Meditations / Book 5

Marcus Aurelius · George Long · public domain

Book 5

The primary reading body below is the raw text only. The companion apparatus comes after it: one gathered Adaptation section and one gathered Editor's notes section for the whole book.

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41
Primary text
21 min read
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1 / 41

Reading order: raw text first. The book-level adaptation and the single set of editorial notes follow at the end as companion apparatus rather than repeated inline furniture.

Book 5 · Unit 01

Meditation 01

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In the morning when thou risest unwillingly, let this thought be present—I am rising to the work of a human being. Why then am I dissatisfied if I am going to do the things for which I exist and for which I was brought into the world? Or have I been made for this, to lie in the bedclothes and keep myself warm?—But this is more pleasant.—Dost thou exist then to take thy pleasure, and not at all for action or exertion? Dost thou not see the little plants, the little birds, the ants, the spiders, the bees working together to put in order their several parts of the universe? And art thou unwilling to do the work of a human being, and dost thou not make haste to do that which is according to thy nature?—But it is necessary to take rest also.—It is necessary: however nature has fixed bounds to this too: she has fixed bounds both to eating and drinking, and yet thou goest beyond these bounds, beyond what is sufficient; yet in thy acts it is not so, but thou stoppest short of what thou canst do. So thou lovest not thyself, for if thou didst, thou wouldst love thy nature and her will. But those who love their several arts exhaust themselves in working at them unwashed and without food; but thou valuest thy own nature less than the turner values the turning art, or the dancer the dancing art, or the lover of money values his money, or the vainglorious man his little glory. And such men, when they have a violent affection to a thing, choose neither to eat nor to sleep rather than to perfect the things which they care for. But are the acts which concern society more vile in thy eyes and less worthy of thy labour?

Book 5 · Unit 02

Meditation 02

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How easy it is to repel and to wipe away every impression which is troublesome or unsuitable, and immediately to be in all tranquility.

Book 5 · Unit 03

Meditation 03

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Judge every word and deed which are according to nature to be fit for thee; and be not diverted by the blame which follows from any people nor by their words, but if a thing is good to be done or said, do not consider it unworthy of thee. For those persons have their peculiar leading principle and follow their peculiar movement; which things do not thou regard, but go straight on, following thy own nature and the common nature; and the way of both is one.

Book 5 · Unit 04

Meditation 04

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I go through the things which happen according to nature until I shall fall and rest, breathing out my breath into that element out of which I daily draw it in, and falling upon that earth out of which my father collected the seed, and my mother the blood, and my nurse the milk; out of which during so many years I have been supplied with food and drink; which bears me when I tread on it and abuse it for so many purposes.

Book 5 · Unit 05

Meditation 05

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Thou sayest, Men cannot admire the sharpness of thy wits.—Be it so: but there are many other things of which thou canst not say, I am not formed for them by nature. Show those qualities then which are altogether in thy power, sincerity, gravity, endurance of labour, aversion to pleasure, contentment with thy portion and with few things, benevolence, frankness, no love of superfluity, freedom from trifling magnanimity. Dost thou not see how many qualities thou art immediately able to exhibit, in which there is no excuse of natural incapacity and unfitness, and yet thou still remainest voluntarily below the mark? Or art thou compelled through being defectively furnished by nature to murmur, and to be stingy, and to flatter, and to find fault with thy poor body, and to try to please men, and to make great display, and to be so restless in thy mind? No, by the gods: but thou mightest have been delivered from these things long ago. Only if in truth thou canst be charged with being rather slow and dull of comprehension, thou must exert thyself about this also, not neglecting it nor yet taking pleasure in thy dullness.

Book 5 · Unit 06

Meditation 06

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One man, when he has done a service to another, is ready to set it down to his account as a favour conferred. Another is not ready to do this, but still in his own mind he thinks of the man as his debtor, and he knows what he has done. A third in a manner does not even know what he has done, but he is like a vine which has produced grapes, and seeks for nothing more after it has once produced its proper fruit. As a horse when he has run, a dog when he has tracked the game, a bee when it has made the honey, so a man when he has done a good act, does not call out for others to come and see, but he goes on to another act, as a vine goes on to produce again the grapes in season.—Must a man then be one of these, who in a manner act thus without observing it?—Yes.—But this very thing is necessary, the observation of what a man is doing: for, it may be said, it is characteristic of the social animal to perceive that he is working in a social manner, and indeed to wish that his social partner also should perceive it.—It is true what thou sayest, but thou dost not rightly understand what is now said: and for this reason thou wilt become one of those of whom I spoke before, for even they are misled by a certain show of reason. But if thou wilt choose to understand the meaning of what is said, do not fear that for this reason thou wilt omit any social act.

