Meditations / Book 7

Marcus Aurelius · George Long · public domain

Book 7

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.

Units
76
Primary text
20 min read
Current unit
1 / 76

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 7 · Unit 01

Meditation 01

#

What is badness? It is that which thou hast often seen. And on the occasion of everything which happens keep this in mind, that it is that which thou hast often seen. Everywhere up and down thou wilt find the same things, with which the old histories are filled, those of the middle ages and those of our own day; with which cities and houses are filled now. There is nothing new: all things are both familiar and short-lived.

Book 7 · Unit 02

Meditation 02

#

How can our principles become dead, unless the impressions [thoughts] which correspond to them are extinguished? But it is in thy power continuously to fan these thoughts into a flame. I can have that opinion about anything, which I ought to have. If I can, why am I disturbed? The things which are external to my mind have no relation at all to my mind.—Let this be the state of thy affects, and thou standest erect. To recover thy life is in thy power. Look at things again as thou didst use to look at them; for in this consists the recovery of thy life.

Book 7 · Unit 03

Meditation 03

#

The idle business of show, plays on the stage, flocks of sheep, herds, exercises with spears, a bone cast to little dogs, a bit of bread into fishponds, labourings of ants and burden-carrying, runnings about of frightened little mice, puppets pulled by strings—all alike. It is thy duty then in the midst of such things to show good humour and not a proud air; to understand however that every man is worth just so much as the things are worth about which he busies himself.

Book 7 · Unit 04

Meditation 04

#

In discourse thou must attend to what is said, and in every movement thou must observe what is doing. And in the one thou shouldst see immediately to what end it refers, but in the other watch carefully what is the thing signified.

Book 7 · Unit 05

Meditation 05

#

Is my understanding sufficient for this or not? If it is sufficient, I use it for the work as an instrument given by the universal nature. But if it is not sufficient, then either I retire from the work and give way to him who is able to do it better, unless there be some reason why I ought not to do so; or I do it as well as I can, taking to help me the man who with the aid of my ruling principle can do what is now fit and useful for the general good. For whatsoever either by myself or with another I can do, ought to be directed to this only, to that which is useful and well suited to society.

Book 7 · Unit 06

Meditation 06

#

How many after being celebrated by fame have been given up to oblivion; and how many who have celebrated the fame of others have long been dead.

Book 7 · Unit 07

Meditation 07

#

Be not ashamed to be helped; for it is thy business to do thy duty like a soldier in the assault on a town. How then, if being lame thou canst not mount up on the battlements alone, but with the help of another it is possible?

Book 7 · Unit 08

Meditation 08

#

Let not future things disturb thee, for thou wilt come to them, if it shall be necessary, having with thee the same reason which now thou usest for present things.

Book 7 · Unit 09

Meditation 09

#

All things are implicated with one another, and the bond is holy; and there is hardly anything unconnected with any other thing. For things have been coordinated, and they combine to form the same universe [order]. For there is one universe made up of all things, and one God who pervades all things, and one substance, and one law, one common reason in all intelligent animals, and one truth; if indeed there is also one perfection for all animals which are of the same stock and participate in the same reason.

Book 7 · Unit 10

Meditation 10

#

Everything material soon disappears in the substance of the whole; and everything formal [causal] is very soon taken back into the universal reason; and the memory of everything is very soon overwhelmed in time.

Book 7 · Unit 11

Meditation 11

#

To the rational animal the same act is according to nature and according to reason.

Book 7 · Unit 12

Meditation 12

#

Be thou erect, or be made erect.

Book 7 · Unit 13

Meditation 13

#

Just as it is with the members in those bodies which are united in one, so it is with rational beings which exist separate, for they have been constituted for one cooperation. And the perception of this will be more apparent to thee, if thou often sayest to thyself that I am a member [μέλος] of the system of rational beings. But if [using the letter r] thou sayest that thou art a part [μέρος] thou dost not yet love men from thy heart; beneficence does not yet delight thee for its own sake; thou still doest it barely as a thing of propriety, and not yet as doing good to thyself.

Book 7 · Unit 14

Meditation 14

#

Let there fall externally what will on the parts which can feel the effects of this fall. For those parts which have felt will complain, if they choose. But I, unless I think that what has happened is an evil, am not injured. And it is in my power not to think so.

Book 7 · Unit 15

Meditation 15

#

Whatever anyone does or says, I must be good, just as if the gold, or the emerald, or the purple were always saying this. Whatever anyone does or says, I must be emerald and keep my colour.

