversion (avoidance of certain things) free
from restraint. And what is this? Neither to be disappointed in
that which you desire, nor to fall into anything which you would
avoid. Towards this object then exercise (practice) ought to tend.
For since it is not possible to have your desire not disappointed
and your aversion free from falling into that which you would
avoid, without great and constant practice, you must know that if
you allow your desire and aversion to turn to things which are not
within the power of the will, you will neither have your desire
capable of attaining your object, nor your aversion free from the
power of avoiding that which you would avoid. And since strong
habit leads (prevails), and we are accustomed to employ desire and
aversion only to things which are not within the power of our will,
we ought to oppose to this habit a contrary habit, and where there
is great slipperiness in the appearances, there to oppose the habit
of exercise. Then at last, if occasion presents itself, for the
purpose of trying yourself at a proper time you will descend into
the arena to know if appearances overpower you as they did
formerly. But at first fly far from that which is stronger than
yourself; the contest is unequal between a charming young girl and
a beginner in philosophy. The earthen pitcher, as the saying is,
and the rock do not agree.</p>
<hr>
<p>WHAT SOLITUDE IS, AND WHAT KIND OF PERSON A SOLITARY MAN
IS.—Solitude is a certain condition of a helpless man. For
because a man is alone, he is not for that reason also solitary;
just as though a man is among numbers, he is not therefore not
solitary. When then we have lost either a brother, or a son, or a
friend on whom we were accustomed to repose, we say that we are
left solitary, though we are often in Rome, though such a crowd
meet us, though so many live in the same place, and sometimes we
have a great number of slaves. For the man who is solitary, as it
is conceived, is considered to be a helpless person and exposed to
those who wish to harm him. For this reason when we travel, then
especially do we say that we are lonely when we fall among robbers,
for it is not the sight of a human creature which removes us from
solitude, but the sight of one who is faithful and modest and
helpful to us. For if being alone is enough to make solitude, you
may say that even Zeus is solitary in the conflagration and bewails
himself saying, Unhappy that I am who have neither Hera, nor
Athena, nor Apollo, nor brother, nor son, nor descendant, nor
kinsman. This is what some say that he does when he is alone at the
conflagration. For they do not understand how a man passes his life
when he is alone, because they set out from a certain natural
principle, from the natural desire of community and mutual love and
from the pleasure of conversation among men. But none the less a
man ought to be prepared in a manner for this also (being alone),
to be able to be sufficient for himself and to be his own
companion. For as Zeus dwells with himself, and is tranquil by
himself, and thinks of his own administration and of its nature,
and is employed in thoughts suitable to himself; so ought we also
to be able to talk with ourselves, not to feel the want of others
also, not to be unprovided with the means of passing our time; to
observe the divine administration, and the relation of ourselves to
everything else; to consider how we formerly were affected towards
things that happened and how at present; what are still the things
which give us pain; how these also can be cured and how removed; if
any things require improvement, to improve them according to
reason.</p>
<p>Well then, if some man should come upon me when I am alone and
murder me? Fool, not murder You, but your poor body.</p>
<p>What kind of solitude then remains? what want? why do we make
ourselves worse than children; and what do children do when they
are left alone? They take up shells and ashes, and they build
something, then pull it down, and build something else, and so they
never want the means of passing the time. Shall I then, if you sail
away, sit down and weep, because I have been left alone and
solitary? Shall I then have no shells, no ashes? But children do
what they do through want of thought (or deficiency in knowledge),
and we through knowledge are unhappy.</p>
<p>Every great power (faculty) is dangerous to beginners. You must
then bear such things as you are able, but conformably to nature:
but not ... Practise sometimes a way of living like a person out of
health that you may at some time live like a man in health.</p>
<hr>
<p>CERTAIN MISCELLANEOUS MATTERS.—As bad tragic actors cannot
sing alone, but in company with many, so some persons cannot walk
about alone. Man, if you are anything, both walk alone and talk to
yourself, and do not hide yourself in the chorus. Examine a little
at last, look around, stir yourself up, that you may know who you
are.</p>
<p>You must root out of men these two things, arrogance (pride) and
distrust. Arrogance then is the opinion that you want nothing (are
deficient in nothing); but distrust is the opinion that you cannot
be happy when so many circumstances surround you. Arrogance is
removed by confutation; and Socrates was the first who practised
this. And (to know) that the thing is not impossible inquire and
seek. This search will do you no harm; and in a manner this is
philosophizing, to seek how it is possible to employ desire and
aversion ([Greek: echchlisis]) without impediment.</p>
<p>I am superior to you, for my father is a man of consular rank.
Another says, I have been a tribune, but you have not. If we were
horses, would you say, My father was swifter? I have much barley
and fodder, or elegant neck ornaments. If then you were saying
this, I said, Be it so: let us run then. Well, is there nothing in
a man such as running in a horse, by which it will be known which
is superior and inferior? Is there not modesty ([Greek: aidos]),
fidelity, justice? Show yourself superior in these, that you may be
superior as a man. If you tell me that you can kick violently, I
also will say to you, that you are proud of that which is the act
of an ass.</p>
<hr>
<p>THAT WE OUGHT TO PROCEED WITH CIRCUMSPECTION TO
EVERYTHING.[Footnote: Compare Encheiridion, 29.]—In every act
consider what precedes and what follows, and then proceed to the
act. If you do not consider, you will at first begin with spirit,
since you have not thought at all of the things which follow; but
afterwards when some consequences have shown themselves, you will
basely desist (from that which you have begun).—I wish to
conquer at the Olympic games.—(And I too, by the gods; for it
is a fine thing.) But consider here what precedes and what follows;
and then, if it is for your good, undertake the thing. You must act
according to rules, follow strict diet, abstain from delicacies,
exercise yourself by compulsion at fixed times, in heat, in cold;
drink no cold water, nor wine, when there is opportunity of
drinking it. In a word, you must surrender yourself to the trainer,
as you do to a physician. Next in the contest, you must be covered
with sand, sometimes dislocate a hand, sprain an ankle, swallow a
quantity of dust, be scourged with the whip; and after undergoing
all this, you must sometimes be conquered. After reckoning all
these things, if you have still an inclination, go to the athletic
practice. If you do not reckon them, observe you will behave like
children who at one time play as wrestlers, then as gladiators,
then blow a trumpet, then act a tragedy, when they have seen and
admired such things. So you also do: you are at one time a wrestler
(athlete), then a gladiator, then a philosopher, then a
rhetorician; but with your whole soul you are nothing: like the ape
you imitate all that you see; and always one thing after another
pleases you, but that which becomes familiar displeases you. For
you have never undertaken anything after consideration, nor after
having explored the whole matter and put it to a strict
examination; but you have undertaken it at hazard and with a cold
desire. Thus some persons having seen a philosopher and having
heard one speak like Euphrates—and yet who can speak like
him?—wish to be philosophers themselves.</p>
<p>Man, consider first what the matter is (which you propose to
do), then your own nature also, what it is able to bear. If you are
a wrestler, look at your shoulders, your thighs, your loins: for
different men are naturally formed for different things. Do you
think that, if you do (what you are doing daily), you can be a
philosopher? Do you think that you can eat as you do now, drink as
you do now, and in the same way be angry and out of humor? You must
watch, labor, conquer certain desires, you must depart from your
kinsmen, be despised by your slaves, laughed at by those who meet
you, in everything you must be in an inferior condition, as to
magisterial office, in honors, in courts of justice. When you have
considered all these things completely, then, if you think proper,
approach to philosophy, if you would gain in exchange for these
things freedom from perturbations, liberty, tranquillity. If you
have not considered these things, do not approach philosophy: do
not act like children, at one time a philosopher, then a tax
collector, then a rhetorician, then a procurator (officer) of
Cæsar. These things are not consistent. You must be one man
either good or bad; you must either labor at your own ruling
faculty or at external things; you must either labor at things
within or at external things; that is, you must either occupy the
place of a philosopher or that of one of the vulgar.</p>
<p>A person said to Rufus when Galba was murdered: Is the world now
governed by Providence? But Rufus replied: Did I ever incidentally
form an argument from Galba that the world is governed by
Providence?</p>
<hr>
<p>THAT WE OUGHT WITH CAUTION TO ENTER INTO FAMILIAR INTERCOURSE
WITH MEN.—If a man has frequent intercourse with others
either for talk, or drinking together, or generally for social
purposes, he must either become like them, or change them to his
own fashion. For if a man places a piece of quenched charcoal close
to a piece that is burning, either the quenched charcoal will
quench the other, or the burning charcoal will light that which is
quenched. Since then the danger is so great, we must cautiously
enter into such intimacies with those of the common sort, and
remember that it is impossible that a man can keep company with one
who is covered with soot without being partaker of the soot
himself. For what will you do if a man speaks about gladiators,
about horses, about athletes, or what is worse about men? Such a
person is bad, such a person is good; this was well done, this was
done badly. Further, if he scoff, or ridicule, or show an
ill-natured disposition? Is any man among us prepared like a
lute-player when he takes a lute, so that as soon as he has touched
the strings, he discovers which are discordant, and tunes the
instrument? Such a power as Socrates had who in all his social
intercourse could lead his companions to his own purpose? How
should you have this power? It is therefore a necessary consequence
that you are carried about by the common kind of people.</p>
<p>Why then are they more powerful than you? Because they utter
these useless words from their real opinions; but you utter your
elegant words only from your lips; for this reason they are without
strength and dead, and it is nauseous to listen to your
exhortations and your miserable virtue, which is talked of
everywhere (up and down). In this way the vulgar have the advantage
over you; for every opinion ([Greek: dogma]) is strong and
invincible. Until then the good ([Greek: chompsai]) sentiments
([Greek: hupolaepseis]) are fixed in you, and you shall have
acquired a certain power for your security, I advise you to be
careful in your association with common persons; if you are not,
every day like wax in the sun there will be melted away whatever
you inscribe on your minds in the school. Withdraw then yourselves
far from the sun so long as you have these waxen sentiments. For
this reason also philosophers advise men to leave their native
country, because ancient habits distract them and do not allow a
beginning to be made of a different habit; nor can we tolerate
those who meet us and say: See such a one is now a philosopher, who
was once so and so. Thus also physicians send those who have
lingering diseases to a different country and a different air; and
they do right. Do you also introduce other habits than those which
you have; fix you opinions and exercise yourselves in them. But you
do not so; you go hence to a spectacle, to a show of gladiators, to
a place of exercise ([Greek: chuston]), to a circus; then you come
back hither, and again from this place you go to those places, and
still the same persons. And there is no pleasing (good) habit, nor
attention, nor care about self and observation of this kind. How
shall I use the appearances presented to me? according to nature,
or contrary to nature? how do I answer to them? as I ought, or as I
ought not? Do I say to those things which are independent of the
will, that they do not concern me? For if you are not yet in this
state, fly from your former habits, fly from the common sort, if
you intend ever to begin to be something.</p>
<hr>
<p>ON PROVIDENCE.-When you make any charge against Providence,
consider, and you will learn that the thing has happened according
to reason. Yes, but the unjust man has the advantage. In what? In
money. Yes, for he is superior to you in this, that he flatters, is
free from shame, and is watchful. What is the wonder? But see if he
has the advantage over you in being faithful, in being modest; for
you will not find it to be so; but wherein you are superior, there
you will find that you have the advantage. And I once said to a man
who was vexed because Philostorgus was fortunate: Would you choose
to lie with Sura? May it never happen, he replied, that this day
should come? Why then are you vexed, if he receives something in
return for that which he sells; or how can you consider him happy
who acquires those things by such means as you abominate; or what
wrong does Providence, if he gives the better things to the better
men? Is it not better to be modest than to be rich? He admitted
this. Why are you vexed then, man, when you possess the better
thing? Remember then always and have in readiness the truth, that
this is a law of nature, that the superior has an advantage over
the inferior in that in which he is superior; and you will never be
vexed.</p>
<p>But my wife treats me badly. Well, if any man asks you what this
is, say, my wife treats me badly. Is there then nothing more?
Nothing. My father gives me nothing. (What is this? my father gives
me nothing. Is there nothing else then? Nothing); but to say that
this is an evil is something which must be added to it externally,
and falsely added. For this reason we must not get rid of poverty,
but of the opinion about poverty, and then we shall be happy.</p>
<hr>
<p>ABOUT CYNICISM.—When one of his pupils inquired of
Epictetus, and he was a person who appeared to be inclined to
Cynicism, what kind of person a Cynic ought to be, and what was the
notion ([Greek: prolaepsis]) of the thing, we will inquire, said
Epictetus, at leisure; but I have so much to say to you that he who
without God attempts so great a matter, is hateful to God, and has
no other purpose than to act indecently in public.</p>
<p>In the first place, in the things which relate to yourself, you
must not be in any respect like what you do now; you must not blame
God or man; you must take away desire altogether, you must transfer
avoidance ([Greek: echchlisis]) only to the things which are within
the power of the will; you must not feel anger nor resentment or
envy nor pity; a girl must not appear handsome to you, nor must you
love a little reputation, nor be pleased with a boy or a cake. For
you ought to know that the rest of men throw walls around them and
houses and darkness when they do any such things, and they have
many means of concealment. A man shuts the door, he sets somebody
before the chamber; if a person comes, say that he is out, he is
not at leisure. But the Cynic instead of all these things must use
modesty as his protection; if he does not, he will be indecent in
his nakedness and under the open sky. This is his house, his door;
this is the slave before his bedchamber; this is his darkness. For
he ought not to wish to hide anything that he does; and if he does,
he is gone, he has lost the character of a Cynic, of a man who
lives under the open sky, of a free man; he has begun to fear some
external thing, he has begun to have need of concealment, nor can
he get concealment when he chooses. For where shall he hide himself
and how? And if by chance this public instructor shall be detected,
this pædagogue, what kind of things will he be compelled to
suffer? when then a man fears these things, is it possible for him
to be bold with his whole soul to superintend men? It cannot be: it
is impossible.</p>
<p>In the first place then you must make your ruling faculty pure,
and this mode of life also. Now (you should say), to me the matter
to work on is my understanding, as wood is to the carpenter, as
hides to the shoemaker; and my business is the right use of
appearances. But the body is nothing to me: the parts of it are
nothing to me. Death? Let it come when it chooses, either death of
the whole or of a part. Fly, you say. And whither; can any man
eject me out of the world? He cannot. But wherever I go, there is
the sun, there is the moon, there are the stars, dreams, omens, and
the conversation ([Greek: omilia]) with gods.</p>
<p>Then, if he is thus prepared, the true Cynic cannot be satisfied
with this; but he must know that he is sent a messenger from Zeus
to men about good and bad things, to show them that they have
wandered and are seeking the substance of good and evil where it is
not, but where it is, they never think; and that he is a spy, as
Diogenes was carried off to Philip after the battle of Chaeroneia
as a spy. For in fact a Cynic is a spy of the things which are good
for men and which are evil, and it is his duty to examine carefully
and to come and report truly, and not to be struck with terror so
as to point out as enemies those who are not enemies, nor in any
other way to be perturbed by appearances nor confounded.</p>
<p>It is his duty then to be able with a loud voice, if the
occasion should arise, and appearing on the tragic stage to say
like Socrates: Men, whither are you hurrying, what are you doing,
wretches? like blind people you are wandering up and down; you are
going by another road, and have left the true road; you seek for
prosperity and happiness where they are not, and if another shows
you where they are, you do not believe him. Why do you seek it
without? In the body? It is not there. If you doubt, look at Myro,
look at Ophellius. In possessions? It is not there. But if you do
not believe me, look at Croesus: look at those who are now rich,
with what lamentations their life is filled. In power? It is not
there. If it is, those must be happy who have been twice and thrice
consuls; but they are not. Whom shall we believe in these matters?