Book 5 · Unit 07

Meditation 07

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A prayer of the Athenians: Rain, rain, O dear Zeus, down on the ploughed fields of the Athenians and on the plains.—In truth we ought not to pray at all, or we ought to pray in this simple and noble fashion.

Book 5 · Unit 08

Meditation 08

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Just as we must understand when it is said, That Æsculapius prescribed to this man horse-exercise, or bathing in cold water or going without shoes; so we must understand it when it is said, That the nature of the universe prescribed to this man disease or mutilation or loss or anything else of the kind. For in the first case Prescribed means something like this: he prescribed this for this man as a thing adapted to procure health; and in the second case it means: That which happens to or suits every man is fixed in a manner for him suitably to his destiny. For this is what we mean when we say that things are suitable to us, as the workmen say of squared stones in walls or the pyramids, that they are suitable, when they fit them to one another in some kind of connection. For there is altogether one fitness, harmony. And as the universe is made up out of all bodies to be such a body as it is, so out of all existing causes necessity [destiny] is made up to be such a cause as it is. And even those who are completely ignorant understand what I mean, for they say, It [necessity, destiny] brought this to such a person.—This then was brought and this was prescribed to him. Let us then receive these things, as well as those which Æsculapius prescribes. Many as a matter of course even among his prescriptions are disagreeable, but we accept them in the hope of health. Let the perfecting and accomplishment of the things, which the common nature judges to be good, be judged by thee to be of the same kind as thy health. And so accept everything which happens, even if it seem disagreeable, because it leads to this, to the health of the universe and to the prosperity and felicity of Zeus [the universe]. For he would not have brought on any man what he has brought, if it were not useful for the whole. Neither does the nature of anything, whatever it may be, cause anything which is not suitable to that which is directed by it. For two reasons then it is right to be content with that which happens to thee; the one, because it was done for thee and prescribed for thee, and in a manner had reference to thee, originally from the most ancient causes spun with thy destiny; and the other, because even that which comes severally to every man is to the power which administers the universe a cause of felicity and perfection, nay even of its very continuance. For the integrity of the whole is mutilated, if thou cuttest off anything whatever from the conjunction and the continuity either of the parts or of the causes. And thou dost cut off, as far as it is in thy power, when thou art dissatisfied, and in a manner triest to put anything out of the way.

Book 5 · Unit 09

Meditation 09

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Be not disgusted, nor discouraged, nor dissatisfied, if thou dost not succeed in doing everything according to right principles; but when thou hast failed, return back again, and be content if the greater part of what thou doest is consistent with man's nature, and love this to which thou returnest; and do not return to philosophy as if she were a master, but act like those who have sore eyes and apply a bit of sponge and egg, or as another applies a plaster, or drenching with water. For thus thou wilt not fail to obey reason, and thou wilt repose in it. And remember that philosophy requires only the things which thy nature requires; but thou wouldst have something else which is not according to nature.—It may be objected, Why what is more agreeable than this which I am doing?—But is not this the very reason why pleasure deceives us? And consider if magnanimity, freedom, simplicity, equanimity, piety, are not more agreeable. For what is more agreeable than wisdom itself, when thou thinkest of the security and the happy course of all things which depend on the faculty of understanding and knowledge?

Book 5 · Unit 10

Meditation 10

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Things are in such a kind of envelopment that they have seemed to philosophers, not a few nor those common philosophers, altogether unintelligible; nay even to the Stoics themselves they seem difficult to understand. And all our assent is changeable; for where is the man who never changes? Carry thy thoughts then to the objects themselves, and consider how short-lived they are and worthless, and that they may be in the possession of a filthy wretch or a whore or a robber. Then turn to the morals of those who live with thee, and it is hardly possible to endure even the most agreeable of them, to say nothing of a man being hardly able to endure himself. In such darkness then and dirt and in so constant a flux both of substance and of time, and of motion and of things moved, what there is worth being highly prized or even an object of serious pursuit, I cannot imagine. But on the contrary it is a man's duty to comfort himself, and to wait for the natural dissolution and not to be vexed at the delay, but to rest in these principles only: the one, that nothing will happen to me which is not conformable to the nature of the universe; and the other, that it is in my power never to act contrary to my god and daemon: for there is no man who will compel me to this.

Book 5 · Unit 11

Meditation 11

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About what am I now employing my own soul? On every occasion I must ask myself this question, and inquire, what have I now in this part of me which they call the ruling principle? And whose soul have I now? That of a child, or of a young man, or of a feeble woman, or of a tyrant, or of a domestic animal, or of a wild beast?

