Theodorus, who was surnamed the Atheist, used to say that he held
out arguments with his right hand, but his hearers received them
with their left; so awkward people frequently take in a clumsy
manner the favours of fortune; but men of sense, as bees extract
honey from thyme which is the strongest and driest of herbs,725 so from the least
auspicious circumstances frequently derive advantage and
profit.
§ vi. We ought then to cultivate
such a habit as this, 294like the man who threw a stone at his dog,
and missed it, but hit his step-mother, and cried out, "Not so
bad." Thus we may often turn the edge of fortune when things turn
not out as we wish. Diogenes was driven into exile; "not so bad;"
for his exile made him turn philosopher. And Zeno of Cittium,726 when he heard that the
only merchantman he had was wrecked, cargo and all, said, "Fortune,
you treat me handsomely, since you reduce me to my threadbare cloak
and piazza."727 What prevents our
imitating such men as these? Have you failed to get some office?
You will be able to live in the country henceforth, and manage your
own affairs. Did you court the friendship of some great man, and
meet with a rebuff? You will live free from danger and cares. Have
you again had matters to deal with that required labour and
thought? "Warm water will not so much make the limbs soft by
soaking," to quote Pindar,728 as glory and honour and power make "labour
sweet, and toil to be no toil."729 Or has any bad luck or contumely fallen on you
in consequence of some calumny or from envy? The breeze is
favourable that will waft you to the Muses and the Academy, as it
did Plato when his friendship with Dionysius came to an end. It
does indeed greatly conduce to contentedness of mind to see how
famous men have borne the same troubles with an unruffled mind. For
example, does childlessness trouble you? Consider those kings of
the Romans, none of whom left his kingdom to a son. Are you
distressed at the pinch of poverty? Who of the Bœotians would
you rather prefer to be than Epaminondas, or of the Romans than
Fabricius? Has your wife been seduced? Have you never read that
inscription at Delphi,
"Agis the king of land and sea
erected me;"
and have you not heard that his wife Timæa was seduced by
Alcibiades, and in her whispers to her handmaidens called the child
that was born Alcibiades? Yet this did not prevent Agis from being
the most famous and greatest 295of the Greeks. Neither again
did the licentiousness of his daughter prevent Stilpo from leading
the merriest life of all the philosophers that were his
contemporaries. And when Metrocles reproached him with her life, he
said, "Is it my fault or hers?" And when Metrocles answered, "Her
fault, but your misfortune," he rejoined, "How say you? Are not
faults also slips?" "Certainly," said he. "And are not slips
mischances in those matters wherein we slip?" Metrocles assented.
"And are not mischances misfortunes in those matters wherein we
mischance?" By this gentle and philosophical argument he
demonstrated the Cynic's reproach to be an idle bark.
§ vii. But most people are
troubled and exasperated not only at the bad in their friends and
intimates, but also in their enemies. For railing and anger and
envy and malignity and jealousy and ill-will are the bane of those
that suffer from those infirmities, and trouble and exasperate the
foolish: as for example the quarrels of neighbours, and peevishness
of acquaintances, and the want of ability in those that manage
state affairs. By these things you yourself seem to me to be put
out not a little, as the doctors in Sophocles, who
"With bitter physic purge the
bitter bile,"730
so vexed and bitter are you at people's weaknesses and
infirmities, which is not reasonable in you. Even your own private
affairs are not always managed by simple and good and suitable
instruments, so to speak, but very frequently by sharp and crooked
ones. Do not think it then either your business, or an easy matter
either, to set all these things to rights. But if you take people
as they are, as the surgeon uses his bandages and instruments for
drawing teeth, and with cheerfulness and serenity welcome all that
happens, as you would look upon barking dogs as only following
their nature, you will be happier in the disposition you will then
have than you will be distressed at other people's disagreeableness
and shortcomings. For you will forget to make a collection of
disagreeable things,731 which 296now inundate, as some hollow and
low-lying ground, your littleness of mind and weakness, which fills
itself with other people's bad points. For seeing that some of the
philosophers censure compassion to the unfortunate (on the ground
that it is good to help our neighbours, and not to give way to
sentimental sympathy in connection with them), and, what is of more
importance, do not allow those that are conscious of their errors
and bad moral disposition to be dejected and grieved at them, but
bid them cure their defects without grief at once, is it not
altogether unreasonable, look you, to allow ourselves to be peevish
and vexed, because all those who have dealings with us and come
near us are not good and clever? Let us see to it, dear Paccius,
that we do not, whether we are aware of it or not, play a part,
really looking732 not at the universal defects of those that
approach us, but at our own interests through our selfishness, and
not through our hatred of evil. For excessive excitement about
things, and an undue appetite and desire for them, or on the other
hand aversion and dislike to them, engender suspiciousness and
peevishness against persons, who were, we think, the cause of our
being deprived of some things, and of being troubled with others.