You who from without see their affairs and are dazzled by an
appearance, or the men themselves? What do they say? Hear them when
they groan, when they grieve, when on account of these very
consulships and glory and splendor they think that they are more
wretched and in greater danger. Is it in royal power? It is not: if
it were, Nero would have been happy, and Sardanapalus. But neither
was Agamemnon happy, though he was a better man than Sardanapalus
and Nero; but while others are snoring, what is he doing?</p>
<p class="poetic">Much from his head he tore his rooted hair:<br/>
Iliad, x., 15.</p>
<p>and what does he say himself?</p>
<p class="poetic">"I am perplexed," he says, "and<br/>
Disturb'd I am," and "my heart out of my bosom<br/>
Is leaping."<br/>
Iliad, x., 91.</p>
<p>Wretch, which of your affairs goes badly? Your possessions? No.
Your body? No. But you are rich in gold and copper. What then is
the matter with you? That part of you, whatever it is, has been
neglected by you and is corrupted, the part with which we desire,
with which we avoid, with which we move towards and move from
things. How neglected? He knows not the nature of good for which he
is made by nature and the nature of evil; and what is his own, and
what belongs to another; and when anything that belongs to others
goes badly, he says, Woe to me, for the Hellenes are in danger.
Wretched is his ruling faculty, and alone neglected and uncared
for. The Hellenes are going to die destroyed by the Trojans. And if
the Trojans do not kill them, will they not die? Yes; but not all
at once. What difference then does it make? For if death is an
evil, whether men die altogether, or if they die singly, it is
equally an evil. Is anything else then going to happen than the
separation of the soul and the body? Nothing. And if the Hellenes
perish, is the door closed, and is it not in your power to die? It
is. Why then do you lament (and say), Oh, you are a king and have
the sceptre of Zeus? An unhappy king does not exist more than an
unhappy god. What then art thou? In truth a shepherd: for you weep
as shepherds do, when a wolf has carried off one of their sheep:
and these who are governed by you are sheep. And why did you come
hither? Was your desire in any danger? was your aversion ([Greek:
echchlisis])? was your movement (pursuits)? was your avoidance of
things? He replies, No; but the wife of my brother was carried off.
Was it not then a great gain to be deprived of an adulterous wife?
Shall we be despised then by the Trojans? What kind of people are
the Trojans, wise or foolish? If they are wise, why do you fight
with them? If they are fools, why do you care about them?</p>
<p>Do you possess the body then free or is it in servile condition?
We do not know. Do you not know that it is the slave of fever, of
gout, ophthalmia, dysentery, of a tyrant, of fire, of iron, of
everything which is stronger? Yes, it is a slave. How then is it
possible that anything which belongs to the body can be free from
hindrance? and how is a thing great or valuable which is naturally
dead, or earth, or mud? Well then, do you possess nothing which is
free? Perhaps nothing. And who is able to compel you to assent to
that which appears false? No man. And who can compel you not to
assent to that which appears true? No man. By this then you see
that there is something in you naturally free. But to desire or to
be averse from, or to move towards an object or to move from it, or
to prepare yourself, or to propose to do anything, which of you can
do this, unless he has received an impression of the appearance of
that which is profitable or a duty? No man. You have then in these
things also something which is not hindered and is free. Wretched
men, work out this, take care of this, seek for good here.</p>
<hr>
<p>THAT WE OUGHT NOT TO BE MOVED BY A DESIRE OF THOSE THINGS WHICH
ARE NOT IN OUR POWER.—Let not that which in another is
contrary to nature be an evil to you; for you are not formed by
nature to be depressed with others nor to be unhappy with others,
but to be happy with them. If a man is unhappy, remember that his
unhappiness is his own fault; for God has made all men to be happy,
to be free from perturbations. For this purpose he has given means
to them, some things to each person as his own, and other things
not as his own; some things subject to hindrance and compulsion and
deprivation; and these things are not a man's own; but the things
which are not subject to hindrances, are his own; and the nature of
good and evil, as it was fit to be done by him who takes care of us
and protects us like a father, he has made our own. But you say, I
have parted from a certain person, and he is grieved. Why did he
consider as his own that which belongs to another? why, when he
looked on you and was rejoiced, did he not also reckon that you are
a mortal, that it is natural for you to part from him for a foreign
country? Therefore he suffers the consequences of his own folly.
But why do you or for what purpose bewail yourself? Is it that you
also have not thought of these things? but like poor women who are
good for nothing, you have enjoyed all things in which you took
pleasure, as if you would always enjoy them, both places and men
and conversation; and now you sit and weep because you do not see
the same persons and do not live in the same places. Indeed you
deserve this, to be more wretched than crows and ravens who have
the power of flying where they please and changing their nests for
others, and crossing the seas without lamenting or regretting their
former condition. Yes, but this happens to them because they are
irrational creatures. Was reason then given to us by the gods for
the purpose of unhappiness and misery, that we may pass our lives
in wretchedness and lamentation? Must all persons be immortal and
must no man go abroad, and must we ourselves not go abroad, but
remain rooted like plants; and if any of our familiar friends goes
abroad, must we sit and weep; and on the contrary, when he returns,
must we dance and clap our hands like children?</p>
<p>But my mother laments when she does not see me. Why has she not
learned these principles? and I do not say this, that we should not
take care that she may not lament, but I say that we ought not to
desire in every way what is not our own. And the sorrow of another
is another's sorrow; but my sorrow is my own. I then will stop my
own sorrow by every means, for it is in my power; and the sorrow of
another I will endeavor to stop as far as I can; but I will not
attempt to do it by every means; for if I do, I shall be fighting
against God, I shall be opposing Zeus and shall be placing myself
against him in the administration of the universe; and the reward
(the punishment) of this fighting against God and of this
disobedience not only will the children of my children pay, but I
also shall myself, both by day and by night, startled by dreams,
perturbed, trembling at every piece of news, and having my
tranquillity depending on the letters of others. Some person has
arrived from Rome. I only hope there is no harm. But what harm can
happen to you, where you are not? From Hellas (Greece) some one is
come; I hope that there is no harm. In this way every place may be
the cause of misfortune to you. Is it not enough for you to be
unfortunate there where you are, and must you be so even beyond
sea, and by the report of letters? Is this the way in which your
affairs are in a state of security? Well then suppose that my
friends have died in the places which are far from me. What else
have they suffered than that which is the condition of mortals? Or
how are you desirous at the same time to live to old age, and at
the same time not to see the death of any person whom you love?
Know you not that in the course of a long time many and various
kinds of things must happen; that a fever shall overpower one, a
robber another, and a third a tyrant? Such is the condition of
things around us, such are those who live with us in the world;
cold and heat, and unsuitable ways of living, and journeys by land,
and voyages by sea, and winds, and various circumstances which
surround us, destroy one man, and banish another, and throw one
upon an embassy and another into an army. Sit down then in a
flutter at all these things, lamenting, unhappy, unfortunate,
dependent on another, and dependent not on one or two, but on ten
thousands upon ten thousands.</p>
<p>Did you hear this when you were with the philosophers? did you
learn this? do you not know that human life is a warfare? that one
man must keep watch, another must go out as a spy, and a third must
fight? and it is not possible that all should be in one place, nor
is it better that it should be so. But you neglecting to do the
commands of the general complain when anything more hard than usual
is imposed on you, and you do not observe what you make the army
become as far as it is in your power; that if all imitate you, no
man will dig a trench, no man will put a rampart round, nor keep
watch, nor expose himself to danger, but will appear to be useless
for the purposes of an army. Again, in a vessel if you go as a
sailor, keep to one place and stick to it. And if you are ordered
to climb the mast, refuse; if to run to the head of the ship,
refuse; and what master of a ship will endure you? and will he not
pitch you overboard as a useless thing, an impediment only and bad
example to the other sailors? And so it is here also: every man's
life is a kind of warfare, and it is long and diversified. You must
observe the duty of a soldier and do every thing at the nod of the
general; if it is possible, divining what his wishes are; for there
is no resemblance between that general and this, neither in
strength nor in superiority of character. Know you not that a good
man does nothing for the sake of appearance, but for the sake of
doing right? What advantage is it then to him to have done right?
And what advantage is it to a man who writes the name of Dion to
write it as he ought? The advantage is to have written it. Is there
no reward then? Do you seek a reward for a good man greater than
doing what is good and just? At Olympia you wish for nothing more,
but it seems to you enough to be crowned at the games. Does it seem
to you so small and worthless a thing to be good and happy? For
these purposes being introduced by the gods into this city (the
world), and it being now your duty to undertake the work of a man,
do you still want nurses also and a mamma, and do foolish women by
their weeping move you and make you effeminate? Will you thus never
cease to be a foolish child? know you not that he who does the acts
of a child, the older he is, the more ridiculous he is?</p>
<p>So in this matter also: if you kiss your own child, or your
brother or friend, never give full license to the appearance
([Greek: phantasian]), and allow not your pleasure to go as far as
it chooses; but check it, and curb it as those who stand behind men
in their triumphs and remind them that they are mortal. Do you also
remind yourself in like manner, that he whom you love is mortal,
and that what you love is nothing of your own; it has been given to
you for the present, not that it should not be taken from you, nor
has it been given to you for all time, but as a fig is given to you
or a bunch of grapes at the appointed season of the year. But if
you wish for these things in winter, you are a fool. So if you wish
for your son or friend when it is not allowed to you, you must know
that you are wishing for a fig in winter. For such as winter is to
a fig, such is every event which happens from the universe to the
things which are taken away according to its nature. And further,
at the times when you are delighted with a thing, place before
yourself the contrary appearances. What harm is it while you are
kissing your child to say with a lisping voice: To-morrow you will
die; and to a friend also: To-morrow you will go away or I shall,
and never shall we see one another again? But these are words of
bad omen—and some incantations also are of bad omen; but
because they are useful, I don't care for this; only let them be
useful. But do you call things to be of bad omen except those which
are significant of some evil? Cowardice is a word of bad omen, and
meanness of spirit, and sorrow, and grief, and shamelessness. These
words are of bad omen; and yet we ought not to hesitate to utter
them in order to protect ourselves against the things. Do you tell
me that a name which is significant of any natural thing is of evil
omen? say that even for the ears of corn to be reaped is of bad
omen, for it signifies the destruction of the ears, but not of the
world. Say that the falling of the leaves also is of bad omen, and
for the dried fig to take the place of the green fig, and for
raisins to be made from the grapes. For all these things are
changes from a former state into other states; not a destruction,
but a certain fixed economy and administration. Such is going away
from home and a small change: such is death, a greater change, not
from the state which now is to that which is not, but to that which
is not now. Shall I then no longer exist? You will not exist, but
you will be something else, of which the world now has need; for
you also came into existence not when you chose, but when the world
had need of you.</p>
<p>Let these thoughts be ready to hand by night and by day; these
you should write, these you should read; about these you should
talk to yourself and to others. Ask a man: Can you help me at all
for this purpose? and further, go to another and to another. Then
if anything that is said be contrary to your wish, this reflection
first will immediately relieve you, that it is not unexpected. For
it is a great thing in all cases to say: I knew that I begot a son
who is mortal. For so you also will say: I knew that I am mortal, I
knew that I may leave my home, I knew that I may be ejected from
it, I knew that I may be led to prison. Then if you turn round and
look to yourself, and seek the place from which comes that which
has happened, you will forthwith recollect that it comes from the
place of things which are out of the power of the will, and of
things which are not my own. What then is it to me? Then, you will
ask, and this is the chief thing: And who is it that sent it? The
leader, or the general, the state, the law of the state. Give it me
then, for I must always obey the law in everything. Then, when the
appearance (of things) pains you, for it is not in your power to
prevent this, contend against it by the aid of reason, conquer it:
do not allow it to gain strength nor to lead you to the
consequences by raising images such as it pleases and as it
pleases. If you be in Gyara, do not imagine the mode of living at
Rome, and how many pleasures there were for him who lived there and
how many there would be for him who returned to Rome; but fix your
mind on this matter, how a man who lives in Gyara ought to live in
Gyara like a man of courage. And if you be in Rome, do not imagine
what the life in Athens is, but think only of the life in Rome.</p>
<p>Then in the place of all other delights substitute this, that of
being conscious that you are obeying God, that not in word, but in
deed you are performing the acts of a wise and good man. For what a
thing it is for a man to be able to say to himself: Now whatever
the rest may say in solemn manner in the schools and may be judged
to be saying in a way contrary to common opinion (or in a strange
way), this I am doing; and they are sitting and are discoursing of
my virtues and inquiring about me and praising me; and of this Zeus
has willed that I shall receive from myself a demonstration, and
shall myself know if he has a soldier such as he ought to have, a
citizen such as he ought to have, and if he has chosen to produce
me to the rest of mankind as a witness of the things which are
independent of the will: See that you fear without reason, that you
foolishly desire what you do desire; seek not the good in things
external; seek it in yourselves: if you do not, you will not find
it. For this purpose he leads me at one time hither, at another
time sends me thither, shows me to men as poor, without authority,
and sick; sends me to Gyara, leads me into prison, not because he
hates me—far from him be such a meaning, for who hates the
best of his servants? nor yet because he cares not for me, for he
does not neglect any even of the smallest things; but he does this
for the purpose of exercising me and making use of me as a witness
to others. Being appointed to such a service, do I still care about
the place in which I am, or with whom I am, or what men say about
me? and do I not entirely direct my thoughts to God and to his
instructions and commands?</p>
<p>Having these things (or thoughts) always in hand, and exercising
them by yourself, and keeping them in readiness, you will never be
in want of one to comfort you and strengthen you. For it is not
shameful to be without something to eat, but not to have reason
sufficient for keeping away fear and sorrow. But if once you have
gained exemption from sorrow and fear, will there any longer be a
tyrant for you, or a tyrant's guard, or attendants on Cæsar?