Book 5 · Unit 12

Meditation 12

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What kind of things those are which appear good to the many, we may learn even from this. For if any man should conceive certain things as being really good, such as prudence, temperance, justice, fortitude, he would not after having first conceived these endure to listen to anything which should not be in harmony with what is really good. But if a man has first conceived as good the things which appear to the many to be good, he will listen and readily receive as very applicable that which was said by the comic writer. Thus even the many perceive the difference. For were it not so, this saying would not offend and would not be rejected in the first case, while we receive it when it is said of wealth, and of the means which further luxury and fame, as said fitly and wittily. Go on then and ask if we should value and think those things to be good, to which after their first conception in the mind the words of the comic writer might be aptly applied—that he who has them, through pure abundance has not a place to ease himself in.

Book 5 · Unit 13

Meditation 13

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I am composed of the formal and the material; and neither of them will perish into nonexistence, as neither of them came into existence out of nonexistence. Every part of me then will be reduced by change into some part of the universe, and that again will change into another part of the universe, and so on forever. And by consequence of such a change I too exist, and those who begot me, and so on forever in the other direction. For nothing hinders us from saying so, even if the universe is administered according to definite periods of revolution.

Book 5 · Unit 14

Meditation 14

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Reason and the reasoning art [philosophy] are powers which are sufficient for themselves and for their own works. They move then from a first principle which is their own, and they make their way to the end which is proposed to them; and this is the reason why such acts are named catorthoseis or right acts, which word signifies that they proceed by the right road.

Book 5 · Unit 15

Meditation 15

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None of these things ought to be called a man's, which do not belong to a man, as man. They are not required of a man, nor does man's nature promise them, nor are they the means of man's nature attaining its end. Neither then does the end of man lie in these things, nor yet that which aids to the accomplishment of this end, and that which aids towards this end is that which is good. Besides, if any of these things did belong to man, it would not be right for a man to despise them and to set himself against them; nor would a man be worthy of praise who showed that he did not want these things, nor would he who stinted himself in any of them be good, if indeed these things were good. But now the more of these things a man deprives himself of, or of other things like them, or even when he is deprived of any of them, the more patiently he endures the loss, just in the same degree he is a better man.

Book 5 · Unit 16

Meditation 16

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Such as are thy habitual thoughts, such also will be the character of thy mind; for the soul is dyed by the thoughts. Dye it then with a continuous series of such thoughts as these: for instance, that where a man can live, there he can also live well. But he must live in a palace;—well then, he can also live well in a palace. And again, consider that for whatever purpose each thing has been constituted, for this it has been constituted, and towards this it is carried; and its end is in that towards which it is carried; and where the end is, there also is the advantage and the good of each thing. Now the good for the reasonable animal is society; for that we are made for society has been shown above. Is it not plain that the inferior exist for the sake of the superior? But the things which have life are superior to those which have not life, and of those which have life the superior are those which have reason.

Book 5 · Unit 17

Meditation 17

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To seek what is impossible is madness: and it is impossible that the bad should not do something of this kind.

Book 5 · Unit 18

Meditation 18

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Nothing happens to any man which he is not formed by nature to bear. The same things happen to another, and either because he does not see that they have happened or because he would show a great spirit he is firm and remains unharmed. It is a shame then that ignorance and conceit should be stronger than wisdom.

Book 5 · Unit 19

Meditation 19

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Things themselves touch not the soul, not in the least degree; nor have they admission to the soul, nor can they turn or move the soul: but the soul turns and moves itself alone, and whatever judgements it may think proper to make, such it makes for itself the things which present themselves to it.

Book 5 · Unit 20

Meditation 20

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In one respect man is the nearest thing to me, so far as I must do good to men and endure them. But so far as some men make themselves obstacles to my proper acts, man becomes to me one of the things which are indifferent, no less than the sun or wind or a wild beast. Now it is true that these may impede my action, but they are no impediments to my affects and disposition, which have the power of acting conditionally and changing: for the mind converts and changes every hindrance to its activity into an aid; and so that which is a hindrance is made a furtherance to an act; and that which is an obstacle on the road helps us on this road.

Book 5 · Unit 21

Meditation 21

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Reverence that which is best in the universe; and this is that which makes use of all things and directs all things. And in like manner also reverence that which is best in thyself; and this is of the same kind as that. For in thyself also, that which makes use of everything else, is this, and thy life is directed by this.

Book 5 · Unit 22

Meditation 22

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That which does no harm to the state, does no harm to the citizen. In the case of every appearance of harm apply this rule: if the state is not harmed by this, neither am I harmed. But if the state is harmed, thou must not be angry with him who does harm to the state. Show him where his error is.