Book 7 · Unit 16

Meditation 16

#

The ruling faculty does not disturb itself; I mean, does not frighten itself or cause itself pain. But if anyone else can frighten or pain it, let him do so. For the faculty itself will not by its own opinion turn itself into such ways. Let the body itself take care, if it can, that is suffer nothing, and let it speak, if it suffers. But the soul itself, that which is subject to fear, to pain, which has completely the power of forming an opinion about these things, will suffer nothing, for it will never deviate into such a judgement. The leading principle in itself wants nothing, unless it makes a want for itself; and therefore it is both free from perturbation and unimpeded, if it does not disturb and impede itself.

Book 7 · Unit 17

Meditation 17

#

Eudæmonia [happiness] is a good daemon, or a good thing. What then art thou doing here, O imagination? Go away, I entreat thee by the gods, as thou didst come, for I want thee not. But thou art come according to thy old fashion. I am not angry with thee: only go away.

Book 7 · Unit 18

Meditation 18

#

Is any man afraid of change? Why what can take place without change? What then is more pleasing or more suitable to the universal nature? And canst thou take a bath unless the wood undergoes a change? And canst thou be nourished, unless the food undergoes a change? And can anything else that is useful be accomplished without change? Dost thou not see then that for thyself also to change is just the same, and equally necessary for the universal nature?

Book 7 · Unit 19

Meditation 19

#

Through the universal substance as through a furious torrent all bodies are carried, being by their nature united with and cooperating with the whole, as the parts of our body with one another. How many a Chrysippus, how many a Socrates, how many an Epictetus has time already swallowed up? And let the same thought occur to thee with reference to every man and thing.

Book 7 · Unit 20

Meditation 20

#

One thing only troubles me, lest I should do something which the constitution of man does not allow, or in the way which it does not allow, or what it does not allow now.

Book 7 · Unit 21

Meditation 21

#

Near is thy forgetfulness of all things; and near the forgetfulness of thee by all.

Book 7 · Unit 22

Meditation 22

#

It is peculiar to man to love even those who do wrong. And this happens, if when they do wrong it occurs to thee that they are kinsmen, and that they do wrong through ignorance and unintentionally, and that soon both of you will die; and above all, that the wrongdoer has done thee no harm, for he has not made thy ruling faculty worse than it was before.

Book 7 · Unit 23

Meditation 23

#

The universal nature out of the universal substance, as if it were wax, now moulds a horse, and when it has broken this up, it uses the material for a tree, then for a man, then for something else; and each of these things subsists for a very short time. But it is no hardship for the vessel to be broken up, just as there was none in its being fastened together.

Book 7 · Unit 24

Meditation 24

#

A scowling look is altogether unnatural; when it is often assumed, the result is that all comeliness dies away, and at last is so completely extinguished that it cannot be again lighted up at all. Try to conclude from this very fact that it is contrary to reason. For if even the perception of doing wrong shall depart, what reason is there for living any longer?

Book 7 · Unit 25

Meditation 25

#

Nature which governs the whole will soon change all things which thou seest, and out of their substance will make other things, and again other things from the substance of them, in order that the world may be ever new.

Book 7 · Unit 26

Meditation 26

#

When a man has done thee any wrong, immediately consider with what opinion about good or evil he has done wrong. For when thou hast seen this, thou wilt pity him, and wilt neither wonder nor be angry. For either thou thyself thinkest the same thing to be good that he does or another thing of the same kind. It is thy duty then to pardon him. But if thou dost not think such things to be good or evil, thou wilt more readily be well disposed to him who is in error.

Book 7 · Unit 27

Meditation 27

#

Think not so much of what thou hast not as of what thou hast: but of the things which thou hast select the best, and then reflect how eagerly they would have been sought, if thou hadst them not. At the same time however take care that thou dost not through being so pleased with them accustom thyself to overvalue them, so as to be disturbed if ever thou shouldst not have them.

Book 7 · Unit 28

Meditation 28

#

Retire into thyself. The rational principle which rules has this nature, that it is content with itself when it does what is just, and so secures tranquility.

Book 7 · Unit 29

Meditation 29

#

Wipe out the imagination. Stop the pulling of the strings. Confine thyself to the present. Understand well what happens either to thee or to another. Divide and distribute every object into the causal [formal] and the material. Think of thy last hour. Let the wrong which is done by a man stay there where the wrong was done.

Book 7 · Unit 30

Meditation 30

#

Direct thy attention to what is said. Let thy understanding enter into the things that are doing and the things which do them.

Book 7 · Unit 31

Meditation 31

#

Adorn thyself with simplicity and modesty and with indifference towards the things which lie between virtue and vice. Love mankind. Follow God. The poet says that Law rules all. And it is enough to remember that Law rules all.

Book 7 · Unit 32

Meditation 32

#

About death: Whether it is a dispersion, or a resolution into atoms, or annihilation, it is either extinction or change.