Or shall any appointment to offices at court cause you pain, or
shall those who sacrifice in the Capitol on the occasion of being
named to certain functions, cause pain to you who have received so
great authority from Zeus? Only do not make a proud display of it,
nor boast of it; but show it by your acts; and if no man perceives
it, be satisfied that you are yourself in a healthy state and
happy.</p>
<hr>
<p>TO THOSE WHO FALL OFF (DESIST) FROM THEIR
PURPOSE.—Consider as to the things which you proposed to
yourself at first, which you have secured, and which you have not;
and how you are pleased when you recall to memory the one, and are
pained about the other; and if it is possible, recover the things
wherein you failed. For we must not shrink when we are engaged in
the greatest combat, but we must even take blows. For the combat
before us is not in wrestling and the Pancration, in which both the
successful and the unsuccessful may have the greatest merit, or may
have little, and in truth may be very fortunate or very
unfortunate; but the combat is for good fortune and happiness
themselves. Well then, even if we have renounced the contest in
this matter (for good fortune and happiness), no man hinders us
from renewing the combat again, and we are not compelled to wait
for another four years that the games at Olympia may come again;
but as soon as you have recovered and restored yourself, and employ
the same zeal, you may renew the combat again; and if again you
renounce it, you may again renew it; and if you once gain the
victory, you are like him who has never renounced the combat. Only
do not through a habit of doing the same thing (renouncing the
combat), begin to do it with pleasure, and then like a bad athlete
go about after being conquered in all the circuit of the games like
quails who have run away.</p>
<hr>
<p>TO THOSE WHO FEAR WANT.—Are you not ashamed at being more
cowardly and more mean than fugitive slaves? How do they when they
run away leave their masters? on what estates do they depend, and
what domestics do they rely on? Do they not after stealing a
little, which is enough for the first days, then afterwards move on
through land or through sea, contriving one method after another
for maintaining their lives? And what fugitive slave ever died of
hunger? But you are afraid lest necessary things should fail you,
and are sleepless by night. Wretch, are you so blind, and don't you
see the road to which the want of necessaries leads?—Well,
where does it lead?—to the same place to which a fever leads,
or a stone that falls on you, to death. Have you not often said
this yourself to your companions? have you not read much of this
kind, and written much? and how often have you boasted that you
were easy as to death?</p>
<p>Learn then first what are the things which are shameful, and
then tell us that you are a philosopher: but at present do not,
even if any other man calls you so, allow it.</p>
<p>Is that shameful to you which is not your own act, that of which
you are not the cause, that which has come to you by accident, as a
headache, as a fever? If your parents were poor, and left their
property to others, and if while they live, they do not help you at
all, is this shameful to you? Is this what you learned with the
philosophers? Did you never hear that the thing which is shameful
ought to be blamed, and that which is blamable is worthy of blame?
Whom do you blame for an act which is not his own, which he did not
do himself? Did you then make your father such as he is, or is it
in your power to improve him? Is this power given to you? Well
then, ought you to wish the things which are not given to you, or
to be ashamed if you do not obtain them? And have you also been
accustomed while you were studying philosophy to look to others and
to hope for nothing from yourself? Lament then and groan and eat
with fear that you may not have food to-morrow. Tremble about your
poor slaves lest they steal, lest they run away, lest they die. So
live, and continue to live, you who in name only have approached
philosophy, and have disgraced its theorems as far as you can by
showing them to be useless and unprofitable to those who take them
up; you, who have never sought constancy, freedom from
perturbation, and from passions; you who have not sought any person
for the sake of this object, but many for the sake of syllogisms;
you who have never thoroughly examined any of these appearances by
yourself, Am I able to bear, or am I not able to bear? What remains
for me to do? But as if all your affairs were well and secure, you
have been resting on the third topic, that of things being
unchanged, in order that you may possess unchanged—what?
cowardice, mean spirit, the admiration of the rich, desire without
attaining any end, and avoidance ([Greek: echchlisin]) which fails
in the attempt? About security in these things you have been
anxious.</p>
<p>Ought you not to have gained something in addition from reason,
and then to have protected this with security? And whom did you
ever see building a battlement all around and encircling it with a
wall? And what doorkeeper is placed with no door to watch? But you
practise in order to be able to prove—what? You practise that
you may not be tossed as on the sea through sophisms, and tossed
about from what? Show me first what you hold, what you measure, or
what you weigh; and show me the scales or the medimnus (the
measure); or how long will you go on measuring the dust? Ought you
not to demonstrate those things which make men happy, which make
things go on for them in the way as they wish, and why we ought to
blame no man, accuse no man, and acquiesce in the administration of
the universe?</p>
<hr>
<p>ABOUT FREEDOM.—He is free who lives as he wishes to live;
who is neither subject to compulsion nor to hindrance, nor to
force; whose movements to action ([Greek: hormai]) are not impeded,
whose desires attain their purpose, and who does not fall into that
which he would avoid ([Greek: echchliseis aperiptotoi]). Who then
chooses to live in error? No man. Who chooses to live deceived,
liable to mistake, unjust, unrestrained, discontented, mean? No
man. Not one then of the bad lives as he wishes; nor is he then
free. And who chooses to live in sorrow, fear, envy, pity, desiring
and failing in his desires, attempting to avoid something and
falling into it? Not one. Do we then find any of the bad free from
sorrow, free from fear, who does not fall into that which he would
avoid, and does not obtain that which he wishes? Not one; nor then
do we find any bad man free.</p>
<p>Further, then, answer me this question, also: does freedom seem
to you to be something great and noble and valuable? How should it
not seem so? Is it possible then when a man obtains anything so
great and valuable and noble to be mean? It is not possible. When
then you see any man subject to another or flattering him contrary
to his own opinion, confidently affirm that this man also is not
free; and not only if he do this for a bit of supper, but also if
he does it for a government (province) or a consulship; and call
these men little slaves who for the sake of little matters do these
things, and those who do so for the sake of great things call great
slaves, as they deserve to be. This is admitted also. Do you think
that freedom is a thing independent and self-governing? Certainly.
Whomsoever then it is in the power of another to hinder and compel,
declare that he is not free. And do not look, I entreat you, after
his grandfathers and great-grandfathers, or inquire about his being
bought or sold, but if you hear him saying from his heart and with
feeling, "Master," even if the twelve fasces precede him (as
consul), call him a slave. And if you hear him say, "Wretch that I
am, how much I suffer," call him a slave. If, finally, you see him
lamenting, complaining, unhappy, call him a slave, though he wears
a praetexta. If, then, he is doing nothing of this kind do not yet
say that he is free, but learn his opinions, whether they are
subject to compulsion, or may produce hindrance, or to bad fortune,
and if you find him such, call him a slave who has a holiday in the
Saturnalia; say that his master is from home; he will return soon,
and you will know what he suffers.</p>
<p>What then is that which makes a man free from hindrance and
makes him his own master? For wealth does not do it, nor
consulship, nor provincial government, nor royal power; but
something else must be discovered. What then is that which when we
write makes us free from hindrance and unimpeded? The knowledge of
the art of writing. What then is it in playing the lute? The
science of playing the lute. Therefore in life also it is the
science of life. You have then heard in a general way; but examine
the thing also in the several parts. Is it possible that he who
desires any of the things which depend on others can be free from
hindrance? No. Is it possible for him to be unimpeded? No.
Therefore he cannot be free. Consider then, whether we have nothing
which is in our own power only, or whether we have all things, or
whether some things are in our own power, and others in the power
of others. What do you mean? When you wish the body to be entire
(sound) is it in your power or not? It is not in my power. When you
wish it to be healthy? Neither is this in my power. When you wish
it to be handsome? Nor is this. Life or death? Neither is this in
my power. Your body then is another's, subject to every man who is
stronger than yourself. It is. But your estate is it in your power
to have it when you please, and as long as you please, and such as
you please? No. And your slaves? No. And your clothes? No. And your
house? No. And your horses? Not one of these things. And if you
wish by all means your children to live, or your wife, or your
brother, or your friends, is it in your power? This also is not in
my power.</p>
<p>Whether then have you nothing which is in your own power, which
depends on yourself only and cannot be taken from you, or have you
anything of the kind? I know not. Look at the thing then thus, and
examine it. Is any man able to make you assent to that which is
false? No man. In the matter of assent then you are free from
hindrance and obstruction. Granted. Well; and can a man force you
to desire to move towards that to which you do not choose? He can,
for when he threatens me with death or bonds he compels me to
desire to move towards it. If then you despise death and bonds, do
you still pay any regard to him? No. Is then the despising of death
an act of your own or is it not yours? It is my act.</p>
<p>When you have made this preparation, and have practised this
discipline, to distinguish that which belongs to another from that
which is your own, the things which are subject to hindrance from
those which are not, to consider the things free from hindrance to
concern yourself, and those which are not free not to concern
yourself, to keep your desire steadily fixed to the things which do
concern yourself, and turned from the things which do not concern
yourself; do you still fear any man? No one. For about what will
you be afraid? About the things which are your own, in which
consists the nature of good and evil? and who has power over these
things? who can take them away? who can impede them? No man can, no
more than he can impede God. But will you be afraid about your body
and your possessions, about things which are not yours, about
things which in no way concern you? and what else have you been
studying from the beginning than to distinguish between your own
and not your own, the things which are in your power and not in
your power, the things subject to hindrance and not subject? and
why have you come to the philosophers? was it that you may
nevertheless be unfortunate and unhappy? You will then in this way,
as I have supposed you to have done, be without fear and
disturbance. And what is grief to you? for fear comes from what you
expect, but grief from that which is present. But what further will
you desire? For of the things which are within the power of the
will, as being good and present, you have a proper and regulated
desire; but of the things which are not in the power of the will
you do not desire any one, and so you do not allow any place to
that which is irrational, and impatient, and above measure
hasty.</p>
<p>Then after receiving everything from another and even yourself,
are you angry and do you blame the giver if he takes anything from
you? Who are you, and for what purpose did you come into the world?
Did not he (God) introduce you here, did he not show you the light,
did he not give you fellow-workers, and perceptions and reason? and
as whom did he introduce you here? did he not introduce you as
subject to death, and as one to live on the earth with a little
flesh, and to observe his administration, and to join with him in
the spectacle and the festival for a short time? Will you not then,
as long as you have been permitted, after seeing the spectacle and
the solemnity, when he leads you out, go with adoration of him and
thanks for what you have heard and seen? No; but I would still
enjoy the feast. The initiated too would wish to be longer in the
initiation; and perhaps also those at Olympia to see other
athletes. But the solemnity is ended; go away like a grateful and
modest man; make room for others; others also must be born, as you
were, and, being born, they must have a place, and houses, and
necessary things. And if the first do not retire, what remains? Why
are you insatiable? Why are you not content? why do you contract
the world? Yes, but I would have my little children with me and my
wife. What, are they yours? do they not belong to the giver, and to
him who made you? then will you not give up what belongs to others?
will you not give way to him who is superior? Why then did he
introduce me into the world on these conditions? And if the
conditions do not suit you, depart. He has no need of a spectator
who is not satisfied. He wants those who join in the festival,
those who take part in the chorus, that they may rather applaud,
admire, and celebrate with hymns the solemnity. But those who can
bear no trouble, and the cowardly, he will not unwillingly see
absent from the great assembly ([Greek: panaeguris]) for they did
not when they were present behave as they ought to do at a festival
nor fill up their place properly, but they lamented, found fault
with the deity, fortune, their companions; not seeing both what
they had, and their own powers, which they received for contrary
purposes, the powers of magnanimity, of a generous mind, manly
spirit, and what we are now inquiring about, freedom. For what
purpose then have I received these things? To use them. How long?
So long as he who has lent them chooses. What if they are necessary
to me? Do not attach yourself to them and they will not be
necessary; do not say to yourself that they are necessary, and then
they are not necessary.</p>
<p>You then, a man may say, are you free? I wish, by the gods, and
pray to be free; but I am not yet able to face my masters, I still
value my poor body, I value greatly the preservation of it entire,
though I do not possess it entire. But I can point out to you a
free man, that you may no longer seek an example. Diogenes was
free. How was he free? Not because he was born of free parents, but
because he was himself free, because he had cast off all the
handles of slavery, and it was not possible for any man to approach
him, nor had any man the means of laying hold of him to enslave
him. He had everything easily loosed, everything only hanging to
him. If you laid hold of his property, he would have rather let it
go and be yours, than he would have followed you for it; if you had
laid hold of his leg, he would have let go his leg; if of all his
body, all his poor body; his intimates, friends, country, just the
same. For he knew from whence he had them, and from whom, and on
what conditions. His true parents indeed, the gods, and his real
country he would never have deserted, nor would he have yielded to
any man in obedience to them and to their orders, nor would any man
have died for his country more readily. For he was not used to
inquire when he should be considered to have done anything on
behalf of the whole of things (the universe, or all the world), but
he remembered that everything which is done comes from thence and
is done on behalf of that country and is commanded by him who
administers it. Therefore see what Diogenes himself says and
writes: "For this reason," he says, "Diogenes, it is in your power
to speak both with the King of the Persians and with Archidamus the
King of the Lacedaemonians, as you please." Was it because he was
born of free parents? I suppose all the Athenians and all the
Lacedaemonians, because they were born of slaves, could not talk
with them (these kings) as they wished, but feared and paid court
to them. Why then does he say that it is in his power? Because I do
not consider the poor body to be my own, because I want nothing,
because law is everything to me, and nothing else is. These were
the things which permitted him to be free.</p>
<p>Think of these things, these opinions, these words; look to
these examples, if you would be free, if you desire the thing
according to its worth. And what is the wonder if you buy so great
a thing at the price of things so many and so great? For the sake
of this which is called liberty, some hang themselves, others throw
themselves down precipices, and sometimes even whole cities have
perished; and will you not for the sake of the true and
unassailable and secure liberty give back to God when he demands
them the things which he has given? Will you not, as Plato says,
study not to die only, but also to endure torture, and exile, and
scourging, and, in a word, to give up all which is not your own? If
you will not, you will be a slave among slaves, even if you be ten
thousand times a consul; and if you make your way up to the palace
(Cæsar's residence), you will no less be a slave; and you
will feel that perhaps philosophers utter words which are contrary
to common opinion (paradoxes), as Cleanthes also said, but not
words contrary to reason. For you will know by experience that the
words are true, and that there is no profit from the things which
are valued and eagerly sought to those who have obtained them; and
to those who have not yet obtained them there is an imagination
([Greek: phantasia]), that when these things are come, all that is
good will come with them; then, when they are come, the feverish
feeling is the same, the tossing to and fro is the same, the
satiety, the desire of things, which are not present; for freedom
is acquired not by the full possession of the things which are
desired, but by removing the desire. And that you may know that
this is true, as you have labored for those things, so transfer
your labor to these: be vigilant for the purpose of acquiring an
opinion which will make you free; pay court to a philosopher
instead of to a rich old man; be seen about a philosopher's doors;
you will not disgrace yourself by being seen; you will not go away
empty nor without profit, if you go to the philosopher as you
ought, and if not (if you do not succeed), try at least; the trial
(attempt) is not disgraceful.</p>
<hr>
<p>ON FAMILIAR INTIMACY.—To this matter before all you must
attend, that you be never so closely connected with any of your
former intimates or friends as to come down to the same acts as he
does. If you do not observe this rule, you will ruin yourself. But
if the thought arises in your mind, "I shall seem disobliging to
him and he will not have the same feeling towards me," remember
that nothing is done without cost, nor is it possible for a man if
he does not do the same things to be the same man that he was.