Book 5 · Unit 23

Meditation 23

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Often think of the rapidity with which things pass by and disappear, both the things which are and the things which are produced. For substance is like a river in a continual flow, and the activities of things are in constant change, and the causes work in infinite varieties; and there is hardly anything which stands still. And consider this which is near to thee, this boundless abyss of the past and of the future in which all things disappear. How then is he not a fool who is puffed up with such things or plagued about them and makes himself miserable? for they vex him only for a time, and a short time.

Book 5 · Unit 24

Meditation 24

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Think of the universal substance, of which thou hast a very small portion; and of universal time, of which a short and indivisible interval has been assigned to thee; and of that which is fixed by destiny, and how small a part of it thou art.

Book 5 · Unit 25

Meditation 25

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Does another do me wrong? Let him look to it. He has his own disposition, his own activity. I now have what the universal nature wills me to have; and I do what my nature now wills me to do.

Book 5 · Unit 26

Meditation 26

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Let the part of thy soul which leads and governs be undisturbed by the movements in the flesh, whether of pleasure or of pain; and let it not unite with them, but let it circumscribe itself and limit those affects to their parts. But when these affects rise up to the mind by virtue of that other sympathy that naturally exists in a body which is all one, then thou must not strive to resist the sensation, for it is natural: but let not the ruling part of itself add to the sensation the opinion that it is either good or bad.

Book 5 · Unit 27

Meditation 27

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Live with the gods. And he does live with the gods who constantly shows to them, his own soul is satisfied with that which is assigned to him, and that it does all that the daemon wishes, which Zeus hath given to every man for his guardian and guide, a portion of himself. And this is every man's understanding and reason.

Book 5 · Unit 28

Meditation 28

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Art thou angry with him whose armpits stink? Art thou angry with him whose mouth smells foul? What good will this danger do thee? He has such a mouth, he has such armpits: it is necessary that such an emanation must come from such things—but the man has reason, it will be said, and he is able, if he takes pain, to discover wherein he offends—I wish thee well of thy discovery. Well then, and thou hast reason: by thy rational faculty stir up his rational faculty; show him his error, admonish him. For if he listens, thou wilt cure him, and there is no need of anger. Neither tragic actor nor whore …

Book 5 · Unit 29

Meditation 29

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As thou intendest to live when thou art gone out, … so it is in thy power to live here. But if men do not permit thee, then get away out of life, yet so as if thou wert suffering no harm. The house is smoky, and I quit it. Why dost thou think that this is any trouble? But so long as nothing of the kind drives me out, I remain, am free, and no man shall hinder me from doing what I choose; and I choose to do what is according to the nature of the rational and social animal.

Book 5 · Unit 30

Meditation 30

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The intelligence of the universe is social. Accordingly it has made the inferior things for the sake of the superior, and it has fitted the superior to one another. Thou seest how it has subordinated, coordinated and assigned to everything its proper portion, and has brought together into concord with one another the things which are the best.

Book 5 · Unit 31

Meditation 31

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How hast thou behaved hitherto to the gods, thy parents, brethren, children, teachers, to those who looked after thy infancy, to thy friends, kinsfolk, to thy slaves? Consider if thou hast hitherto behaved to all in such a way that this may be said of thee:

Book 5 · Unit 32

Meditation 32

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Never has wronged a man in deed or word.

Book 5 · Unit 33

Meditation 33

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And call to recollection both how many things thou hast passed through, and how many things thou hast been able to endure: and that the history of thy life is now complete and thy service is ended: and how many beautiful things thou hast seen: and how many pleasures and pains thou hast despised; and how many things called honourable thou hast spurned; and to how many ill-minded folks thou hast shown a kind disposition.

Book 5 · Unit 34

Meditation 34

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Why do unskilled and ignorant souls disturb him who has skill and knowledge? What soul then has skill and knowledge? That which knows beginning and end, and knows the reason which pervades all substance and through all time by fixed periods [revolutions] administers the universe.

Book 5 · Unit 35

Meditation 35

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Soon, very soon, thou wilt be ashes, or a skeleton, and either a name or not even a name; but name is sound and echo. And the things which are much valued in life are empty and rotten and trifling, and like little dogs biting one another, and little children quarrelling, laughing, and then straightway weeping. But fidelity and modesty and justice and truth are fled

Book 5 · Unit 36

Meditation 36

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Up to Olympus from the widespread earth.

Book 5 · Unit 37

Meditation 37

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What then is there which still detains thee here? If the objects of sense are easily changed and never stand still, and the organs of perception are dull and easily receive false impressions; and the poor soul itself is an exhalation from blood. But to have good repute amidst such a world as this is an empty thing. Why then dost thou not wait in tranquility for thy end, whether it is extinction or removal to another state? And until that time comes, what is sufficient? Why, what else than to venerate the gods and bless them, and to do good to men, and to practise tolerance and self-restraint; but as to everything which is beyond the limits of the poor flesh and breath, to remember that this is neither thine nor in thy power.