But he that is accustomed to adapt himself to things easily and
calmly is most cheerful and gentle in his dealings with people.
§ viii. Wherefore let us resume
our argument. As in a fever everything seems bitter and unpleasant
to the taste, but when we see others not loathing but fancying the
very same eatables and drinkables, we no longer find the fault to
be in them but in ourselves and our disease, so we shall cease to
blame and be discontented with the state of affairs, if we see
others cheerfully and without grief enduring the same. It also
makes for contentedness, when things happen against our wish, not
to overlook our many advantages and comforts, but by looking at
both good and bad to feel that the good preponderate. When our eyes
are dazzled with things too bright we turn them away, and ease them
by looking at flowers or grass, while we keep the eyes of our mind
strained on disagreeable things, and force 297them to dwell on bitter
ideas, well-nigh tearing them away by force from the consideration
of pleasanter things. And yet one might apply here, not unaptly,
what was said to the man of curiosity,733
"Malignant wretch, why art so
keen to mark Thy neighbour's fault, and
seest not thine own?"
Why on earth, my good sir, do you confine your view to your
troubles, making them so vivid and acute, while you do not let your
mind dwell at all on your present comforts? But as cupping-glasses
draw the worst blood from the flesh, so you force upon your
attention the worst things in your lot: acting not a whit more
wisely than that Chian, who, selling much choice wine to others,
asked for some sour wine for his own supper; and one of his slaves
being asked by another, what he had left his master doing, replied,
"Asking for bad when good was by." For most people overlook the
advantages and pleasures of their individual lives, and run to
their difficulties and grievances. Aristippus, however, was not
such a one, for he cleverly knew as in a scale to make the better
preponderate over the worse. So having lost a good farm, he asked
one of those who made a great show of condolence and sympathy,
"Have you not only one little piece of ground, while I have three
fields left?" And when he admitted that it was so, he went on to
say, "Ought I not then to condole with you rather than you with
me?" For it is the act of a madman to distress oneself over what is
lost, and not to rejoice at what is left; but like little children,
if one of their many playthings be taken away by anyone, throw the
rest away and weep and cry out, so we, if we are assailed by
fortune in some one point, wail and mourn and make all other things
seem unprofitable in our eyes.
§ ix. Suppose someone should
say, What blessings have we? I would reply, What have we not? One
has reputation, another a house, another a wife, another a good
friend. When Antipater of Tarsus was reckoning up on his death-bed
his various pieces of good fortune, he did not 298even pass
over his favourable voyage from Cilicia to Athens. So we should not
overlook, but take account of everyday blessings, and rejoice
that we live, and are well, and see the sun, and that no war or
sedition plagues our country, but that the earth is open to
cultivation, the sea secure to mariners, and that we can speak or
be silent, lead a busy or an idle life, as we choose. We shall get
more contentedness from the presence of all these blessings, if we
fancy them as absent, and remember from time to time how people ill
yearn for health, and people in war for peace, and strangers and
unknown in a great city for reputation and friends, and how painful
it is to be deprived of all these when one has once had them. For
then each of these blessings will not appear to us only great and
valuable when it is lost, and of no value while we have it. For not
having it cannot add value to anything. Nor ought we to amass
things we regard as valuable, and always be on the tremble and
afraid of losing them as valuable things, and yet, when we have
them, ignore them and think little of them; but we ought to use
them for our pleasure and enjoyment, that we may bear their loss,
if that should happen, with more equanimity. But most people, as
Arcesilaus said, think it right to inspect minutely and in every
detail, perusing them alike with the eyes of the body and mind,
other people's poems and paintings and statues, while they neglect
to study their own lives, which have often many not unpleasing
subjects for contemplation, looking abroad and ever admiring other
people's reputations and fortunes, as adulterers admire other men's
wives, and think cheap of their own.