Choose then which of the two you will have, to be equally loved by
those by whom you were formerly loved, being the same with your
former self; or, being superior, not to obtain from your friends
the same that you did before.</p>
<hr>
<p>WHAT THINGS WE SHOULD EXCHANGE FOR OTHER THINGS.—Keep this
thought in readiness, when you lose anything external, what you
acquire in place of it; and if it be worth more, never say, I have
had a loss; neither if you have got a horse in place of an ass, or
an ox in place of a sheep, nor a good action in place of a bit of
money, nor in place of idle talk such tranquillity as befits a man,
nor in place of lewd talk if you have acquired modesty. If you
remember this, you will always maintain your character such as it
ought to be. But if you do not, consider that the times of
opportunity are perishing, and that whatever pains you take about
yourself, you are going to waste them all and overturn them. And it
needs only a few things for the loss and overturning of
all—namely, a small deviation from reason. For the steerer of
a ship to upset it, he has no need of the same means as he has need
of for saving it; but if he turns it a little to the wind, it is
lost; and if he does not do this purposely, but has been neglecting
his duty a little, the ship is lost. Something of the kind happens
in this case also; if you only fall a nodding a little, all that
you have up to this time collected is gone. Attend therefore to the
appearances of things, and watch over them; for that which you have
to preserve is no small matter, but it is modesty and fidelity and
constancy, freedom from the affects, a state of mind undisturbed,
freedom from fear, tranquillity, in a word liberty. For what will
you sell these things? See what is the value of the things which
you will obtain in exchange for these.—But shall I not obtain
any such thing for it?—See, and if you do in return get that,
see what you receive in place of it. I possess decency, he
possesses a tribuneship: he possesses a prætorship, I possess
modesty. But I do not make acclamations where it is not becoming: I
will not stand up where I ought not; for I am free, and a friend of
God. and so I obey him willingly. But I must not claim (seek)
anything else, neither body nor possession, nor magistracy, nor
good report, nor in fact anything. For he (God) does not allow me
to claim (seek) them, for if he had chosen, he would have made them
good for me; but he has not done so, and for this reason I cannot
transgress his commands. Preserve that which is your own good in
everything; and as to every other thing, as it is permitted, and so
far as to behave consistently with reason in respect to them,
content with this only. If you do not, you will be unfortunate, you
will fail in all things, you will be hindered, you will be impeded.
These are the laws which have been sent from thence (from God);
these are the orders. Of these laws a man ought to be an expositor,
to these he ought to submit, not to those of Masurius and
Cassius.</p>
<hr>
<p>TO THOSE WHO ARE DESIROUS OF PASSING LIFE IN
TRANQUILLITY.—Remember that not only the desire of power and
of riches makes us mean and subject to others, but even the desire
of tranquillity, and of leisure, and of travelling abroad, and of
learning. For, to speak plainly, whatever the external thing may
be, the value which we set upon it places us in subjection to
others. What then is the difference between desiring to be a
senator or not desiring to be one; what is the difference between
desiring power or being content with a private station; what is the
difference between saying, I am unhappy, I have nothing to do, but
I am bound to my books as a corpse; or saying, I am unhappy, I have
no leisure for reading? For as salutations and power are things
external and independent of the will, so is a book. For what
purpose do you choose to read? Tell me. For if you only direct your
purpose to being amused or learning something, you are a silly
fellow and incapable of enduring labor. But if you refer reading to
the proper end, what else is this than a tranquil and happy life
([Greek: eusoia])? But if reading does not secure for you a happy
and tranquil life, what is the use of it? But it does secure this,
the man replies, and for this reason I am vexed that I am deprived
of it.—And what is this tranquil and happy life, which any
man can impede, I do not say Cæsar or Cæsar's friend,
but a crow, a piper, a fever, and thirty thousand other things? But
a tranquil and happy life contains nothing so sure as continuity
and freedom from obstacle. Now I am called to do something: I will
go then with the purpose of observing the measures (rules) which I
must keep, of acting with modesty, steadiness, without desire and
aversion to things external; and then that I may attend to men,
what they say, how they are moved; and this not with any bad
disposition, or that I may have something to blame or to ridicule;
but I turn to myself, and ask if I also commit the same faults. How
then shall I cease to commit them? Formerly I also acted wrong, but
now I do not: thanks to God.</p>
<p>What then is the reason of this? The reason is that we have
never read for this purpose, we have never written for this
purpose, so that we may in our actions use in a way conformable to
nature the appearances presented to us; but we terminate in this,
in learning what is said, and in being able to expound it to
another, in resolving a syllogism, and in handling the hypothetical
syllogism. For this reason where our study (purpose) is, there
alone is the impediment. Would you have by all means the things
which are not in your power? Be prevented then, be hindered, fail
in your purpose. But if we read what is written about action
(efforts, [Greek: hormae]), not that we may see what is said about
action, but that we may act well; if we read what is said about
desire and aversion (avoiding things), in order that we may neither
fail in our desires, nor fall into that which we try to avoid; if
we read what is said about duty (officium), in order that
remembering the relations (of things to one another) we may do
nothing irrationally nor contrary to these relations; we should not
be vexed, in being hindered as to our readings, but we should be
satisfied with doing the acts which are conformable (to the
relations), and we should be reckoning not what so far we have been
accustomed to reckon: To-day I have read so many verses, I have
written so many; but (we should say), To-day I have employed my
action as it is taught by the philosophers; I have not employed my
desire; I have used avoidance ([Greek: echchlisei]) only with
respect to things which are within the power of my will; I have not
been afraid of such a person, I have not been prevailed upon by the
entreaties of another; I have exercised my patience, my abstinence,
my co-operation with others; and so we should thank God for what we
ought to thank him.</p>
<p>There is only one way to happiness, and let this rule be ready
both in the morning and during the day and by night: the rule is
not to look towards things which are out of the power of our will,
to think that nothing is our own, to give up all things to the
Divinity, to Fortune; to make them the superintendents of these
things, whom Zeus also has made so; for a man to observe that only
which is his own, that which cannot be hindered; and when we read,
to refer our reading to this only, and our writing and our
listening. For this reason I cannot call the man industrious, if I
hear this only, that he reads and writes; and even if a man adds
that he reads all night, I cannot say so, if he knows not to what
he should refer his reading. For neither do you say that a man is
industrious if he keeps awake for a girl, nor do I. But if he does
it (reads and writes) for reputation, I say that he is a lover of
reputation. And if he does it for money, I say that he is a lover
of money, not a lover of labor; and if he does it through love of
learning, I say that he is a lover of learning. But if he refers
his labor to his own ruling power that he may keep it in a state
conformable to nature and pass his life in that state, then only do
I say that he is industrious. For never commend a man on account of
these things which are common to all, but on account of his
opinions (principles); for these are the things which belong to
each man, which make his actions bad or good. Remembering these
rules, rejoice in that which is present, and be content with the
things which come in season. If you see anything which you have
learned and inquired about occurring to you in your course of life
(or opportunely applied by you to the acts of life), be delighted
at it. If you have laid aside or have lessened bad disposition and
a habit of reviling; if you have done so with rash temper, obscene
words, hastiness, sluggishness; if you are not moved by what you
formerly were, and not in the same way as you once were, you can
celebrate a festival daily, to-day because you have behaved well in
one act, and to-morrow because you have behaved well in another.
How much greater is this a reason for making sacrifices than a
consulship or the government of a province? These things come to
you from yourself and from the gods. Remember this, who gives these
things and to whom, and for what purpose. If you cherish yourself
in these thoughts, do you still think that it makes any difference
where you shall be happy, where you shall please God? Are not the
gods equally distant from all places? Do they not see from all
places alike that which is going on?</p>
<hr>
<p>AGAINST THE QUARRELSOME AND FEROCIOUS.—The wise and good
man neither himself fights with any person, nor does he allow
another, so far as he can prevent it. And an example of this as
well as of all other things is proposed to us in the life of
Socrates, who not only himself on all occasions avoided fights
(quarrels), but would not allow even others to quarrel. See in
Xenophon's Symposium how many quarrels he settled, how further he
endured Thrasymachus and Polus and Callicles; how he tolerated his
wife, and how he tolerated his son who attempted to confute him and
to cavil with him. For he remembered well that no man has in his
power another man's ruling principle. He wished therefore for
nothing else than that which was his own. And what is this? Not
that this or that man may act according to nature, for that is a
thing which belongs to another; but that while others are doing
their own acts, as they choose, he may nevertheless be in a
condition conformable to nature and live in it, only doing what is
his own to the end that others also may be in a state conformable
to nature. For this is the object always set before him by the wise
and good man. Is it to be commander (a prætor) of an army?
No; but if it is permitted him, his object is in this matter to
maintain his own ruling principle. Is it to marry? No; but if
marriage is allowed to him, in this matter his object is to
maintain himself in a condition conformable to nature. But if he
would have his son not to do wrong or his wife, he would have what
belongs to another not to belong to another: and to be instructed
is this, to learn what things are a man's own and what belongs to
another.</p>
<p>How then is there left any place for fighting (quarrelling) to a
man who has this opinion (which he ought to have)? Is he surprised
at any thing which happens, and does it appear new to him? Does he
not expect that which comes from the bad to be worse and more
grievous than that what actually befalls him? And does he not
reckon as pure gain whatever they (the bad) may do which falls
short of extreme wickedness? Such a person has reviled you. Great
thanks to him for not having struck you. But he has struck me also.
Great thanks that he did not wound you. But he wounded me also.
Great thanks that he did not kill you. For when did he learn or in
what school that man is a tame animal, that men love one another,
that an act of injustice is a great harm to him who does it. Since
then he has not learned this and is not convinced of it, why shall
he not follow that which seems to be for his own interest? Your
neighbor has thrown stones. Have you then done anything wrong? But
the things in the house have been broken. Are you then a utensil?
No; but a free power of will. What then is given to you (to do) in
answer to this? If you are like a wolf, you must bite in return,
and throw more stones. But, if you consider what is proper for a
man, examine your storehouse, see with what faculties you came into
the world. Have you the disposition of a wild beast, have you the
disposition of revenge for an injury? When is a horse wretched?
When he is deprived of his natural faculties, not when he cannot
crow like a cock, but when he cannot run. When is a dog wretched?
Not when he cannot fly, but when he cannot track his game. Is then
a man also unhappy in this way, not because he cannot strangle
lions or embrace statues, for he did not come into the world in the
possession of certain powers from nature for this purpose, but
because he has lost his probity and his fidelity? People ought to
meet and lament such a man for the misfortunes into which he has
fallen; not indeed to lament because a man has been born or has
died, but because it has happened to him in his lifetime to have
lost the things which are his own, not that which he received from
his father, not his land and house, and his inn, and his slaves;
for not one of these things is a man's own, but all belong to
others, are servile, and subject to account ([Greek: hupeithuna]),
at different times given to different persons by those who have
them in their power: but I mean the things which belong to him as a
man, the marks (stamps) in his mind with which he came into the
world, such as we seek also on coins, and if we find them we
approve of the coins, and if we do not find the marks we reject
them. What is the stamp on this sestertius? The stamp of Trajan.