Book 5 · Unit 38

Meditation 38

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Thou canst pass thy life in an equable flow of happiness, if thou canst go by the right way, and think and act in the right way. These two things are common both to the soul of God and to the soul of man, and to the soul of every rational being, not to be hindered by another; and to hold good to consist in the disposition to justice and the practice of it, and in this to let thy desire find its termination.

Book 5 · Unit 39

Meditation 39

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If this is neither my own badness, nor an effect of my own badness, and the common weal is not injured, why am I troubled about it? And what is the harm to the common weal?

Book 5 · Unit 40

Meditation 40

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Do not be carried along inconsiderately by the appearance of things, but give help to all according to thy ability and their fitness; and if they should have sustained loss in matters which are indifferent, do not imagine this to be a damage. For it is a bad habit. But as the old man, when he went away, asked back his foster-child's top, remembering that it was a top, so do thou in this case also.

Book 5 · Unit 41

Meditation 41

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When thou art calling out on the Rostra, hast thou forgotten, man, what these things are?—Yes; but they are objects of great concern to these people—wilt thou too then be made a fool for these things?—I was once a fortunate man, but I lost it, I know not how.—But fortunate means that a man has assigned to himself a good fortune: and a good fortune is good disposition of the soul, good emotions, good actions.

Companion apparatus

After the text

The reading body ends above. What follows stays close to the source without interrupting it.

Companion apparatus

Adaptation

A closely tethered modern rendering of each numbered unit, gathered here so the raw text can remain the primary reading experience.

Unit 01

01

In the morning, when you rise unwillingly, let this thought be ready: I am rising to the work of a human being. Why am I dissatisfied if I am going to do the things for which I exist and for which I was brought into the world? Or was I made for this—to lie under the blankets and keep warm? "But this is more pleasant." Do you exist, then, to take your pleasure, and not at all for action or effort? Do you not see the little plants, the little birds, the ants, the spiders, the bees, all working together to put their parts of the universe in order? And you are unwilling to do the work of a human being? You do not hurry to do what accords with your nature? "But rest is necessary too." It is necessary—yet nature has set bounds to rest as well. She has set bounds to eating and drinking, and still you go beyond what is enough; yet in your actions you stop short of what you can do. So you do not love yourself—for if you did, you would love your nature and her will. Those who love their trades exhaust themselves in their work, unwashed and unfed. But you value your own nature less than the turner values his lathe, the dancer her art, the miser his money, or the vainglorious man his little fame. Such people, when they have a passion for something, would rather skip food and sleep than leave their work unfinished. Are the acts that serve the common good really cheaper in your eyes and less worthy of your effort?

Unit 02

02

How easy it is to repel and wipe away every impression that is troublesome or unwelcome, and to be at once in complete tranquility.

Unit 03

03

Judge every word and deed that accords with nature to be worthy of you, and do not be turned aside by the blame or the words of others. If a thing is good to do or say, do not think it beneath you. Those people have their own guiding principle and follow their own impulse; pay no attention to that, but go straight on, following your own nature and the common nature—and the path of both is one.

Unit 04

04

I pass through the things that happen according to nature until I fall and rest—breathing out my breath into the element from which I daily draw it in, falling upon the earth from which my father drew the seed, my mother the blood, and my nurse the milk; the earth that has supplied me with food and drink for so many years, that bears me when I walk upon it and that I use for so many purposes.

Unit 05

05

You say, "People cannot admire the sharpness of my wit." Granted—but there are many other qualities of which you cannot say, "I was not made for them." Show, then, those that are entirely in your power: sincerity, gravity, endurance of hard work, indifference to pleasure, contentment with your lot and with little, benevolence, frankness, no love of excess, freedom from pettiness, magnanimity. Do you not see how many qualities you are able to display right now, for which there is no excuse of natural incapacity? And yet you remain voluntarily below the mark. Or are you forced by some deficiency of nature to grumble, to be stingy, to flatter, to blame your body, to ingratiate yourself, to make a great display, to be so restless in your mind? No, by the gods—you could have freed yourself from these things long ago. If the only true charge against you is that you are rather slow and dull of understanding, then you must work on that too: not neglecting it, and not taking pleasure in your dullness.

