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Seneca - Moral letters to Lucilius

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Seneca Moral letters to Lucilius

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The Roman statesman and philosopher Seneca (4 BCE-65 CE) recorded his moral philosophy and reflections on life as a highly original kind of correspondence. Letters on Ethics includes vivid descriptions of poetry and oratory, and philosophical training for Senecas friend Lucilius. This volume, the first complete English translation in nearly a century, makes the Letters more accessible than ever before. Written as much for a general audience as for Lucilius, these engaging letters offer advice on how to deal with everything from nosy neighbors to sickness, pain, and death. Seneca uses the informal format of the letter to present the central ideas of Stoicism, for centuries the most influential philosophical system in the Mediterranean world. His lively and at times humorous expositions have made the Letters his most popular work and an enduring classic. Including an introduction and explanatory notes by Margaret Graver and A.A. Long, this authoritative edition will captivate a new generation of readers. -- from dust jacket.;Taking charge of your time -- A beneficial reading program -- Trusting ones friends -- Coming to terms with death -- Our inward and outward lives -- Intimacy within friendship -- Avoiding the crowd -- Writing as a form of service -- Friendship and self-sufficiency -- Communing with oneself -- Blushing -- Visiting a childhood home -- Anxieties about the future -- Safety in a dangerous world -- Exercises for the body and the voice -- Daily study and practice -- Saving for retirement -- The Saturnalia festival -- The satisfactions of retirement -- The importance of being consistent -- How reading can make you famous -- Giving up a career -- Real joy is a serious matter -- Courage in a threatening situation -- Effective teaching -- Growing old -- Real joy depends on real study -- Travel is no cure for depression -- A disillusioned friend -- An Epicurean on his deathbed -- Our minds godlike potential -- Steadiness of aim -- The use of philosophical maxims -- Willingness is the key -- Learning to be a friend -- Helping another maintain his commitment -- Service to philosophy is true freedom -- Fewer words achieve more -- Healthy and unhealthy desires -- Oratory and the philosopher -- God dwells within us -- Good people are rare -- Being the subject of gossip -- Noble birth -- A gift of books -- A book by Lucilius -- How we treat our slaves -- Tricks of logic -- Remembering old times -- Blindness to ones own faults -- The party town of Baiae -- Good learners and good teachers -- A bad experience at sea -- A near-fatal asthma attack -- Passing the home of a recluse -- Noisy lodging above a bathhouse -- A dark tunnel -- A conversation about Plato -- Steadiness of joy -- Our prayers are all amiss -- Preparing for death -- Living the inner life -- Consolation for the death of a friend -- Some analyses of causation -- All goods are equal -- All goods are choiceworthy -- The uses of retirement -- Combating ones faults -- Ending ones own life -- Lifes highest good -- Finding time for study -- Gratitude toward rulers -- Only the honorable is good -- What it means to make progress -- Some proofs that only the honorable is good -- Facing death with courage -- Coping with bodily pain -- A trip around Sicily brings thoughts of glory -- A quiet day at home -- Gratitude for benefits received -- Syllogisms cannot make us brave -- Heavy drinking -- The writers craft -- Some objections to Stoic ethics -- The rustic villa of Scipio Africanus -- Poverty and wealth -- The liberal arts -- The divisions of philosophy -- The beginnings of civilization -- A terrible fire at Lyon -- What we need for happiness -- A premature death -- The role of precepts in philosophy -- The role of general principles -- Complaints -- A trial in the time of Cicero -- The power of the mind -- Consolation for the death of a child -- A book by Papirius Fabianus -- A sudden death -- Renown and immortality -- Those we meet may be dangerous to us -- Why travel cannot set you free -- How to avoid being harmed by other people -- The corporeal nature of the good -- An unexpected misfortune -- Vegetarianism and the use of literature -- Mutual aid among the wise -- False fears and mistaken ideas of wealth -- What we lose with our tricks of logic -- A difficult pupil -- Is a virtue an animate creature? -- A debased style of eloquence -- Fine language will not help us -- The Stoic view of emotion -- Propositions and incorporeals -- A proper definition for the human good -- Natural wealth -- How we develop our concept of the good -- Self-awareness in animate creatures -- The hours of day and night -- Resisting external influences -- The criterion for the human good -- Fragments of other letters.