§ x. And yet it makes much for
contentedness of mind to look for the most part at home and to our
own condition, or if not, to look at the case of people worse off
than ourselves, and not, as most people do, to compare ourselves
with those who are better off. For example, those who are in chains
think those happy who are freed from their chains, and they again
freemen, and freemen citizens, and they again the rich, and the
rich satraps, and satraps kings, and kings the gods, content with
hardly anything short of hurling thunderbolts and lightning. And so
they ever299 want something above them, and are never
thankful for what they have.
"I care not for the wealth of
golden Gyges,"
and,
"I never had or envy or
desire To be a god, or love for mighty
empire, Far distant from my eyes are all
such things."
But this, you will say, was the language of a Thasian. But you
will find others, Chians or Galatians or Bithynians, not content
with the share of glory or power they have among their
fellow-citizens, but weeping because they do not wear senators'
shoes; or, if they have them, that they cannot be prætors at
Rome; or, if they get that office, that they are not consuls; or,
if they are consuls, that they are only proclaimed second and not
first. What is all this but seeking out excuses for being
unthankful to fortune, only to torment and punish oneself? But he
that has a mind in sound condition, does not sit down in sorrow and
dejection if he is less renowned or rich than some of the countless
myriads of mankind that the sun looks upon, "who feed on the
produce of the wide world,"734 but goes on his way rejoicing at his fortune and
life, as far fairer and happier than that of myriads of others. In
the Olympian games it is not possible to be the victor by choosing
one's competitors. But in the race of life circumstances allow us
to plume ourselves on surpassing many, and to be objects of envy
rather than to have to envy others, unless we pit ourselves against
a Briareus or a Hercules. Whenever then you admire anyone carried
by in his litter as a greater man than yourself, lower your eyes
and look at those that bear the litter. And when you think the
famous Xerxes happy for his passage over the Hellespont, as a
native of those parts735 did, look too at those who dug through Mount
Athos under the lash, and at those whose ears and noses were cut
off because the bridge was broken by the waves, consider their
state of mind also, for they think your life and fortunes happy.
Socrates, when he heard one of his friends saying, "How 300dear
this city is! Chian wine costs one mina,736 a purple robe three, and half a pint of honey
five drachmæ," took him to the meal market, and showed him
half a peck of meal for an obol, then took him to the olive market,
and showed him a peck of olives for two coppers, and lastly showed
him that a sleeveless vest737 was only ten drachmæ. At each place
Socrates' friend exclaimed, "How cheap this city is!" So also we,
when we hear anyone saying that our affairs are bad and in a woful
plight, because we are not consuls or governors, may reply, "Our
affairs are in an admirable condition, and our life an enviable
one, seeing that we do not beg, nor carry burdens, nor live by
flattery."
§ xi. But since through our folly we are accustomed to
live more with an eye to others than ourselves, and since nature is
so jealous and envious that it rejoices not so much in its own
blessings as it is pained by those of others, do not look only at
the much-cried-up splendour of those whom you envy and admire, but
open and draw, as it were, the gaudy curtain of their pomp and
show, and peep within, you will see that they have much to trouble
them, and many things to annoy them. The well-known Pittacus,738 whose fame was so
great for fortitude and wisdom and uprightness, was once
entertaining some guests, and his wife came in in a rage and upset
the table, and as the guests were dismayed he said, Every one of
you has some trouble, and he who has mine only is not so bad
off.