Unit 06

06

One man, when he has done someone a service, is quick to chalk it up as a favour owed. Another does not go that far, but still in his own mind he thinks of the man as his debtor and is aware of what he did. A third, in a way, does not even know what he has done: he is like a vine that has produced grapes and looks for nothing more after bearing its proper fruit. As a horse runs, a dog tracks the game, a bee makes honey, so a person who has done a good act does not cry out for an audience but goes on to the next, as a vine goes on to produce the next season's grapes. "Must a man, then, be one of those who act this way without even noticing it?" Yes. "But this very awareness is necessary—for it is characteristic of the social creature to perceive that it is working socially, and indeed to wish that its partner perceive it too." What you say is true, but you misunderstand what is being said now, and for that reason you will become one of those I described before—even they are misled by a certain show of reason. But if you choose to understand the real meaning, do not fear that you will on that account neglect any social act.

Unit 07

07

A prayer of the Athenians: "Rain, rain, dear Zeus, upon the ploughed fields and plains of the Athenians." We should either not pray at all, or pray in this simple and noble way.

Unit 08

08

Just as when we hear that Asclepius prescribed horse-riding, cold baths, or walking barefoot for a patient, we must understand it the same way when we hear that the nature of the universe prescribed disease, mutilation, loss, or anything of the kind for someone. In the first case, "prescribed" means he ordered this as something suited to restore health. In the second, it means that what happens to each person is fitted to him in a way suited to his destiny. We speak of things "fitting" us just as builders say of squared stones in walls or pyramids that they fit when they are joined to one another in some kind of connection. For there is one fitness running through everything, one harmony. And as the universe is composed of all bodies to be the body it is, so out of all existing causes destiny is composed to be the cause it is. Even the wholly ignorant grasp this, for they say, "Fate brought this to him." So—this was brought, this was prescribed. Let us accept these things as we accept what Asclepius prescribes. Many of his prescriptions, too, are disagreeable, but we accept them in hope of health. Let the working-out and accomplishment of what common nature judges good seem to you something like your health. Accept everything that happens, even when it seems harsh, because it leads to the health of the universe, to the prosperity and well-being of Zeus—that is, of the whole. He would not bring anything on anyone that was not useful for the whole; no nature causes anything unsuited to what it governs. There are, then, two reasons to be content with what happens to you: first, because it was done for you, prescribed for you, and linked to you from the most ancient causes woven with your destiny; second, because what comes to each individual is a cause of the well-being, the completeness, and indeed the very continuance of the power that governs all things. The integrity of the whole is damaged if you cut off anything from the connection and continuity either of the parts or of the causes. And you do cut it off, so far as lies in you, when you are dissatisfied and try, in a sense, to push something out of the way.

Unit 09

09

Do not be disgusted, discouraged, or dissatisfied if you do not always succeed in acting on right principles. When you fail, return to them again, and be content if most of what you do is consistent with human nature—and love the thing you return to. Do not come back to philosophy as a schoolboy comes back to a master; come as people with sore eyes come to a sponge and egg-white, or as another comes to a poultice or a cold compress. In this way you will not merely obey reason—you will rest in it. And remember: philosophy demands only what your nature demands; but you want something else, something not according to nature. "But surely what I am doing is more pleasant?" Is that not exactly how pleasure deceives us? Consider whether magnanimity, freedom, simplicity, equanimity, and piety are not more pleasant. And what is more pleasant than wisdom itself, when you think of the security and smooth course of everything that depends on understanding and knowledge?

Unit 10

10

Things are so deeply wrapped in obscurity that to not a few philosophers—and not ordinary ones—they have seemed altogether unintelligible; even the Stoics themselves find them difficult. Every assent we give is changeable, for where is the person who never changes? Turn your thoughts, then, to the objects themselves: how short-lived they are and how worthless, how easily possessed by someone contemptible. Then turn to the characters of those who live around you: even the most agreeable of them are hard to endure, to say nothing of how hard it is to endure oneself. In such darkness, such muck, such a constant flux of substance and time, of motion and things moved, I cannot think what there is to prize highly or pursue in earnest. On the contrary, one ought to take comfort and wait for natural dissolution without impatience, resting on just two principles: first, that nothing will happen to me that is not in accord with the nature of the universe; second, that it is in my power never to act against my god and my guiding spirit, for no one can force me to that.

Unit 11

11

What am I now employing my soul on? Ask yourself this at every turn: what is present right now in the part of me they call the ruling principle? Whose soul do I have at this moment—a child's, a youth's, a tyrant's, a beast of burden's, a wild animal's?

Unit 12

12

What kind of things the many consider good we can learn from this: if someone conceives of truly good things—prudence, temperance, justice, fortitude—he would not, having once grasped these, tolerate hearing anything inconsistent with what is really good. But a man who has first conceived as good the things the crowd calls good will readily accept and laugh at what the comic poet said, as fitting and witty. Even the crowd perceives the difference. Otherwise the joke would not offend in the first case while being received, in the case of wealth and luxury and fame, as apt. Go on, then, and ask whether we should value and call good those things to which one could aptly apply the comic writer's quip—that their owner, from sheer abundance, has nowhere to relieve himself.