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Moral letters to Lucilius - image 1

Lucius Annaeus Seneca
Moral letters to Lucilius
Volume 1

We have lost morals, justice, honor, piety and faith, and that sense of shame which, once lost, can never be restored.


Moral letters to Lucilius - image 2

encoding and publishing house

Volume 1
Notes

How Seneca came by this "pointed" style will be evident to one who reads the sample speeches given in the handbook of the Elder Seneca.

Hesiod, Works and Days, 369.

Frag. 475 Usener

i.e., a word which has a special significance to the Stoics; see Ep. xlviii, note.

Frag. 74 Wimmer.

See Index.

A reference to the murder of Caligula, on the Palatine, A.D. 41.

i.e., to death.

The Garden of Epicurus. Frag. 477 and 200 Usener.

i.e., of the Stoic school.

Frag. 25 Fowler.

Cf. Herodotus, i. 8 .

Frag. 26 Fowler.

During the luncheon interval condemned criminals were often driven into the arena and compelled to fight, for the amusement of those spectators who remained throughout the day.

The remark is addressed to the brutalized spectators.

Frag. 302 Diels.

Frag. 208 Usener.

As contrasted with the general Stoic doctrine of taking part in the world's work.

See Ep. lxxxv. 33 for the famous saying of the Rhodian pilot.

cernulat, equivalent to Greek , of a horse which throws a rider over its head.

Cf. the Stoic precept nil admirandum.

Frag. 199 Usener.

Literally "spun around" by the master and dismissed to freedom. Cf. Persius, v. 75f.

Fabulae togatae were plays which dealt with Roman subject matter, as contrasted with adaptations from the Greek, called palliatae. The term, in the widest sense includes both comedy and tragedy.

i.e., comedians or mimes.

Syri Sententiae, p. 309 Ribbeck.

Com. Rom. Frag. p. 394 Ribbeck.

ibidem.

Frag. 174 Usener.

i.e., the Cynics.

i.e., the Cynics.

i.e., the diurna mercedula; see Ep. vi, 7.

Frag. 27 Fowler.

Frag. 175 Usener.

"Pure love," i.e., love in its essence, unalloyed with other emotions.

Cf. his Frag. moral. 674 von Arnim.

The distinction is based upon the meaning of egere, "to be in want of" something indispensible, and opus esse, "to have need of" something which one can do without.

This refers to the Stoic conflagration: after certain cycles their world was destroyed by fire. Cf. E. V. Arnold, Roman Stoicism, pp. 192 f.; cf. also Chrysippus, Frag. phys. 1065 von Arnim.

Gnomologici Vaticani 515 Sternberg.

Frag. 474 Usener.

Cf. above 6.

i.e., not confined to the Stoics, etc.

Author unknown; perhaps, as Buecheler thinks, adapted from the Greek.

Frag. de superstitione 36 H., according to Rossbach.

Epicurus, Frag. 210 Usener.

Frag. 210 Usener.

The figure is taken from the , the Holy of Holies in a temple. Cf. Vergil, Aeneid, vi. 10 secreta Sibyllas.

A jesting allusion to the Roman funeral; the corpse's feet pointing towards the door.

His former owner should have kept him and buried him.

Small figures, generally of terra-cotta, were frequently given to children as presents at the Saturnalia. Cf. Macrobius, i. 11. 49 sigila... pro se atque suis piaculum.

i.e., the old slave resembles a child in that he is losing his teeth (but for the second time).

i.e., seniores, as contrasted with iuniores.

, "the Obscure," Frag. 106 Diels.

i.e., of light and darkness.

Usus was the mere enjoyment of a piece of property; dominium was the exclusive right to its control. Possession for one, or two, years conferred ownership. See Leage, Roman Private Law, pp. 133, 152, and 164. Although Pacuvius was governor so long that the province seemed to belong to him, yet he knew he might die any day.