"Happy is he accounted at the
forum, But when he opens the door of his own
house Thrice miserable; for his wife rules
all, Still lords it over him, and is ever
quarrelling. Many griefs has he that I wot
not of."
Many such cases are there, unknown to the public, for family
pride casts a veil over them, to be found in wealth and glory and
even in royalty.
"O happy son of Atreus, child
of destiny, Blessed thy lot;"739
congratulation like this comes from an external view, from a
halo of arms and horses and the pomp of war, but the inward voice
of emotion testifies against all this vain glory;
301"A heavy fate is laid on
me by Zeus The son of Cronos."740
And,
"Old man, I think your lot one
to be envied, As that of any man who free
from danger Passes his life unknown and in
obscurity."741
By such reflections as these one may wean oneself from that
discontent with one's fortune, which makes one's own condition look
low and mean from too much admiring one's neighbour's.
§ xii. Another thing, which is a great hindrance to
peace of mind, is not to proportion our desires to our means, but
to carry too much sail, as it were, in our hopes of great things
and then, if unsuccessful, to blame destiny and fortune, and not
our own folly. For he is not unfortunate who wishes to shoot with a
plough, or hunt the hare with an ox; nor has he an evil genius
opposed to him, who does not catch deer with fishing nets, but
merely is the dupe of his own stupidity and folly in attempting
impossibilities. Self-love is mainly to blame, making people fond
of being first and aspiring in all matters, and insatiably desirous
to engage in everything. For people not only wish at one and the
same time to be rich, and learned, and strong, and boon-companions,
and agreeable, and friends of kings, and governors of cities, but
they are also discontented if they have not dogs and horses and
quails and cocks of the first quality. Dionysius the elder was not
content with being the most powerful monarch of his times, but
because he could not beat Philoxenus the poet in singing, or
surpass Plato in dialectics, was so angry and exasperated that he
put the one to work in his stone quarries, and sent the other to
Ægina and sold him there. Alexander was of a different
spirit, for when Crisso the famous runner ran a race with him, and
seemed to let the king outrun him on purpose, he was greatly
displeased. Good also was the spirit of Achilles in Homer, who,
when he said,
"None of the Achæan
warriors is a match For me in
war,"
302added,
"Yet in the council hall Others there are who better are than me."742
And when Megabyzus the Persian visited the studio of Apelles,
and began to chatter about art, Apelles stopped him and said,
"While you kept silence you seemed to be somebody from your gold
and purple, but now these lads that are grinding colours are
laughing at your nonsense." But some who think the Stoics only talk
idly, in styling their wise man not only prudent and just and brave
but also orator and general and poet and rich man and king, yet
claim for themselves all those titles, and are indignant if they do
not get them. And yet even among the gods different functions are
assigned to different personages; thus one is called the god of
war, another the god of oracles, another the god of gain, and
Aphrodite, as she has nothing to do with warlike affairs, is
despatched by Zeus to marriages and bridals.
§ xiii. And indeed there are some pursuits which
cannot exist together, but are by their very nature opposed. For
example oratory and the study of the mathematics require ease and
leisure; whereas political ability and the friendship of kings
cannot be attained without mixing in affairs and in public life.
Moreover wine and indulgence in meat make the body indeed strong
and vigorous, but blunt the intellect; and though unremitting
attention to making and saving money will heap up wealth, yet
despising and contemning riches is a great help to philosophy. So
that all things are not within any one's power, and we must obey
that saying inscribed in the temple of Apollo at Delphi, Know
thyself,743 and adapt
ourselves to our natural bent, and not drag and force nature to
some other kind of life or pursuit. "The horse to the chariot, and
the ox to the plough, and swiftly alongside the ship scuds the
dolphin, while he that meditates destruction for the boar must find
a staunch hound."744 But he that chafes and is grieved that he is not
at one and the same time "a lion reared on the mountains, exulting
in his strength,"745 and a little Maltese 303lap-dog746 reared in the lap of a
rich widow, is out of his senses. And not a whit wiser is he who
wishes to be an Empedocles, or Plato, or Democritus, and write
about the world and the real nature of things, and at the same time
to be married like Euphorion to a rich wife, or to revel and drink
with Alexander like Medius; and is grieved and vexed if he is not
also admired for his wealth like Ismenias, and for his virtue like
Epaminondas. But runners are not discontented because they do not
carry off the crowns of wrestlers, but rejoice and delight in their
own crowns. "You are a citizen of Sparta: see you make the most of
her." So too said Solon:
"We will not change our virtue
for their wealth, For virtue never dies,
but wealth has wings, And flies about from
one man to another."
