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Seneca

Of a Happy Life (De Vita Beata)

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  • Ирина Осипенкоhas quoted5 years ago
    “They are ill at ease,” replies he, “because many things arise which distract their thoughts, and their minds are disquieted by conflicting opinions.” I admit that this is true: still these very men, foolish, inconsistent, and certain to feel remorse as they are, do nevertheless receive great pleasure, and we must allow that in so doing they are as far from feeling any trouble as they are from forming a right judgment, and that, as is the case with many people, they are possessed by a merry madness, and laugh while they rave. The pleasures of wise men, on the other hand, are mild, decorous, verging on dullness, kept under restraint and scarcely noticeable, and are neither invited to come nor received with honour when they come of their own accord, nor are they welcomed with any delight by those whom they visit, who mix them up with their lives and fill up empty spaces with them, like an amusing farce in the intervals of serious business.
  • roselyn chandiawijayahas quoted5 years ago
    Let us therefore inquire, not what is most commonly done, but what is best for us to do, and what will establish us in the possession of undying happiness, not what is approved of by the vulgar, the worst possible exponents of truth.
  • roselyn chandiawijayahas quoted5 years ago
    is harmful to follow the march of those who go before us, and since everyone had rather believe another than form his own opinion
  • roselyn chandiawijayahas quoted5 years ago
    like sheep, follow the flock that has gone before us, and thus proceed not whither we ought, but whither the rest are going
  • elenashlykova11has quoted8 years ago
    The more numerous and the greater they are, the more inferior and the slave of more masters does that man become whom the vulgar call a happy man.
  • elenashlykova11has quoted8 years ago
    The pleasures of wise men, on the other hand, are mild, decorous, verging on dullness, kept under restraint and scarcely noticeable, and are neither invited to come nor received with
  • elenashlykova11has quoted8 years ago
    follow is the duty of a subordinate, to rule that of a commander?
  • elenashlykova11has quoted8 years ago
    Yet when moderation lessens pleasure, it impairs the highest good.
  • elenashlykova11has quoted8 years ago
    we assign to all bodily pleasures and external delights the same position which is held by auxiliaries and light-armed troops in a camp; if we make them our servants, not our masters—then and then only are they of value to our minds. A man should be unbiased and not to be conquered by external things: he ought to admire himself alone, to feel confidence in his own spirit, and so to order his life as to be ready alike for good or for bad fortune. Let not his confidence be without knowledge, nor his knowledge without steadfastness: let him always abide by what he has once determined, and let there be no er
  • elenashlykova11has quoted8 years ago
    that pleasure might not be the guide but the companion of a right-thinking and honourable mind;
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