Vergil, Aeneid, iv. 653.

Epicurus, Sprche, 9 Wokte.

Seneca dismisses the topic of "exaggerated ills," because judgements will differ concerning present troubles; the Stoics, for example, would not admit that torture was an evil at all. He then passes on to the topic of "imaginary ills," 6-7, and afterwards to "anticipated ills," 8-11. From 12 on, he deals with both imaginary and anticipated ills.

Cf. Solon's .

Epicurus, Frag. 494 Usener.

Cf. Tacitus, Annals, xv. 44, describing the tortures practised upon the Christians.

Scylla was a rock on the Italian side of the Straits. Charybdis was a whirlpool on the Sicillian side. Servius on Vergil, Aeneid, iii, 420 defines the dextrum as the shore "to the right of those coming from the Ionian sea."

Cf. Juvenal, x. 22 cantabit vacuus coram latrone viator.

Cf. the proverb necesse est multos timeat quem multi timent, which is found in Seneca, de Ira, ii. 11. 4 and often elsewhere.

Literally, "is as good as a (priest's) fillet."

Cf. Tac. Hist. i. 50 inter duos quorum bello solum id scires, deteriorem fore vicisset.

See, for example, Letter XXII.

Epicurus, Ep. iii. p. 63. 19 Usener.

Named kalendarium because interest was reckoned according to the Kalends of each month.

i.e., the prize-ring; the contestants were rubbed with oil before the fight began.

Cardiacus meant, according to Pliny, N. H. xxiii. 1. 24, a sort of dyspepsia accompanied by fever and perspiration. Compare the man in Juvenal v. 32, who will not send a spoonful of wine to a friend ill of this complaint.

Named from the Salii, or leaping priests of Mars.

The fuller, or washerman, cleansed the clothes by leaping and stamping upon them in the tub.

Epicurus, Frag. 491 Usener.

Court fools of the period.

i.e., have merely advanced in years.

Frag. 201 Usener.

Perhaps from the Hortensius; see Mller, Frag. 98, p. 326.

Literally, "Water!"

Frag. 479 Usener.

i.e., the whole year is a Saturnalia.

For a dinner dress.

The pilleus was worn by newly freed slaves and by the Roman populace on festal occasions.

The Epicurians. Cf. 9 and Epicurus, Frag. 158. Usener.

Cf. Ep. c. 6 and Martial, iii. 48.

The post which gladiators used when preparing themselves for combats in the arena.

Usually identified with Chaerimus, 307-8 B.C. But Wilhelm, ster Jahreshefte, V.136, has shown that there is probably no confusion of names. A Charinus was archon at Athens in 290-89; see Johnson, Class. Phil. ix. p. 256.

Vergil, Aeneid, viii. 364 f.

The procurator did the work of a quaestor in an imperial province. Positions at Rome to which Lucilius might succeed were such as praefectus annonae, in charge of the grain supply, or praefectus urbi, Director of Public Safety, and others.

And therefore could speak with authority on this point.

Perhaps a tragedy, although Seneca uses the word liber to describe it. Maecenas wrote a Symposium, a work De cultu suo, Octavia, some stray verse, and perhaps some history. See Seneca, Epp. xcii. and ci.

Seneca whimsically pretends to assume that eccentric literary style and high political position go hand in hand. See also the following sentence.

Epicurus, Frag.542 Usener.

A slave kept by every prominant Roman to identify the master's friends and dependants.

Epicurus, Frag. 542 Usener.

A slave kept by every prominant Roman to identify the master's friends and dependants

Seneca applies to wisdom the definition of friendship, Salust, Catiline, 20. 4 idem velle atque idem nolle, ea demum firma amicitia est.

Frag. 206 Usener.

i.e., the life of voluntary poverty.

Adapted from the epigram on Alexander the Great, "hic est quem non capit orbis." See Plutarch, Alexander, 6 . , and Seneca, Ep. cxix. 8.

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