And Strato the natural philosopher, when he heard that Menedemus
had many more pupils than he had, said, "Is it wonderful at all
that more wish to wash than to be anointed?" And Aristotle, writing
to Antipater, said, "Not only has Alexander a right to plume
himself on his rule over many subjects, but no less legitimate is
satisfaction at entertaining right opinions about the gods." For
those that think so highly of their own walk in life will not be so
envious about their neighbours'. We do not expect a vine to bear
figs, nor an olive grapes, yet now-a-days, with regard to
ourselves, if we have not at one and the same time the privilege of
being accounted rich and learned, generals and philosophers,
flatterers and outspoken, stingy and extravagant, we slander
ourselves and are dissatisfied, and despise ourselves as living a
maimed and imperfect life. Furthermore, we see that nature teaches
us the same lesson.747 For as she provides different kinds of beasts
with different kinds of food, and has not made all carnivorous, or
seed-pickers, or root-diggers, so she has given to mankind various
means of getting a livelihood, "one by keeping sheep, another by
ploughing, another by fowling,"748 and another by catching the fish of the sea.
304We ought each therefore to select the
calling appropriate for ourselves and labour energetically in it,
and leave other people to theirs, and not demonstrate Hesiod as
coming short of the real state of things when he said,
"Potter is wroth with potter,
smith with smith."749
For not only do people envy those of the same trade and manner
of life, but the rich envy the learned, and the famous the rich,
and advocates sophists, aye, and freemen and patricians admire and
think happy comedians starring it at the theatres, and dancers, and
the attendants at kings' courts, and by all this envy give
themselves no small trouble and annoyance.
§ xiv. But that every man has in
himself the magazines of content or discontent, and that the jars
containing blessings and evils are not on the threshold of Zeus,750 but lie stored in the
mind, is plain from the differences of men's passions. For the
foolish overlook and neglect present blessings, through their
thoughts being ever intent on the future; but the wise make the
past clearly present to them through memory. For the present giving
only a moment of time to the touch, and then evading our grasp,
does not seem to the foolish to be ours or to belong to us at all.
And like that person751 painted as rope-making in Hades and permitting
an ass feeding by to eat up the rope as fast as he makes it, so the
stupid and thankless forgetfulness of most people comes upon them
and takes possession of them, and obliterates from their mind every
past action, whether success, or pleasant leisure, or society, or
enjoyment, and breaks the unity of life which arises from the past
being blended with the present; for detaching to-day from both
yesterday and to-morrow, it soon makes every event as if it had
never happened from lack of memory. For as those in the schools,
who deny the growth of our bodies by reason of the continual flux
of substance, make each of us in theory different from himself and
another man, so those who do not keep or recall to their memory
former things, but let them drift, actually empty them305selves
daily, and hang upon the morrow, as if what happened a year ago, or
even yesterday and the day before yesterday, had nothing to do with
them, and had hardly occurred at all.
§ xv. This is one great
hindrance to contentedness of mind, and another still greater is
whenever, like flies that slide down smooth places in mirrors, but
stick fast in rough places or where there are cracks, men let
pleasant and agreeable things glide from their memory, and pin
themselves down to the remembrance of unpleasant things; or rather,
as at Olynthus they say beetles, when they get into a certain place
called Destruction-to-beetles, cannot get out, but fly round and
round till they die, so men will glide into the remembrance of
their woes, and will not give themselves a respite from sorrow.