Present it. It is the stamp of Nero. Throw it away; it cannot be
accepted, it is counterfeit. So also in this case: What is the
stamp of his opinions? It is gentleness, a sociable disposition, a
tolerant temper, a disposition to mutual affections. Produce these
qualities. I accept them: I consider this man a citizen, I accept
him as a neighbor, a companion in my voyages. Only see that he has
not Nero's stamp. Is he passionate, is he full of resentment, is he
fault-finding? If the whim seizes him, does he break the heads of
those who come in his way? (If so), why then did you say that he is
a man? Is everything judged (determined) by the bare form? If that
is so, say that the form in wax is an apple and has the smell and
the taste of an apple. But the external figure is not enough:
neither then is the nose enough and the eyes to make the man, but
he must have the opinions of a man. Here is a man who does not
listen to reason, who does not know when he is refuted: he is an
ass; in another man the sense of shame is become dead: he is good
for nothing, he is anything rather than a man. This man seeks whom
he may meet and kick or bite, so that he is not even a sheep or an
ass, but a kind of wild beast.</p>
<p>What then? would you have me to be despised?—By whom? by
those who know you? and how shall those who know you despise a man
who is gentle and modest? Perhaps you mean by those who do not know
you? What is that to you? For no other artisan cares for the
opinion of those who know not his art. But they will be more
hostile to me for this reason. Why do you say "me"? Can any man
injure your will, or prevent you from using in a natural way the
appearances which are presented to you? In no way can he. Why then
are you still disturbed and why do you choose to show yourself
afraid? And why do you not come forth and proclaim that you are at
peace with all men whatever they may do, and laugh at those chiefly
who think that they can harm you? These slaves, you can say, know
not either who I am, nor where lies my good or my evil, because
they have no access to the things which are mine.</p>
<p>In this way also those who occupy a strong city mock the
besiegers (and say): What trouble these men are now taking for
nothing; our wall is secure, we have food for a very long time, and
all other resources. These are the things which make a city strong
and impregnable; but nothing else than his opinions makes a man's
soul impregnable. For what wall is so strong, or what body is so
hard, or what possession is so safe, or what honor (rank,
character) so free from assault (as a man's opinions)? All (other)
things everywhere are perishable, easily taken by assault, and if
any man in any way is attached to them, he must be disturbed,
except what is bad, he must fear, lament, find his desires
disappointed, and fall into things which he would avoid. Then do we
not choose to make secure the only means of safety which are
offered to us, and do we not choose to withdraw ourselves from that
which is perishable and servile and to labor at the things which
are imperishable and by nature free; and do we not remember that no
man either hurts another or does good to another, but that a man's
opinions about each thing, is that which hurts him, is that which
overturns him; this is fighting, this is civil discord, this is
war? That which made Eteocles and Polynices enemies was nothing
else than this opinion which they had about royal power, their
opinion about exile, that the one is the extreme of evils, the
other the greatest good. Now this is the nature of every man to
seek the good, to avoid the bad; to consider him who deprives us of
the one and involves us in the other an enemy and treacherous, even
if he be a brother, or a son, or a father. For nothing is more akin
to us than the good; therefore, if these things (externals) are
good and evil, neither is a father a friend to sons, nor a brother
to a brother, but all the world is everywhere full of enemies,
treacherous men, and sycophants. But if the will ([Greek:
proairesis], the purpose, the intention) being what it ought to be,
is the only good; and if the will being such as it ought not to be,
is the only evil, where is there any strife, where is there
reviling? about what? about the things which do not concern us? and
strife with whom? with the ignorant, the unhappy, with those who
are deceived about the chief things?</p>
<p>Remembering this Socrates managed his own house and endured a
very ill-tempered wife and a foolish (ungrateful?) son.</p>
<hr>
<p>AGAINST THOSE WHO LAMENT OVER BEING PITIED.—I am grieved,
a man says, at being pitied. Whether then is the fact of your being
pitied a thing which concerns you or those who pity you? Well, is
it in your power to stop this pity? It is in my power, if I show
them that I do not require pity. And whether then are you in the
condition of not deserving (requiring) pity, or are you not in that
condition? I think that I am not; but these persons do not pity me,
for the things for which, if they ought to pity me, it would be
proper, I mean, for my faults; but they pity me for my poverty, for
not possessing honorable offices, for diseases and deaths and other
such things. Whether then are you prepared to convince the many,
that not one of these things is an evil, but that it is possible
for a man who is poor and has no office ([Greek: anarchonti)] and
enjoys no honor to be happy; or to show yourself to them as rich
and in power? For the second of these things belong to a man who is
boastful, silly, and good for nothing. And consider by what means
the pretence must be supported. It will be necessary for you to
hire slaves and to possess a few silver vessels, and to exhibit
them in public, if it is possible, though they are often the same,
and to attempt to conceal the fact that they are the same, and to
have splendid garments, and all other things for display, and to
show that you are a man honored by the great, and to try to sup at
their houses, or to be supposed to sup there, and as to your person
to employ some mean arts, that you may appear to be more handsome
and nobler than you are. These things you must contrive, if you
choose to go by the second path in order not to be pitied. But the
first way is both impracticable and long, to attempt the very thing
which Zeus has not been able to do, to convince all men what things
are good and bad. Is this power given to you? This only is given to
you, to convince yourself; and you have not convinced yourself.
Then I ask you, do you attempt to persuade other men? and who has
lived so long with you as you with yourself? and who has so much
power of convincing you as you have of convincing yourself; and who
is better disposed and nearer to you than you are to yourself? How
then have you not yet convinced yourself in order to learn? At
present are not things upside down? Is this what you have been
earnest about doing, to learn to be free from grief and free from
disturbance, and not to be humbled (abject), and to be free? Have
you not heard then that there is only one way which leads to this
end, to give up (dismiss) the things which do not depend on the
will, to withdraw from them, and to admit that they belong to
others? For another man then to have an opinion about you, of what
kind is it? It is a thing independent of the will—Then is it
nothing to you? It is nothing. When then you are still vexed at
this and disturbed, do you think that you are convinced about good
and evil?</p>
<hr>
<p>ON FREEDOM FROM FEAR.—What makes the tyrant formidable?
The guards, you say, and their swords, and the men of the
bedchamber, and those who exclude them who would enter. Why then if
you bring a boy (child) to the tyrant when he is with his guards,
is he not afraid; or is it because the child does not understand
these things? If then any man does understand what guards are and
that they have swords, and comes to the tyrant for this very
purpose because he wishes to die on account of some circumstance
and seeks to die easily by the hand of another, is he afraid of the
guards? No, for he wishes for the thing which makes the guards
formidable. If then any man neither wishing to die nor to live by
all means, but only as it may be permitted, approaches the tyrant
what hinders him from approaching the tyrant without fear? Nothing.
If then a man has the same opinion about his property as the man
whom I have instanced has about his body; and also about his
children and his wife, and in a word is so affected by some madness
or despair that he cares not whether he possesses them or not, but
like children who are playing with shells (quarrel) about the play,
but do not trouble themselves about the shells, so he too has set
no value on the materials (things), but values the pleasure that he
has with them and the occupation, what tyrant is then formidable to
him, or what guards or what swords?</p>
<p>What hinders a man, who has clearly separated (comprehended)
these things, from living with a light heart and bearing easily the
reins, quietly expecting everything which can happen, and enduring
that which has already happened? Would you have me to bear poverty?
Come and you will know what poverty is when it has found one who
can act well the part of a poor man. Would you have me to possess
power? Let me have power, and also the trouble of it. Well,
banishment? Wherever I shall go, there it will be well with me; for
here also where I am, it was not because of the place that it was
well with me, but because of my opinions which I shall carry off
with me, for neither can any man deprive me of them; but my
opinions alone are mine and they cannot be taken from me, and I am
satisfied while I have them, wherever I may be and whatever I am
doing. But now it is time to die. Why do you say to die? Make no
tragedy show of the thing, but speak of it as it is. It is now time
for the matter (of the body) to be resolved into the things out of
which it was composed. And what is the formidable thing here? what
is going to perish of the things which are in the universe? what
new thing or wondrous is going to happen? Is it for this reason
that a tyrant is formidable? Is it for this reason that the guards
appear to have swords which are large and sharp? Say this to
others; but I have considered about all these things; no man has
power over me. I have been made free; I know his commands, no man
can now lead me as a slave. I have a proper person to assert my
freedom; I have proper judges. (I say) are you not the master of my
body? What then is that to me? Are you not the master of my
property? What then is that to me? Are you not the master of my
exile or of my chains? Well, from all these things and all the poor
body itself I depart at your bidding, when you please. Make trial
of your power, and you will know how far it reaches.</p>
<p>Whom then can I still fear? Those who are over the bedchamber?
Lest they should do, what? Shut me out? If they find that I wish to
enter, let them shut me out. Why then do you go to the doors?
Because I think it befits me, while the play (sport) lasts, to join
in it. How then are you not shut out? Because unless some one
allows me to go in, I do not choose to go in, but am always content
with that which happens; for I think that what God chooses is
better than what I choose. I will attach myself as a minister and
follower to him; I have the same movements (pursuits) as he has, I
have the same desires; in a word, I have the same will ([Greek:
sunthelo]). There is no shutting out for me, but for those who
would force their way in. Why then do not I force my way in?
Because I know that nothing good is distributed within to those who
enter. But when I hear any man called fortunate because he is
honored by Cæsar, I say what does he happen to get? A
province (the government of a province). Does he also obtain an
opinion such as he ought? The office of a Prefect. Does he also
obtain the power of using his office well? Why do I still strive to
enter (Cæsar's chamber)? A man scatters dried figs and nuts:
the children seize them, and fight with one another; men do not,
for they think them to be a small matter. But if a man should throw
about shells, even the children do not seize them. Provinces are
distributed: let children look to that. Money is distributed; let
children look to that. Prætorships, consulships, are
distributed; let children scramble for them, let them be shut out,
beaten, kiss the hands of the giver, of the slaves: but to me these
are only dried figs and nuts. What then? If you fail to get them,
while Cæsar is scattering them about, do not be troubled; if
a dried fig come into your lap, take it and eat it; for so far you
may value even a fig. But if I shall stoop down and turn another
over, or be turned over by another, and shall flatter those who
have got into (Cæsar's) chamber, neither is a dried fig worth
the trouble, nor anything else of the things which are not good,
which the philosophers have persuaded me not to think good.</p>
<hr>
<p>TO A PERSON WHO HAD BEEN CHANGED TO A CHARACTER OF
SHAMELESSNESS.—When you see another man in the possession of
power (magistracy), set against this the fact that you have not the
want (desire) of power; when you see another rich, see what you
possess in place of riches: for if you possess nothing in place of
them, you are miserable; but if you have not the want of riches,
know that you possess more than this man possesses and what is
worth much more.</p>
<hr>
<p>WHAT THINGS WE OUGHT TO DESPISE AND WHAT THINGS WE OUGHT TO
VALUE.—The difficulties of all men are about external things,
their helplessness is about external. What shall I do? how will it
be? how will it turn out? will this happen? will that? All these
are the words of those who are turning themselves to things which
are not within the power of the will. For who says, How shall I not
assent to that which is false? how shall I not turn away from the
truth? If a man be of such a good disposition as to be anxious
about these things I will remind him of this: Why are you anxious?
The thing is in your own power, be assured; do not be precipitate
in assenting before you apply the natural rule. On the other side,
if a man is anxious (uneasy) about desire, lest it fail in its
purpose and miss its end, and with respect to the avoidance of
things, lest he should fall into that which he would avoid, I will
first kiss (love) him, because he throws away the things about
which others are in a flutter (others desire) and their fears, and
employs his thoughts about his own affairs and his own condition.
Then I shall say to him: If you do not choose to desire that which
you will fail to obtain nor to attempt to avoid that into which you
will fall, desire nothing which belongs to (which is in the power
of) others, nor try to avoid any of the things which are not in
your power. If you do not observe this rule, you must of necessity
fail in your desires and fall into that which you would avoid. What
is the difficulty here? where is there room for the words How will
it be? and How will it turn out? and Will this happen or that?</p>
<p>Now is not that which will happen independent of the will? Yes.
And the nature of good and of evil, is it not in the things which
are within the power of the will? Yes. Is it in your power then to
treat according to nature everything which happens? Can any person
hinder you? No man. No longer then say to me, How will it be? For,
however it may be, you will dispose of it well, and the result to
you will be a fortunate one. What would Hercules have been if he
said: How shall a great lion not appear to me, or a great boar, or
savage men? And what do you care for that? If a great boar appear,
you will fight a greater fight; if bad men appear, you will relieve
the earth of the bad. Suppose then that I lose my life in this way.
You will die a good man, doing a noble act. For since he must
certainly die, of necessity a man must be found doing something,
either following the employment of a husbandman, or digging, or
trading, or serving in a consulship, or suffering from indigestion
or from diarrhoea. What then do you wish to be doing when you are
found by death? I, for my part, would wish to be found doing
something which belongs to a man, beneficent, suitable to the
general interest, noble. But if I cannot be found doing things so
great, I would be found doing at least that which I cannot be
hindered from doing, that which is permitted me to do, correcting
myself, cultivating the faculty which makes use of appearances,
laboring at freedom from the affects (laboring at tranquillity of
mind); rendering to the relations of life their due. If I succeed
so far, also (I would be found) touching on (advancing to) the
third topic (or head) safety in forming judgments about things. If
death surprises me when I am busy about these things, it is enough
for me if I can stretch out my hands to God and say: The means
which I have received from thee for seeing thy administration (of
the world) and following it I have not neglected; I have not
dishonored thee by my acts; see how I have used my perceptions, see
how I have used my preconceptions; have I ever blamed thee? have I
been discontented with anything that happens, or wished it to be
otherwise? have I wished to transgress the (established) relations
(of things)? That thou hast given me life, I thank thee for what
thou hast given. So long as I have used the things which are thine
I am content. Take them back and place them wherever thou mayest
choose, for thine were all things, thou gavest them to me. Is it
not enough to depart in this state of mind? and what life is better
and more becoming than that of a man who is in this state of mind?