Unit 13

13

I am composed of form and matter, and neither will perish into nothingness, since neither came into being from nothingness. Every part of me will be changed into some part of the universe, and that part into another, and so on without end. By the same process of change I came into existence, and those who begot me before that, and so on backward without limit. Nothing prevents us from saying this, even if the universe moves in definite cycles.

Unit 14

14

Reason and the art of reasoning—philosophy—are powers sufficient to themselves and to their own work. They proceed from their own first principle and make their way to the end set before them. This is why such acts are called catorthoseis, right acts—a word that means they go by the right road.

Unit 15

15

None of these things ought to be called truly a person's own that do not belong to a person as a person. They are not required of human nature, nor does human nature promise them, nor are they the means by which human nature reaches its end. The end of human life does not lie in them, nor does that which helps accomplish this end—and what helps toward this end is the good. Besides, if any of these things did truly belong to us, it would not be right to despise them or resist them, nor would a person who showed no need for them be praiseworthy, nor would one who stinted himself in them be good—if indeed they were good. But as things stand, the more a person deprives himself of such things, or patiently endures being deprived, the better he is.

Unit 16

16

As your habitual thoughts are, such will be the character of your mind—for the soul is dyed by its thoughts. Dye it, then, with a steady succession of thoughts like these: where a person can live, there he can live well; he must live in a palace—well then, he can live well in a palace. Consider too that each thing has been made for a purpose, and it is carried toward that purpose, and its end lies where it is carried, and where the end is, there too is the advantage and the good. The good for a rational being is community—for we are made for community, as has already been shown. Is it not plain that inferior beings exist for the sake of the superior? Among things without life and things with life, the living are superior; and among the living, those with reason are superior.

Unit 17

17

To seek what is impossible is madness; and it is impossible that bad people should not act as they do.

Unit 18

18

Nothing happens to anyone that he is not formed by nature to bear. The same thing happens to another, and either because he does not see that it has happened, or because he wants to display a great spirit, he stands firm and is unharmed. It is shameful, then, that ignorance and vanity should be stronger than wisdom.

Unit 19

19

Things themselves do not touch the soul, not in the least degree. They have no access to it, and they cannot turn or move it. The soul alone turns and moves itself, and whatever judgements it sees fit to make, it makes for itself out of the things presented to it.

Unit 20

20

In one respect other people are the nearest thing to me, insofar as I must do them good and endure them. But insofar as some make themselves obstacles to my proper work, a human being becomes to me one of the things that are indifferent—no less than the sun, the wind, or a wild beast. These may impede my action, but they are no impediment to my disposition and my intentions, which have the power of acting conditionally and adapting. The mind converts and changes every hindrance to its activity into an aid; what blocks the road helps us on the road.

Unit 21

21

Reverence the best thing in the universe—that which makes use of all things and governs them. In the same way, reverence the best thing in yourself, which is of the same kind. For in you too it is this that makes use of everything else; your life is directed by it.

Unit 22

22

What does no harm to the state does no harm to the citizen. Whenever an apparent harm presents itself, apply this rule: if the state is not harmed by this, neither am I. But if the state is harmed, do not be angry with the one who harms it. Show him where his error lies.

Unit 23

23

Think often of the speed with which all things pass and disappear—both those that exist and those that are being produced. Substance is like a river in constant flow, the activities of things shift endlessly, causes work in infinite variety, and hardly anything stands still. Consider too the boundless abyss of past and future, close beside you, into which all things vanish. How foolish, then, to be puffed up by such things, or tormented by them, or made miserable—for they vex only briefly.

Unit 24

24

Think of universal substance, of which you have a tiny portion; of universal time, of which a short and indivisible interval has been given to you; and of destiny, of which you are how small a part.

Unit 25

25

Does someone wrong me? That is his affair. He has his own disposition, his own activity. I now have what universal nature wills me to have, and I do what my own nature wills me to do.

Unit 26

26

Let the ruling part of your soul remain undisturbed by the movements of the flesh, whether pleasure or pain. Let it not merge with them, but draw a boundary around itself and confine those sensations to their proper parts. When they rise up to the mind by way of the natural sympathy that exists in a unified body, do not try to resist the sensation—it is natural—but let the ruling part not add the judgement that the sensation is good or bad.

Unit 27

27

Live with the gods. And he lives with the gods who constantly shows them that his soul is satisfied with what is assigned to it and does all that its guiding spirit wishes—the spirit that Zeus has given to each person as guardian and guide, a portion of himself. This spirit is each person's understanding and reason.