But, as we use our brightest colours in a picture, so in the mind
we ought to look at the cheerful and bright side of things, and
hide and keep down the gloomy, for we cannot altogether obliterate
or get rid of it. For, as the strings of the bow and lyre are
alternately tightened and relaxed, so is it with the order of the
world; in human affairs there is nothing pure and without alloy.
But as in music there are high and low notes, and in grammar vowels
and mutes, but neither the musician nor grammarian decline to use
either kinds, but know how to blend and employ them both for their
purpose, so in human affairs which are balanced one against
another,—for, as Euripides says,
"There is no good without ill
in the world, But everything is mixed in
due proportion,"—
we ought not to be disheartened or despondent; but as musicians
drown their worst music with the best, so should we take good and
bad together, and make our chequered life one of convenience and
harmony. For it is not, as Menander says,
"Directly any man is born, a
genius Befriends him, a good guide to him
for life,"
but it is rather, as Empedocles states, two fates or genii take
hold of each of us when we are born and govern us. "There were
Chthonia and far-seeing Heliope, and cruel Deris, and grave
Harmonia, and Callisto, and Æschra, and306 Thoosa,
and Denæa, and charming Nemertes, and Asaphea with the black
fruit."
§ xvi. And as752 at our birth we
received the mingled seeds of each of these passions, which is the
cause of much irregularity, the sensible person hopes for better
things, but expects worse, and makes the most of either,
remembering that wise maxim, Not too much of anything. For
not only will he who is least solicitous about to-morrow best enjoy
it when it comes, as Epicurus says, but also wealth, and renown,
and power and rule, gladden most of all the hearts of those who are
least afraid of the contrary. For the immoderate desire for each,
implanting a most immoderate fear of losing them, makes the
enjoyment of them weak and wavering, like a flame under the
influence of a wind. But he whom reason enables to say to fortune
without fear or trembling,
"If you bring any good I
gladly welcome it, But if you fail me
little does it trouble me,"
he can enjoy the present with most zest through his confidence,
and absence of fear of the loss of what he has, which would be
unbearable. For we may not only admire but also imitate the
behaviour of Anaxagoras, which made him cry out at the death of his
son, "I knew I had begot a mortal," and apply it to every
contingency. For example, "I know that wealth is ephemeral and
insecure; I know that those who gave power can take it away again;
I know that my wife is good, but still a woman; and that my friend,
since a human being, is by nature a changeable animal, to use
Plato's expression." For such a prepared frame of mind, if anything
happens unwished for but not unexpected, not admitting of such
phrases as "I shouldn't have dreamed of it," or "I expected quite a
different lot," or "I didn't look for this," abates the violent753 beatings and
palpitations of the heart, and quickly causes wild unrest to
subside. Carneades indeed reminds us that in great matters the
unexpected makes the sum total of grief and dejection. Certainly
the kingdom of Macedonia was many times smaller than the Roman
Empire, but when 307Perseus lost Macedonia, he not only
himself bewailed his wretched fate, but seemed to all men the most
unfortunate and unlucky of mankind; yet Æmilius who conquered
him, though he had to give up to another the command both by land
and sea, yet was crowned, and offered sacrifice, and was justly
esteemed happy. For he knew that he had taken a command which he
would have to give up, but Perseus lost his kingdom without
expecting it. Well also has the poet754 shown the power of anything that happens
unexpectedly. For Odysseus wept bitterly at the death of his dog,
but was not so moved when he sat by his wife who wept, for in the
latter case he had come fully determined to keep his emotion under
the control of reason, whereas in the former it was against his
expectation, and therefore fell upon him as a sudden blow.
§ xvii. And since generally
speaking some things which happen against our will pain and trouble
us by their very nature, while in the case of most we accustom
ourselves and learn to be disgusted with them from fancy, it is not
unprofitable to counteract this to have ever ready that line of
Menander,
"You suffer no dread thing but
in your fancy."