and what end is more happy?</p>
<hr>
<p>ABOUT PURITY (CLEANLINESS).—Some persons raise a question
whether the social feeling is contained in the nature of man; and
yet I think that these same persons would have no doubt that love
of purity is certainly contained in it, and that if man is
distinguished from other animals by anything, he is distinguished
by this. When then we see any other animal cleaning itself, we are
accustomed to speak of the act with surprise, and to add that the
animal is acting like a man; and on the other hand, if a man blames
an animal for being dirty, straightway, as if we were making an
excuse for it, we say that of course the animal is not a human
creature. So we suppose that there is something superior in man,
and that we first receive it from the gods. For since the gods by
their nature are pure and free from corruption, so far as men
approach them by reason, so far do they cling to purity and to a
love (habit) of purity. But since it is impossible that man's
nature ([Greek: ousia]) can be altogether pure, being mixed
(composed) of such materials, reason is applied, as far as it is
possible, and reason endeavors to make human nature love
purity.</p>
<p>The first then and highest purity is that which is in the soul;
and we say the same of impurity. Now you could not discover the
impurity of the soul as you could discover that of the body; but as
to the soul, what else could you find in it than that which makes
it filthy in respect to the acts which are her own? Now the acts of
the soul are movement towards an object or movement from it,
desire, aversion, preparation, design (purpose), assent. What then
is it which in these acts makes the soul filthy and impure? Nothing
else than her own bad judgments ([Greek: chrimata]). Consequently
the impurity of the soul is the soul's bad opinions; and the
purification of the soul is the planting in it of proper opinions;
and the soul is pure which has proper opinions, for the soul alone
in her own acts is free from perturbation and pollution.</p>
<p>For we ought not even by the appearance of the body to deter the
multitude from philosophy; but as in other things, a philosopher
should show himself cheerful and tranquil, so also he should in the
things that relate to the body. See, ye men, that I have nothing,
that I want nothing; see how I am without a house, and without a
city, and an exile, if it happens to be so, and without a hearth I
live more free from trouble and more happily than all of noble
birth and than the rich. But look at my poor body also and observe
that it is not injured by my hard way of living. But if a man says
this to me, who has the appearance (dress) and face of a condemned
man, what god shall persuade me to approach philosophy, if it makes
men such persons? Far from it; I would not choose to do so, even if
I were going to become a wise man. I indeed would rather that a
young man, who is making his first movements towards philosophy,
should come to me with his hair carefully trimmed than with it
dirty and rough, for there is seen in him a certain notion
(appearance) of beauty and a desire of (attempt at) that which is
becoming; and where he supposes it to be, there also he strives
that it shall be. It is only necessary to show him (what it is),
and to say: Young man, you seek beauty, and you do well; you must
know then that it (is produced) grows in that part of you where you
have the rational faculty; seek it there where you have the
movements towards and movements from things, where you have the
desires towards and the aversion from things; for this is what you
have in yourself of a superior kind; but the poor body is naturally
only earth; why do you labor about it to no purpose? if you shall
learn nothing else, you will learn from time that the body is
nothing. But if a man comes to me daubed with filth, dirty, with a
moustache down to his knees, what can I say to him, by what kind of
resemblance can I lead him on? For about what has he busied himself
which resembles beauty, that I may be able to change him and say,
Beauty is not in this, but in that? Would you have me to tell him,
that beauty consists not in being daubed with muck, but that it
lies in the rational part? Has he any desire of beauty? has he any
form of it in his mind? Go and talk to a hog, and tell him not to
roll in the mud.</p>
<hr>
<p>ON ATTENTION.—When you have remitted your attention for a
short time, do not imagine this, that you will recover it when you
choose; but let this thought be present to you, that in consequence
of the fault committed today your affairs must be in a worse
condition for all that follows. For first, and what causes most
trouble, a habit of not attending is formed in you; then a habit of
deferring your attention. And continually from time to time you
drive away by deferring it the happiness of life, proper behavior,
the being and living conformably to nature. If then the
procrastination of attention is profitable, the complete omission
of attention is more profitable; but if it is not profitable, why
do you not maintain your attention constant? Today I choose to
play. Well then, ought you not to play with attention? I choose to
sing. What then hinders you from doing so with attention? Is there
any part of life excepted, to which attention does not extend? For
will you do it (anything in life) worse by using attention, and
better by not attending at all? And what else of the things in life
is done better by those who do not use attention? Does he who works
in wood work better by not attending to it? Does the captain of a
ship manage it better by not attending? and are any of the smaller
acts done better by inattention? Do you not see that when you have
let your mind loose, it is no longer in your power to recall it,
either to propriety, or to modesty, or to moderation; but you do
everything that comes into your mind in obedience to your
inclinations.</p>
<p>First then we ought to have these (rules) in readiness, and to
do nothing without them, and we ought to keep the soul directed to
this mark, to pursue nothing external, and nothing which belongs to
others (or is in the power of others), but to do as he has
appointed who has the power; we ought to pursue altogether the
things which are in the power of the will, and all other things as
it is permitted. Next to this we ought to remember who we are, and
what is our name, and to endeavor to direct our duties towards the
character (nature) of our several relations (in life) in this
manner: what is the season for singing, what is the season for
play, and in whose presence; what will be the consequence of the
act; whether our associates will despise us, whether we shall
despise them; when to jeer ([Greek: schopsai]), and whom to
ridicule; and on what occasion to comply and with whom; and
finally, in complying how to maintain our own character. But
wherever you have deviated from any of these rules, there is damage
immediately, not from anything external, but from the action
itself.</p>
<p>What then? is it possible to be free from faults (if you do all
this)? It is not possible; but this is possible, to direct your
efforts incessantly to being faultless. For we must be content if
by never remitting this attention we shall escape at least a few
errors. But now when you have said, Tomorrow I will begin to
attend, you must be told that you are saying this, Today I will be
shameless, disregardful of time and place, mean; it will be in the
power of others to give me pain; today I will be passionate and
envious. See how many evil things you are permitting yourself to
do. If it is good to use attention tomorrow, how much better is it
to do so today? if tomorrow it is in your interest to attend, much
more is it today, that you may be able to do so tomorrow also, and
may not defer it again to the third day.</p>
<hr>
<p>AGAINST OR TO THOSE WHO READILY TELL THEIR OWN
AFFAIRS.—When a man has seemed to us to have talked with
simplicity (candor) about his own affairs, how is it that at last
we are ourselves also induced to discover to him our own secrets
and we think this to be candid behavior? In the first place,
because it seems unfair for a man to have listened to the affairs
of his neighbor, and not to communicate to him also in turn our own
affairs; next, because we think that we shall not present to them
the appearance of candid men when we are silent about our own
affairs. Indeed, men are often accustomed to say, I have told you
all my affairs, will you tell me nothing of your own? where is this
done? Besides, we have also this opinion that we can safely trust
him who has already told us his own affairs; for the notion rises
in our mind that this man could never divulge our affairs because
he would be cautious that we also should not divulge his. In this
way also the incautious are caught by the soldiers at Rome. A
soldier sits by you in a common dress and begins to speak ill of
Cæsar; then you, as if you had received a pledge of his
fidelity by his having begun the abuse, utter yourself also what
you think, and then you are carried off in chains.</p>
<p>Something of this kind happens to us also generally. Now as this
man has confidently intrusted his affairs to me, shall I also do so
to any man whom I meet? (No), for when I have heard, I keep
silence, if I am of such a disposition; but he goes forth and tells
all men what he has heard. Then, if I hear what has been done, if I
be a man like him, I resolve to be revenged, I divulge what he has
told me; I both disturb others, and am disturbed myself. But if I
remember that one man does not injure another, and that every man's
acts injure and profit him, I secure this, that I do not anything
like him, but still I suffer what I do suffer through my own silly
talk.</p>
<p>True, but it is unfair when you have heard the secrets of your
neighbor for you in your turn to communicate nothing to him. Did I
ask you for your secrets, my man? did you communicate your affairs
on certain terms, that you should in return hear mine also? If you
are a babbler and think that all who meet you are friends, do you
wish me also to be like you? But why, if you did well in intrusting
your affairs to me, and it is not well for me to intrust mine to
you, do you wish me to be so rash? It is just the same as if I had
a cask which is water-tight, and you one with a hole in it, and you
should come and deposit with me your wine that I might put it into
my cask, and then should complain that I also did not intrust my
wine to you, for you have a cask with a hole in it. How then is
there any equality here? You intrusted your affairs to a man who is
faithful and modest, to a man who thinks that his own actions alone
are injurious and (or) useful, and that nothing external is. Would
you have me intrust mine to you, a man who has dishonored his own
faculty of will, and who wishes to gain some small bit of money or
some office or promotion in the court (emperor's palace), even if
you should be going to murder your own children, like Medea? Where
(in what) is this equality (fairness)? But show yourself to me to
be faithful, modest, and steady; show me that you have friendly
opinions; show that your cask has no hole in it; and you will see
how I shall not wait for you to trust me with your own affairs, but
I myself shall come to you and ask you to hear mine. For who does
not choose to make use of a good vessel? Who does not value a
benevolent and faithful adviser? Who will not willingly receive a
man who is ready to bear a share, as we may say, of the difficulty
of his circumstances, and by this very act to ease the burden, by
taking a part of it.</p>
<hr>
<SPAN name="RULE4_3"></SPAN>
<h2>THE ENCHEIRIDION, OR MANUAL.</h2>
<h3>I.</h3>
<p>Of things some are in our power, and others are not. In our
power are opinion ([Greek: hupolaepsis]), movement towards a thing
([Greek: hormae]), desire, aversion ([Greek: echchlisis]), turning
from a thing; and in a word, whatever are our acts. Not in our
power are the body, property, reputation, offices (magisterial
power), and in a word, whatever are not our own acts. And the
things in our power are by nature free, not subject to restraint or
hindrance; but the things not in our power are weak, slavish,
subject to restraint, in the power of others. Remember then, that
if you think the things which are by nature slavish to be free, and
the things which are in the power of others to be your own, you
will be hindered, you will lament, you will be disturbed, you will
blame both gods and men; but if you think that only which is your
own to be your own, and if you think that what is another's, as it
really is, belongs to another, no man will ever compel you, no man
will hinder you, you will never blame any man, you will accuse no
man, you will do nothing involuntarily (against your will), no man
will harm you, you will have no enemy, for you will not suffer any
harm.</p>
<p>If then you desire (aim at) such great things remember that you
must not (attempt to) lay hold of them with a small effort; but you
must leave alone some things entirely, and postpone others for the
present. But if you wish for these things also (such great things),
and power (office) and wealth, perhaps you will not gain even these
very things (power and wealth) because you aim also at those former
things (such great things); certainly you will fail in those things
through which alone happiness and freedom are secured. Straightway
then practise saying to every harsh appearance: You are an
appearance, and in no manner what you appear to be. Then examine it
by the rules which you possess, and by this first and chiefly,
whether it relates to the things which are in our power or to
things which are not in our power; and if it relates to anything
which is not in our power, be ready to say that it does not concern
you.</p>
<h3>II.</h3>
<p>Remember that desire contains in it the profession (hope) of
obtaining that which you desire; and the profession (hope) in
aversion (turning from a thing) is that you will not fall into that
which you attempt to avoid; and he who fails in his desire is
unfortunate; and he who falls into that which he would avoid is
unhappy. If then you attempt to avoid only the things contrary to
nature which are within your power you will not be involved in any
of the things which you would avoid. But if you attempt to avoid
disease, or death, or poverty, you will be unhappy. Take away then
aversion from all things which are not in our power, and transfer
it to the things contrary to nature which are in our power. But
destroy desire completely for the present. For if you desire
anything which is not in our power, you must be unfortunate; but of
the things in our power, and which it would be good to desire,
nothing yet is before you. But employ only the power of moving
towards an object and retiring from it; and these powers indeed
only slightly and with exceptions and with remission.</p>
<h3>III.</h3>
<p>In everything which pleases the soul, or supplies a want, or is
loved, remember to add this to the (description, notion): What is
the nature of each thing, beginning from the smallest? If you love
an earthen vessel, say it is an earthen vessel which you love; for
when it has been broken you will not be disturbed. If you are
kissing your child or wife, say that it is a human being whom you
are kissing, for when the wife or child dies you will not be
disturbed.</p>
<h3>IV.</h3>
<p>When you are going to take in hand any act remind yourself what
kind of an act it is. If you are going to bathe, place before
yourself what happens in the bath; some splashing the water, others
pushing against one another, others abusing one another, and some
stealing; and thus with more safety you will undertake the matter,
if you say to yourself, I now intend to bathe, and to maintain my
will in a manner conformable to nature. And so you will do in every
act; for thus if any hindrance to bathing shall happen let this
thought be ready. It was not this only that I intended, but I
intended also to maintain my will in a way conformable to nature;
but I shall not maintain it so if I am vexed at what happens.</p>
<h3>V.</h3>
<p>Men are disturbed not by the things which happen, but by the
opinions about the things; for example, death is nothing terrible,
for if it were it would have seemed so to Socrates; for the opinion
about death that it is terrible, is the terrible thing. When then
we are impeded, or disturbed, or grieved, let us never blame
others, but ourselves—that is, our opinions. It is the act of
an ill-instructed man to blame others for his own bad condition; it
is the act of one who has begun to be instructed, to lay the blame
on himself; and of one whose instruction is completed, neither to
blame another, nor himself.</p>
<h3>VI.</h3>
<p>Be not elated at any advantage (excellence) which belongs to
another. If a horse when he is elated should say, I am beautiful,
one might endure it. But when you are elated, and say, I have a
beautiful horse, you must know that you are elated at having a good
horse. What then is your own? The use of appearances. Consequently
when in the use of appearances you are conformable to nature, then
be elated, for then you will be elated at something good which is
your own.</p>
<h3>VII.</h3>
<p>As on a voyage when the vessel has reached a port, if you go out
to get water it is an amusement by the way to pick up a shellfish
or some bulb, but your thoughts ought to be directed to the ship,
and you ought to be constantly watching if the captain should call,
and then you must throw away all those things, that you may not be
bound and pitched into the ship like sheep. So in life also, if
there be given to you instead of a little bulb and a shell a wife
and child, there will be nothing to prevent (you from taking them).
But if the captain should call, run to the ship and leave all those
things without regard to them. But if you are old, do not even go
far from the ship, lest when you are called you make default.</p>
<h3>VIII.</h3>
<p>Seek not that the things which happen should happen as you wish;
but wish the things which happen to be as they are, and you will
have a tranquil flow of life.</p>
<h3>IX.</h3>
<p>Disease is an impediment to the body, but not to the will,
unless the will itself chooses. Lameness is an impediment to the
leg, but not to the will. And add this reflection on the occasion
of everything that happens; for you will find it an impediment to
something else, but not to yourself.</p>
<h3>X.</h3>
<p>On the occasion of every accident (event) that befalls you,
remember to turn to yourself and inquire what power you have for
turning it to use. If you see a fair man or a fair woman, you will
find that the power to resist is temperance (continence). If labor
(pain) be presented to you, you will find that it is endurance. If
it be abusive words, you will find it to be patience. And if you
have been thus formed to the (proper) habit, the appearances will
not carry you along with them.</p>
<h3>XI.</h3>
<p>Never say about anything, I have lost it, but say I have
restored it. Is your child dead? It has been restored. Is your wife
dead? She has been restored. Has your estate been taken from you?