Unit 28

28

Are you angry with someone whose armpits stink? Are you angry with someone whose breath is foul? What good will this anger do you? He has such a mouth, he has such armpits; such emanations must come from such things. "But the man has reason," you say, "and could figure out what offends if he tried." Good for you and your insight. Well then—you too have reason. By your rational faculty stir up his; show him his error, warn him. If he listens, you will cure him, and there is no need of anger. You are neither a tragic actor nor a courtesan.

Unit 29

29

As you intend to live when you have departed this life, so you may live here and now. But if others will not allow it, then depart from life itself—yet as though you suffer no harm. The house is smoky, and I leave it. Why should this be thought any hardship? But so long as nothing of the kind drives me out, I remain, free, and no one shall prevent me from doing what I choose; and I choose to act according to the nature of a rational and social being.

Unit 30

30

The intelligence of the universe is social. It has made inferior things for the sake of superior ones, and fitted the superior to one another. See how it has subordinated, coordinated, and assigned to each thing its proper share, and brought the best things into harmony with one another.

Unit 31

31

How have you behaved up to now toward the gods, your parents, your brothers and sisters, your children, your teachers, those who cared for you in childhood, your friends, your relatives, your household? Consider whether you can truly say of your conduct toward all of them:

Unit 32

32

"Never has he wronged a man in deed or word."

Unit 33

33

Call to mind how many things you have passed through, and how many you have been able to endure; that the story of your life is now complete and your service ended; how many beautiful things you have seen; how many pleasures and pains you have looked past; how many so-called honours you have ignored; and to how many ill-natured people you have shown kindness.

Unit 34

34

Why do unskilled and ignorant souls disturb the person who has skill and knowledge? What soul, then, has skill and knowledge? The one that knows beginning and end, and knows the reason that pervades all substance and governs the universe through all time in fixed cycles.

Unit 35

35

Soon, very soon, you will be ashes, or a skeleton, and either a name or not even a name—and a name is only sound and echo. The things prized in life are empty, rotten, and trivial: like little dogs biting one another, like children quarrelling, laughing, and then at once weeping. But fidelity, modesty, justice, and truth have fled—

Unit 36

36

"Up to Olympus from the widespread earth."

Unit 37

37

What, then, still detains you here? The objects of sense change ceaselessly and never stand still; the organs of perception are dull and easily deceived; the soul itself is merely an exhalation of blood. Good reputation in such a world is an empty thing. Why not wait in tranquility for your end, whether it is extinction or a change of state? And until that time comes, what is sufficient? Only this: to reverence the gods and bless them, to do good to others, to practise tolerance and self-restraint, and, as to everything beyond the limits of this poor flesh and breath, to remember that it is neither yours nor in your power.

Unit 38

38

You can pass your life in an even flow of happiness if you go by the right way and think and act rightly. Two things are shared by the soul of God, the soul of a human being, and the soul of every rational creature: not to be hindered by another, and to find the good in a just disposition and just practice—and to let desire end there.

Unit 39

39

If this is neither my own badness nor an effect of my own badness, and the common good is not injured, why am I troubled by it? And what harm is done to the common good?

Unit 40

40

Do not be swept along thoughtlessly by the appearance of things. Give help to everyone according to your ability and their need; but if they have lost something that is merely indifferent, do not treat it as real damage—that is a bad habit. Be like the old man who, on leaving, asked for his foster-child's top back, knowing perfectly well that it was only a top. So should you behave in cases like this.

Unit 41

41

When you are declaiming on the Rostra, have you forgotten what these things really are? "Yes, but they matter greatly to these people." Will you then make yourself a fool on their account? "I was once a fortunate man, but I have lost my fortune, I know not how." But "fortunate" means that a person has assigned himself a good fortune—and a good fortune is a good disposition of the soul, good impulses, good actions.

Companion apparatus

Editor's notes

A single editorial apparatus for the whole book: what recurs, what hardens into pattern, and what kind of attention the book asks for.

Against reluctance

Book V is one of the most workmanlike books in the collection. Its most famous movement is the argument against staying in bed, but the real subject is broader: reluctance, softness, resentment at duty, and the temptation to treat action as optional. Marcus counters all of it by appealing to function.

Philosophy in traffic

The book is social all the way through. Speech, anger, generosity, labour, correction, injury, pity, and service are the ordinary theatres in which Stoicism has to prove itself. Philosophy appears here not as distance from others, but as a way of moving among them without becoming disordered.

A sufficient life in a damaged age

There is a dark edge in this book: the world prizes what dissolves, the virtues seem in retreat, and public life offers no guarantee of moral company. Yet Marcus does not answer with despair. He answers by narrowing the standard to what remains available—reverence, service, self-command, truthful action, and acceptance of mortality.