For what, if they touch you neither in soul nor body, are such
things to you as the low birth of your father, or the adultery of
your wife, or the loss of some prize or precedence, since even by
their absence a man is not prevented from being in excellent
condition both of body and soul. And with respect to the things
that seem to pain us by their very nature, as sickness, and
anxieties, and the deaths of friends and children, we should
remember, that line of Euripides,
"Alas! and why alas? we only
suffer What mortals must
expect."
For no argument has so much weight with emotion when it is borne
down with grief, as that which reminds it of the common and natural
necessity to which man is exposed owing to the body, the only
handle which he gives to fortune, for in his most important and
influential part755 he is 308secure against external things. When
Demetrius captured Megara, he asked Stilpo if any of his things had
been plundered, and Stilpo answered, "I saw nobody carrying off
anything of mine."756 And so when fortune has plundered us and
stripped us of everything else, we have that within ourselves
"Which the Achæans ne'er
could rob us of."757
So that we ought not altogether to abase and lower nature, as if
she had no strength or stability against fortune; but on the
contrary, knowing that the rotten and perishable part of man,
wherein alone he lies open to fortune, is small, while we ourselves
are masters of the better part, wherein are situated our greatest
blessings, as good opinions and teaching and virtuous precepts, all
which things cannot be abstracted from us or perish, we ought to
look on the future with invincible courage, and say to fortune, as
Socrates is supposed to have said to his accusers Anytus and
Melitus before the jury, "Anytus and Melitus can kill me, but they
cannot hurt me." For fortune can afflict us with disease, take away
our money, calumniate us to the people or king, but cannot make a
good and brave and high-souled man bad and cowardly and low and
ignoble and envious, nor take away that disposition of mind, whose
constant presence is of more use for the conduct of life than the
presence of a pilot at sea. For the pilot cannot make calm the wild
wave or wind, nor can he find a haven at his need wherever he
wishes, nor can he await his fate with confidence and without
trembling, but as long as he has not despaired, but uses his skill,
he scuds before the gale, "lowering his big sail, till his lower
mast is only just above the sea dark as Erebus," and sits at the
helm trembling and quaking. But the disposition of a wise man gives
calm even to the body, mostly cutting off the causes of diseases by
temperance and plain living and moderate exercise; but if some
beginning of trouble arise from without, as we avoid a sunken rock,
so he passes by it with furled sail, as Asclepiades puts it; but if
some unexpected 309 and tremendous gale come upon him and
prove too much for him, the harbour is at hand, and he can swim
away from the body, as from a leaky boat.
§ xviii. For it is the fear of
death, and not the desire of life, that makes the foolish person to
hang to the body, clinging to it, as Odysseus did to the fig-tree
from fear of Charybdis that lay below,
"Where the wind neither let
him stay, or sail,"
so that he was displeased at this, and afraid of that. But he
who understands somehow or other the nature of the soul, and
reflects that the change it will undergo at death will be either to
something better or at least not worse, he has in his fearlessness
of death no small help to ease of mind in life. For to one who can
enjoy life when virtue and what is congenial to him have the upper
hand, and that can fearlessly depart from life, when uncongenial
and unnatural things are in the ascendant, with the words on his
lips,
"The deity shall free me, when
I will,"758
what can we imagine could befall such a man as this that would
vex him and wear him and harass him? For he who said, "I have
anticipated you, O fortune, and cut off all your loopholes to get
at me," did not trust to bolts or keys or walls, but to
determination and reason, which are within the power of all persons
that choose. And we ought not to despair or disbelieve any of these
sayings, but admiring them and emulating them and being
enthusiastic about them, we ought to try and test ourselves in
smaller matters with a view to greater, not avoiding or rejecting
that self-examination, nor sheltering ourselves under the remark,
"Perhaps nothing will be more difficult." For inertia759 and softness are
generated by that self-indulgence which ever occupies itself only
with the easiest tasks, and flees from the disagreeable to what is
most pleasant. But the soul that accustoms itself to face steadily
sickness and grief and exile, and calls in reason to its help in
each case, will find in what appears so sore and 310dreadful
much that is false, empty, and rotten, as reason will show in each
case.