Has not then this also been restored? But he who has taken it from
me is a bad man. But what is it to you, by whose hands the giver
demanded it back? So long as he may allow you, take care of it as a
thing which belongs to another, as travellers do with their
inn.</p>
<h3>XII.</h3>
<p>If you intend to improve, throw away such thoughts as these: if
I neglect my affairs, I shall not have the means of living: unless
I chastise my slave, he will be bad. For it is better to die of
hunger and so to be released from grief and fear than to live in
abundance with perturbation; and it is better for your slave to be
bad than for you to be unhappy. Begin then from little things. Is
the oil spilled? Is a little wine stolen? Say on the occasion, at
such price is sold freedom from perturbation; at such price is sold
tranquillity, but nothing is got for nothing. And when you call
your slave, consider that it is possible that he does not hear; and
if he does hear, that he will do nothing which you wish. But
matters are not so well with him, but altogether well with you,
that it should be in his power for you to be not disturbed.</p>
<h3>XIII.</h3>
<p>If you would improve, submit to be considered without sense and
foolish with respect to externals. Wish to be considered to know
nothing; and if you shall seem to some to be a person of
importance, distrust yourself. For you should know that it is not
easy both to keep your will in a condition conformable to nature
and (to secure) external things: but if a man is careful about the
one, it is an absolute necessity that he will neglect the
other.</p>
<h3>XIV.</h3>
<p>If you would have your children and your wife and your friends
to live for ever, you are silly; for you would have the things
which are not in your power to be in your power, and the things
which belong to others to be yours. So if you would have your slave
to be free from faults, you are a fool; for you would have badness
not to be badness, but something else. But if you wish not to fail
in your desires, you are able to do that. Practise then this which
you are able to do. He is the master of every man who has the power
over the things which another person wishes or does not wish, the
power to confer them on him or to take them away. Whoever then
wishes to be free let him neither wish for anything nor avoid
anything which depends on others: if he does not observe this rule,
he must be a slave.</p>
<h3>XV.</h3>
<p>Remember that in life you ought to behave as at a banquet.
Suppose that something is carried round and is opposite to you.
Stretch out your hand and take a portion with decency. Suppose that
it passes by you. Do not detain it. Suppose that it is not yet come
to you. Do not send your desire forward to it, but wait till it is
opposite to you. Do so with respect to children, so with respect to
a wife, so with respect to magisterial offices, so with respect to
wealth, and you will be some time a worthy partner of the banquets
of the gods. But if you take none of the things which are set
before you, and even despise them, then you will be not only a
fellow banqueter with the gods, but also a partner with them in
power. For by acting thus Diogenes and Heracleitus and those like
them were deservedly divine, and were so called.</p>
<h3>XVI.</h3>
<p>When you see a person weeping in sorrow either when a child goes
abroad or when he is dead, or when the man has lost his property,
take care that the appearance do not hurry you away with it, as if
he were suffering in external things. But straightway make a
distinction in your own mind, and be in readiness to say, it is not
that which has happened that afflicts this man, for it does not
afflict another, but it is the opinion about this thing which
afflicts the man. So far as words then do not be unwilling to show
him sympathy, and even if it happens so, to lament with him. But
take care that you do not lament internally also.</p>
<h3>XVII.</h3>
<p>Remember that thou art an actor in a play, of such a kind as the
teacher (author) may choose; if short, of a short one; if long, of
a long one: if he wishes you to act the part of a poor man, see
that you act the part naturally; if the part of a lame man, of a
magistrate, of a private person, (do the same). For this is your
duty, to act well the part that is given to you; but to select the
part, belongs to another.</p>
<h3>XVIII.</h3>
<p>When a raven has croaked inauspiciously, let not the appearance
hurry you away with it; but straightway make a distinction in your
mind and say, None of these things is signified to me, but either
to my poor body, or to my small property, or to my reputation, or
to my children, or to my wife: but to me all significations are
auspicious if I choose. For whatever of these things results, it is
in my power to derive benefit from it.</p>
<h3>XIX.</h3>
<p>You can be invincible, if you enter into no contest in which it
is not in your power to conquer. Take care then when you observe a
man honored before others or possessed of great power or highly
esteemed for any reason, not to suppose him happy, and be not
carried away by the appearance. For if the nature of the good is in
our power, neither envy nor jealousy will have a place in us. But
you yourself will not wish to be a general or senator ([Greek:
prutanis]) or consul, but a free man: and there is only one way to
this, to despise (care not for) the things which are not in our
power.</p>
<h3>XX.</h3>
<p>Remember that it is not he who reviles you or strikes you, who
insults you, but it is your opinion about these things as being
insulting. When then a man irritates you, you must know that it is
your own opinion which has irritated you. Therefore especially try
not to be carried away by the appearance. For if you once gain time
and delay, you will more easily master yourself.</p>
<h3>XXI.</h3>
<p>Let death and exile and every other thing which appears dreadful
be daily before your eyes; but most of all death: and you will
never think of anything mean nor will you desire anything
extravagantly.</p>
<h3>XXII.</h3>
<p>If you desire philosophy, prepare yourself from the beginning to
be ridiculed, to expect that many will sneer at you, and say, He
has all at once returned to us as a philosopher; and whence does he
get this supercilious look for us? Do you not show a supercilious
look; but hold on to the things which seem to you best as one
appointed by God to this station. And remember that if you abide in
the same principles, these men who first ridiculed will afterwards
admire you; but if you shall have been overpowered by them, you
will bring on yourself double ridicule.</p>
<h3>XXIII.</h3>
<p>If it should ever happen to you to be turned to externals in
order to please some person, you must know that you have lost your
purpose in life. Be satisfied then in everything with being a
philosopher; and if you wish to seem also to any person to be a
philosopher, appear so to yourself, and you will be able to do
this.</p>
<h3>XXIV.</h3>
<p>Let not these thoughts afflict you, I shall live unhonored and
be nobody nowhere. For if want of honor ([Greek: atimia]) is an
evil, you cannot be in evil through the means (fault) of another
any more than you can be involved in anything base. Is it then your
business to obtain the rank of a magistrate, or to be received at a
banquet? By no means. How then can this be want of honor
(dishonor)? And how will you be nobody nowhere, when you ought to
be somebody in those things only which are in your power, in which
indeed it is permitted to you to be a man of the greatest worth?
But your friends will be without assistance! What do you mean by
being without assistance? They will not receive money from you, nor
will you make them Roman citizens. Who then told you that these are
among the things which are in our power, and not in the power of
others? And who can give to another what he has not himself?
Acquire money then, your friends say, that we also may have
something. If I can acquire money and also keep myself modest and
faithful and magnanimous, point out the way, and I will acquire it.
But if you ask me to lose the things which are good and my own, in
order that you may gain the things which are not good, see how
unfair and silly you are. Besides, which would you rather have,
money or a faithful and modest friend? For this end then rather
help me to be such a man, and do not ask me to do this by which I
shall lose that character. But my country, you say, as far as it
depends on me, will be without my help. I ask again, what help do
you mean? It will not have porticos or baths through you. And what
does this mean? For it is not furnished with shoes by means of a
smith, nor with arms by means of a shoemaker. But it is enough if
every man fully discharges the work that is his own: and if you
provided it with another citizen faithful and modest, would you not
be useful to it? Yes. Then you also cannot be useless to it. What
place then, you say, shall I hold in the city? Whatever you can, if
you maintain at the same time your fidelity and modesty. But if
when you wish to be useful to the state, you shall lose these
qualities, what profit could you be to it, if you were made
shameless and faithless?</p>
<h3>XXV.</h3>
<p>Has any man been preferred before you at a banquet, or in being
saluted, or in being invited to a consultation? If these things are
good, you ought to rejoice that he has obtained them; but if bad,
be not grieved because you have not obtained them. And remember
that you cannot, if you do not the same things in order to obtain
what is not in our own power, be considered worthy of the same
(equal) things. For how can a man obtain an equal share with
another when he does not visit a man's doors as that other man
does; when he does not attend him when he goes abroad, as the other
man does; when he does not praise (flatter) him as another does?
You will be unjust then and insatiable, if you do not part with the
price, in return for which those things are sold, and if you wish
to obtain them for nothing. Well, what is the price of lettuces? An
obolus perhaps. If then a man gives up the obolus, and receives the
lettuces, and if you do not give up the obolus and do not obtain
the lettuces, do not suppose that you receive less than he who has
got the lettuces; for as he has the lettuces, so you have the
obolus which you did not give. In the same way then in the other
matter also you have not been invited to a man's feast, for you did
not give to the host the price at which the supper is sold; but he
sells it for praise (flattery), he sells it for personal attention.
Give then the price, if it is for your interest, for which it is
sold. But if you wish both not to give the price and to obtain the
things, you are insatiable and silly. Have you nothing then in
place of the supper? You have indeed, you have the not flattering
of him, whom you did not choose to flatter; you have the not
enduring of the man when he enters the room.</p>
<h3>XXVI.</h3>
<p>We may learn the wish (will) of nature from the things in which
we do not differ from one another: for instance, when your
neighbor's slave has broken his cup, or anything else, we are ready
to say forthwith, that it is one of the things which happen. You
must know then that when your cup also is broken, you ought to
think as you did when your neighbor's cup was broken. Transfer this
reflection to greater things also. Is another man's child or wife
dead? There is no one who would not say, This is an event incident
to man. But when a man's own child or wife is dead, forthwith he
calls out, Woe to me, how wretched I am! But we ought to remember
how we feel when we hear that it has happened to others.</p>
<h3>XXVII.</h3>
<p>As a mark is not set up for the purpose of missing the aim, so
neither does the nature of evil exist in the world.</p>
<h3>XXVIII.</h3>
<p>If any person was intending to put your body in the power of any
man whom you fell in with on the way, you would be vexed; but that
you put your understanding in the power of any man whom you meet,
so that if he should revile you, it is disturbed and troubled, are
you not ashamed at this?</p>
<h3>XXIX.</h3>
<p>In every act observe the things which come first, and those
which follow it; and so proceed to the act. If you do not, at first
you will approach it with alacrity, without having thought of the
things which will follow; but afterwards, when certain base (ugly)
things have shown themselves, you will be ashamed. A man wishes to
conquer at the Olympic games. I also wish indeed, for it is a fine
thing. But observe both the things which come first, and the things
which follow; and then begin the act. You must do everything
according to rule, eat according to strict orders, abstain from
delicacies, exercise yourself as you are bid at appointed times, in
heat, in cold, you must not drink cold water, nor wine as you
choose; in a word, you must deliver yourself up to the exercise
master as you do to the physician, and then proceed to the contest.
And sometimes you will strain the hand, put the ankle out of joint,
swallow much dust, sometimes be flogged, and after all this be
defeated. When you have considered all this, if you still choose,
go to the contest: if you do not you will behave like children, who
at one time play at wrestlers, another time as flute players, again
as gladiators, then as trumpeters, then as tragic actors. So you
also will be at one time an athlete, at another a gladiator, then a
rhetorician, then a philosopher, but with your whole soul you will
be nothing at all; but like an ape you imitate everything that you
see, and one thing after another pleases you. For you have not
undertaken anything with consideration, nor have you surveyed it
well; but carelessly and with cold desire. Thus some who have seen
a philosopher and having heard one speak, as Euphrates
speaks—and who can speak as he does?—they wish to be
philosophers themselves also. My man, first of all consider what
kind of thing it is; and then examine your own nature, if you are
able to sustain the character. Do you wish to be a pentathlete or a
wrestler? Look at your arms, your thighs, examine your loins. For
different men are formed by nature for different things. Do you
think that if you do these things, you can eat in the same manner,
drink in the same manner, and in the same manner loathe certain
things? You must pass sleepless nights, endure toil, go away from
your kinsmen, be despised by a slave, in everything have the
inferior part, in honor, in office, in the courts of justice, in
every little matter. Consider these things, if you would exchange
for them, freedom from passions, liberty, tranquillity. If not,
take care that, like little children, you be not now a philosopher,
then a servant of the publicani, then a rhetorician, then a
procurator (manager) for Cæsar. These things are not
consistent. You must be one man, either good or bad. You must
either cultivate your own ruling faculty, or external things. You
must either exercise your skill on internal things or on external
things; that is you must either maintain the position of a
philosopher or that of a common person.</p>
<h3>XXX.</h3>
<p>Duties are universally measured by relations ([Greek: tais
schsesi]). Is a man a father? The precept is to take care of him,
to yield to him in all things, to submit when he is reproachful,
when he inflicts blows. But suppose that he is a bad father. Were
you then by nature made akin to a good father? No; but to a father.
Does a brother wrong you? Maintain then your own position towards
him, and do not examine what he is doing, but what you must do that
your will shall be conformable to nature. For another will not
damage you, unless you choose: but you will be damaged then when
you shall think that you are damaged. In this way then you will
discover your duty from the relation of a neighbor, from that of a
citizen, from that of a general, if you are accustomed to
contemplate the relations.</p>
<h3>XXXI.</h3>
<p>As to piety towards the gods you must know that this is the
chief thing, to have right opinions about them, to think that they
exist, and that they administer the All well and justly; and you
must fix yourself in this principle (duty), to obey them, and to
yield to them in everything which happens, and voluntarily to
follow it as being accomplished by the wisest intelligence. For if
you do so, you will never either blame the gods, nor will you
accuse them of neglecting you. And it is not possible for this to
be done in any other way than by withdrawing from the things which
are not in our power, and by placing the good and the evil only in
those things which are in our power. For if you think that any of
the things which are not in our power is good or bad, it is
absolutely necessary that, when you do not obtain what you wish,
and when you fall into those things which you do not wish, you will
find fault and hate those who are the cause of them; for every
animal is formed by nature to this, to fly from and to turn from
the things which appear harmful and the things which are the cause
of the harm, but to follow and admire the things which are useful
and the causes of the useful. It is impossible then for a person
who thinks that he is harmed to be delighted with that which he
thinks to be the cause of the harm, as it is also impossible to be
pleased with the harm itself. For this reason also a father is
reviled by his son, when he gives no part to his son of the things
which are considered to be good; and it was this which made
Polynices and Eteocles enemies, the opinion that royal power was a
good. It is for this reason that the cultivator of the earth
reviles the gods, for this reason the sailor does, and the
merchant, and for this reason those who lose their wives and their
children. For where the useful (your interest) is, there also piety
is. Consequently he who takes care to desire as he ought and to
avoid ([Greek: echchlinein]) as he ought, at the same time also
cares after piety. But to make libations and to sacrifice and to
offer first-fruits according to the custom of our fathers, purely
and not meanly nor carelessly nor scantily nor above our ability,
is a thing which belongs to all to do.</p>
<h3>XXXII.</h3>
<p>When you have recourse to divination, remember that you do not
know how it will turn out, but that you are come to inquire from
the diviner. But of what kind it is, you know when you come, if
indeed you are a philosopher. For if it is any of the things which
are not in our power, it is absolutely necessary that it must be
neither good nor bad. Do not then bring to the diviner desire or
aversion ([Greek: echchlinein]): if you do, you will approach him
with fear. But having determined in your mind that everything which
shall turn out (result) is indifferent, and does not concern you,
and whatever it may be, for it will be in your power to use it
well, and no man will hinder this, come then with confidence to the
gods as your advisers. And then when any advice shall have been
given, remember whom you have taken as advisers, and whom you will
have neglected, if you do not obey them. And go to divination, as
Socrates said that you ought, about those matters in which all the
inquiry has reference to the result, and in which means are not
given either by reason nor by any other art for knowing the thing
which is the subject of the inquiry. Wherefore when we ought to
share a friend's danger, or that of our country, you must not
consult the diviner whether you ought to share it. For even if the
diviner shall tell you that the signs of the victims are unlucky,
it is plain that this is a token of death, or mutilation of part of
the body, or of exile. But reason prevails, that even with these
risks, we should share the dangers of our friend, and of our
country. Therefore attend to the greater diviner, the Pythian god,
who ejected from the temple him who did not assist his friend, when
he was being murdered.</p>
<h3>XXXIII.</h3>
<p>Immediately prescribe some character and some form to yourself,
which you shall observe both when you are alone and when you meet
with men.</p>
<p>And let silence be the general rule, or let only what is
necessary be said, and in few words. And rarely, and when the
occasion calls, we shall say something; but about none of the
common subjects, not about gladiators, nor horse-races, nor about
athletes, nor about eating or drinking, which are the usual
subjects; and especially not about men, as blaming them or praising
them, or comparing them. If then you are able, bring over by your
conversation, the conversation of your associates, to that which is
proper; but if you should happen to be confined to the company of
strangers, be silent.</p>
<p>Let not your laughter be much, nor on many occasions, nor
excessive.</p>
<p>Refuse altogether to take an oath, if it is possible; if it is
not, refuse as far as you are able.</p>
<p>Avoid banquets which are given by strangers and by ignorant
persons. But if ever there is occasion to join in them, let your
attention be carefully fixed, that you slip not into the manners of
the vulgar (the uninstructed). For you must know, that if your
companion be impure, he also who keeps company with him must become
impure, though he should happen to be pure.</p>
<p>Take (apply) the things which relate to the body as far as the
bare use, as food, drink, clothing, house, and slaves; but exclude
everything which is for show or luxury.</p>
<p>As to pleasure with women, abstain as far as you can before
marriage; but if you do indulge in it, do it in the way which is
conformable to custom. Do not however be disagreeable to those who
indulge in these pleasures, or reprove them; and do not often boast
that you do not indulge in them yourself.</p>
<p>If a man has reported to you, that a certain person speaks ill
of you, do not make any defence (answer) to what has been told you;
but reply, The man did not know the rest of my faults, for he would
not have mentioned these only.</p>
<p>It is not necessary to go to the theatres often: but if there is
ever a proper occasion for going, do not show yourself as being a
partisan of any man except yourself, that is, desire only that to
be done which is done, and for him only to gain the prize who gains
the prize; for in this way you will meet with no hindrance. But
abstain entirely from shouts and laughter at any (thing or person),
or violent emotions. And when you are come away, do not talk much
about what has passed on the stage, except about that which may
lead to your own improvement. For it is plain, if you do talk much,
that you admired the spectacle (more than you ought).</p>
<p>Do not go to the hearing of certain persons' recitations, nor
visit them readily. But if you do attend, observe gravity and
sedateness, and also avoid making yourself disagreeable.</p>
<p>When you are going to meet with any person, and particularly one
of those who are considered to be in a superior condition, place
before yourself what Socrates or Zeno would have done in such
circumstances, and you will have no difficulty in making a proper
use of the occasion.</p>
<p>When you are going to any of those who are in great power, place
before yourself that you will not find the man at home, that you
will be excluded, that the door will not be opened to you, that the
man will not care about you. And if with all this it is your duty
to visit him, bear what happens, and never say to yourself that it
was not worth the trouble. For this is silly, and marks the
character of a man who is offended by externals.</p>
<p>In company take care not to speak much and excessively about
your own acts or dangers; for as it is pleasant to you to make
mention of your own dangers, it is not so pleasant to others to
hear what has happened to you. Take care also not to provoke
laughter; for this is a slippery way towards vulgar habits, and is
also adapted to diminish the respect of your neighbors. It is a
dangerous habit also to approach obscene talk. When then, anything
of this kind happens, if there is a good opportunity, rebuke the
man who has proceeded to this talk; but if there is not an
opportunity, by your silence at least, and blushing and expression
of dissatisfaction by your countenance, show plainly that you are
displeased at such talk.</p>
<h3>XXXIV.</h3>
<p>If you have received the impression ([Greek: phantasion]) of any
pleasure, guard yourself against being carried away by it; but let
the thing wait for you, and allow yourself a certain delay on your
own part. Then think of both times, of the time when you will enjoy
the pleasure, and of the time after the enjoyment of the pleasure,
when you will repent and will reproach yourself. And set against
these things how you will rejoice, if you have abstained from the
pleasure, and how you will commend yourself. But if it seem to you
seasonable to undertake (do) the thing, take care that the charm of
it, and the pleasure, and the attraction of it shall not conquer
you; but set on the other side the consideration, how much better
it is to be conscious that you have gained this victory.</p>
<h3>XXXV.</h3>
<p>When you have decided that a thing ought to be done, and are
doing it, never avoid being seen doing it, though the many shall
form an unfavorable opinion about it. For if it is not right to do
it, avoid doing the thing; but if it is right, why are you afraid
of those who shall find fault wrongly?</p>
<h3>XXXVI.</h3>
<p>As the proposition, it is either day, or it is night, is of
great importance for the disjunctive argument, but for the
conjunctive, is of no value, so in a symposium (entertainment) to
select the larger share is of great value for the body, but for the
maintenance of the social feeling is worth nothing. When, then, you
are eating with another, remember, to look not only to the value
for the body of the things set before you, but also to the value of
the behavior towards the host which ought to be observed.</p>
<h3>XXXVII.</h3>
<p>If you have assumed a character above your strength, you have
both acted in this manner in an unbecoming way, and you have
neglected that which you might have fulfilled.</p>
<h3>XXXVIII.</h3>
<p>In walking about, as you take care not to step on a nail, or to
sprain your foot, so take care not to damage your own ruling
faculty; and if we observe this rule in every act, we shall
undertake this act with more security.</p>
<h3>XXXIX.</h3>
<p>The measure of possession (property) is to every man the body,
as the foot is of the shoe. If then you stand on this rule (the
demands of the body), you will maintain the measure; but if you
pass beyond it, you must then of necessity be hurried as it were
down a precipice. As also in the matter of the shoe, if you go
beyond the (necessities of the) foot, the shoe is gilded, then of a
purple color, then embroidered; for there is no limit to that which
has once passed the true measure.</p>
<h3>XL.</h3>
<p>Women forthwith from the age of fourteen are called by the men
mistresses ([Greek: churiai], dominæ). Therefore, since they
see that there is nothing else that they can obtain, but only the
power of lying with men, they begin to decorate themselves, and to
place all their hopes in this. It is worth our while then to take
care that they may know that they are valued (by men) for nothing
else than appearing (being) decent and modest and discreet.</p>
<h3>XLI.</h3>
<p>It is a mark of a mean capacity to spend much time on the things
which concern the body, such as much exercise, much eating, much
drinking, much easing of the body, much copulation. But these
things should be done as subordinate things; and let all your care
be directed to the mind.</p>
<h3>XLII.</h3>
<p>When any person treats you ill or speaks ill of you, remember
that he does this or says this because he thinks that it is his
duty. It is not possible then for him to follow that which seems
right to you, but that which seems right to himself. Accordingly if
he is wrong in his opinion, he is the person who is hurt, for he is
the person who has been deceived; for if a man shall suppose the
true conjunction to be false, it is not the conjunction which is
hindered, but the man who has been deceived about it. If you
proceed then from these opinions, you will be mild in temper to him
who reviles you; for say on each occasion, It seemed so to him.</p>
<h3>XLIII.</h3>
<p>Everything has two handles, the one by which it may be borne,
the other by which it may not. If your brother acts unjustly, do
not lay hold of the act by that handle wherein he acts unjustly,
for this is the handle which cannot be borne; but lay hold of the
other, that he is your brother, that he was nurtured with you, and
you will lay hold of the thing by that handle by which it can be
borne.</p>
<h3>XLIV.</h3>
<p>These reasonings do not cohere: I am richer than you, therefore
I am better than you; I am more eloquent than you, therefore I am
better than you. On the contrary, these rather cohere: I am richer
than you, therefore my possessions are greater than yours; I am
more eloquent than you, therefore my speech is superior to yours.
But you are neither possession nor speech.</p>
<h3>XLV.</h3>
<p>Does a man bathe quickly (early)? do not say that he bathes
badly, but that he bathes quickly. Does a man drink much wine? do
not say that he does this badly, but say that he drinks much. For
before you shall have determined the opinion how do you know
whether he is acting wrong? Thus it will not happen to you to
comprehend some appearances which are capable of being
comprehended, but to assent to others.</p>
<h3>XLVI.</h3>
<p>On no occasion call yourself a philosopher, and do not speak
much among the uninstructed about theorems (philosophical rules,
precepts); but do that which follows from them. For example, at a
banquet do not say how a man ought to eat, but eat as you ought to
eat. For remember that in this way Socrates also altogether avoided
ostentation. Persons used to come to him and ask to be recommended
by him to philosophers, and he used to take them to philosophers,
so easily did he submit to being overlooked. Accordingly, if any
conversation should arise among uninstructed persons about any
theorem, generally be silent; for there is great danger that you
will immediately vomit up what you have not digested. And when a
man shall say to you that you know nothing, and you are not vexed,
then be sure that you have begun the work (of philosophy). For even
sheep do not vomit up their grass and show to the shepherds how
much they have eaten; but when they have internally digested the
pasture, they produce externally wool and milk. Do you also show
not your theorems to the uninstructed, but show the acts which come
from their digestion.</p>
<h3>XLVII.</h3>
<p>When at a small cost you are supplied with everything for the
body, do not be proud of this; nor, if you drink water, say on
every occasion, I drink water. But consider first how much more
frugal the poor are than we, and how much more enduring of labor.
And if you ever wish to exercise yourself in labor and endurance,
do it for yourself, and not for others. Do not embrace statues; but
if you are ever very thirsty, take a draught of cold water and spit
it out, and tell no man.</p>
<h3>XLVIII.</h3>
<p>The condition and characteristic of an uninstructed person is
this: he never expects from himself profit (advantage) nor harm,
but from externals. The condition and characteristic of a
philosopher is this: he expects all advantage and all harm from
himself. The signs (marks) of one who is making progress are these:
he censures no man, he praises no man, he blames no man, he accuses
no man, he says nothing about himself as if he were somebody or
knew something; when he is impeded at all or hindered, he blames
himself; if a man praises him he ridicules the praiser to himself;
if a man censures him he makes no defence; he goes about like weak
persons, being careful not to move any of the things which are
placed, before they are firmly fixed; he removes all desire from
himself, and he transfers aversion ([Greek: echchlisin]) to those
things only of the things within our power which are contrary to
nature; he employs a moderate movement towards everything; whether
he is considered foolish or ignorant he cares not; and in a word he
watches himself as if he were an enemy and lying in ambush.</p>
<h3>XLIX.</h3>
<p>When a man is proud because he can understand and explain the
writings of Chrysippus, say to yourself, If Chrysippus had not
written obscurely, this man would have had nothing to be proud of.
But what is it that I wish? To understand nature and to follow it.
I inquire therefore who is the interpreter? and when I have heard
that it is Chrysippus, I come to him (the interpreter). But I do
not understand what is written, and therefore I seek the
interpreter. And so far there is yet nothing to be proud of. But
when I shall have found the interpreter, the thing that remains is
to use the precepts (the lessons). This itself is the only thing to
be proud of. But if I shall admire the exposition, what else have I
been made unless a grammarian instead of a philosopher? except in
one thing, that I am explaining Chrysippus instead of Homer. When,
then, any man says to me, Read Chrysippus to me, I rather blush,
when I cannot show my acts like to and consistent with his
words.</p>
<h3>L.</h3>
<p>Whatever things (rules) are proposed to you (for the conduct of
life) abide by them, as if they were laws, as if you would be
guilty of impiety if you transgressed any of them. And whatever any
man shall say about you, do not attend to it; for this is no affair
of yours. How long will you then still defer thinking yourself
worthy of the best things, and in no matter transgressing the
distinctive reason? Have you accepted the theorems (rules), which
it was your duty to agree to, and have you agreed to them? what
teacher then do you still expect that you defer to him the
correction of yourself? You are no longer a youth, but already a
full-grown man. If, then, you are negligent and slothful, and are
continually making procrastination after procrastination, and
proposal (intention) after proposal, and fixing day after day,
after which you will attend to yourself, you will not know that you
are not making improvement, but you will continue ignorant
(uninstructed) both while you live and till you die. Immediately
then think it right to live as a full-grown man, and one who is
making proficiency, and let everything which appears to you to be
the best be to you a law which must not be transgressed. And if
anything laborious or pleasant or glorious or inglorious be
presented to you, remember that now is the contest, now are the
Olympic games, and they cannot be deferred; and that it depends on
one defeat and one giving way that progress is either lost or
maintained. Socrates in this way became perfect, in all things
improving himself, attending to nothing except to reason. But you,
though you are not yet a Socrates, ought to live as one who wishes
to be a Socrates.</p>
<h3>LI.</h3>
<p>The first and most necessary place (part, [Greek: topos]) in
philosophy is the use of theorems (precepts, [Greek: theoraemata]),
for instance, that we must not lie; the second part is that of
demonstrations, for instance, How is it proved that we ought not to
lie? The third is that which is confirmatory of these two, and
explanatory, for example, How is this a demonstration? For what is
demonstration, what is consequence, what is contradiction, what is
truth, what is falsehood? The third part (topic) is necessary on
account of the second, and the second on account of the first; but
the most necessary and that on which we ought to rest is the first.
But we do the contrary. For we spend our time on the third topic,
and all our earnestness is about it; but we entirely neglect the
first. Therefore we lie; but the demonstration that we ought not to
lie we have ready to hand.</p>
<h3>LII.</h3>
<p>In every thing (circumstance) we should hold these maxims ready
to hand:</p>
<p class="poetic">Lead me, O Zeus, and thou O Destiny,<br/>
The way that I am bid by you to go:<br/>
To follow I am ready. If I choose not,<br/>
I make myself a wretch, and still must follow.<br/>
<br/>
But whoso nobly yields unto necessity,<br/>
We hold him wise, and skill'd in things divine.</p>
<p>And the third also: O Crito, if so it pleases the gods, so let
it be; Anytus and Melitus are able indeed to kill me, but they
cannot harm me.</p>
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