§ xix. And yet many shudder at
that line of Menander,
"No one can say, I shall not
suffer this or that,"
being ignorant how much it helps us to freedom from grief to
practise to be able to look fortune in the face with our eyes open,
and not to entertain fine and soft fancies, like one reared in the
shade on many hopes that always yield and never resist. We can,
however, answer Menander's line,
"No one can say, I shall not
suffer this or that,"
for a man can say, "I will not do this or that, I will not lie,
I will not play the rogue, I will not cheat, I will not scheme."
For this is in our power, and is no small but great help to ease of
mind. As on the contrary
"The consciousness of having
done ill deeds,"760
like a sore in the flesh, leaves in the mind a regret which ever
wounds it and pricks it. For reason banishes all other griefs, but
itself creates regret when the soul is vexed with shame and
self-tormented. For as those who shudder in ague-fits or burn in
fevers feel more trouble and distress than those who externally
suffer the same from cold or heat, so the grief is lighter which
comes externally from chance, but that lament,
"None is to blame for this but
I myself,"
coming from within on one's own misdeeds, intensifies one's
bitterness by the shame felt. And so neither costly house, nor
quantity of gold, nor pride of race, nor weighty office, nor grace
of language, nor eloquence, impart so much calm and serenity to
life, as a soul pure from evil acts and desires, having an
imperturbable and undefiled character as the source of its life;
whence good actions flow, producing an enthusiastic and cheerful
energy accompanied by loftiness of thought, and a memory sweeter
and more lasting than that hope which Pindar says is the support of
old age. Censers do not, as Carneades said, after they are emptied,
long retain their sweet smell; but in the mind of the wise man good
actions always leave a fresh and fragrant memory, by which joy is
watered and flourishes, and 311despises those who wail over
life and abuse it as a region of ills, or as a place of exile for
souls in this world.
§ xx. I am very taken with
Diogenes' remark to a stranger at Lacedæmon, who was dressing
with much display for a feast, "Does not a good man consider every
day a feast?" And a very great feast too, if we live soberly. For
the world is a most holy and divine temple, into which man is
introduced at his birth, not to behold motionless images made by
hands, but those things (to use the language of Plato) which the
divine mind has exhibited as the visible representations of
invisible things, having innate in them the principle of life and
motion, as the sun moon and stars, and rivers ever flowing with
fresh water, and the earth affording maintenance to plants and
animals. Seeing then that life is the most complete initiation into
all these things, it ought to be full of ease of mind and joy; not
as most people wait for the festivals of Cronos761 and Dionysus and the
Panathenæa and other similar days, that they may joy and
refresh themselves with bought laughter, paying actors and dancers
for the same. On such occasions indeed we sit silently and
decorously, for no one wails when he is initiated, or groans when
he beholds the Pythian games, or when he is drinking at the
festival of Cronos:761 but men shame the festivals which the deity
supplies us with and initiates us in, passing most of their time in
lamentation and heaviness of heart and distressing anxiety. And
though men delight in the pleasing notes of musical instruments,
and in the songs of birds, and behold with joy the animals playing
and frisking, and on the contrary are distressed when they roar and
howl and look savage; yet in regard to their own life, when they
see it without smiles and dejected, and ever oppressed and
afflicted by the most wretched sorrows and toils and unending
cares, they do not think of trying to procure alleviation and ease.
How is this? Nay, they will not even listen to others' exhortation,
which would enable them to acquiesce in the present without
repining, and to remember the past with thankfulness, and to meet
the future hopefully and cheerfully without fear or suspicion.A mina was
100 drachmæ (i.e. £4. 1s. 3d.),
and 600 obols.
Historia exstat initio libri quinti Cyropædiæ
ResponEliminaWOOOH 15 CENTS A DAY ARE TWO BILLION DOLLARS OF ZIMBABWE
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