Book 7 · Unit 33

Meditation 33

#

About pain: The pain which is intolerable carries us off; but that which lasts a long time is tolerable; and the mind maintains its own tranquility by retiring into itself, and the ruling faculty is not made worse. But the parts which are harmed by pain, let them, if they can, give their opinion about it.

Book 7 · Unit 34

Meditation 34

#

About fame: Look at the minds of those who seek fame, observe what they are, and what kind of things they avoid, and what kind of things they pursue. And consider that as the heaps of sand piled on one another hide the former sands, so in life the events which go before are soon covered by those which come after.

Book 7 · Unit 35

Meditation 35

#

From Plato: The man who has an elevated mind and takes a view of all time and of all substance, dost thou suppose it possible for him to think that human life is anything great? it is not possible, he said.—Such a man then will think that death also is no evil.—Certainly not.

Book 7 · Unit 36

Meditation 36

#

From Antisthenes: It is royal to do good and to be abused. It is a base thing for the countenance to be obedient and to regulate and compose itself as the mind commands, and for the mind not to be regulated and composed by itself.

Book 7 · Unit 37

Meditation 37

#

It is not right to vex ourselves at things, For they care nought about it.

Book 7 · Unit 38

Meditation 38

#

To the immortal gods and us give joy.

Book 7 · Unit 39

Meditation 39

#

Life must be reaped like the ripe ears of corn: One man is born; another dies.

Book 7 · Unit 40

Meditation 40

#

If gods care not for me and for my children, There is a reason for it.

Book 7 · Unit 41

Meditation 41

#

For the good is with me, and the just.

Book 7 · Unit 42

Meditation 42

#

No joining others in their wailing, no violent emotion.

Book 7 · Unit 43

Meditation 43

#

From Plato: But I would make this man a sufficient answer, which is this: Thou sayest not well, if thou thinkest that a man who is good for anything at all ought to compute the hazard of life or death, and should not rather look to this only in all that he does, whether he is doing what is just or unjust, and the works of a good or a bad man.

Book 7 · Unit 44

Meditation 44

#

For thus it is, men of Athens, in truth: wherever a man has placed himself thinking it the best place for him, or has been placed by a commander, there in my opinion he ought to stay and to abide the hazard, taking nothing into the reckoning, either death or anything else, before the baseness of deserting his post.

Book 7 · Unit 45

Meditation 45

#

But, my good friend, reflect whether that which is noble and good is not something different from saving and being saved; for as to a man living such or such a time, at least one who is really a man, consider if this is not a thing to be dismissed from the thoughts: and there must be no love of life: but as to these matters a man must entrust them to the deity and believe what the women say, that no man can escape his destiny, the next inquiry being how he may best live the time that he has to live.

Book 7 · Unit 46

Meditation 46

#

Look round at the courses of the stars, as if thou wert going along with them; and constantly consider the changes of the elements into one another; for such thoughts purge away the filth of the terrene life.

Book 7 · Unit 47

Meditation 47

#

This is a fine saying of Plato: That he who is discoursing about men should look also at earthly things as if he viewed them from some higher place; should look at them in their assemblies, armies, agricultural labours, marriages, treaties, births, deaths, noise of the courts of justice, desert places, various nations of barbarians, feasts, lamentations, markets, a mixture of all things and an orderly combination of contraries.

Book 7 · Unit 48

Meditation 48

#

Consider the past; such great changes of political supremacies. Thou mayest foresee also the things which will be. For they will certainly be of like form, and it is not possible that they should deviate from the order of the things which take place now: accordingly to have contemplated human life for forty years is the same as to have contemplated it for ten thousand years. For what more wilt thou see?

Book 7 · Unit 49

Meditation 49

#

That which has grown from the earth to the earth, But that which has sprung from heavenly seed, Back to the heavenly realms returns.

Book 7 · Unit 50

Meditation 50

#

This is either a dissolution of the mutual involution of the atoms, or a similar dispersion of the unsentient elements.

Book 7 · Unit 51

Meditation 51

#

With food and drinks and cunning magic arts Turning the channel's course to 'scape from death. The breeze which heaven has sent We must endure, and toil without complaining.

Book 7 · Unit 52

Meditation 52

#

Another may be more expert in casting his opponent; but he is not more social, nor more modest, nor better disciplined to meet all that happens, nor more considerate with respect to the faults of his neighbours.

Book 7 · Unit 53

Meditation 53

#

Where any work can be done conformably to the reason which is common to gods and men, there we have nothing to fear: for where we are able to get profit by means of the activity which is successful and proceeds according to our constitution, there no harm is to be suspected.

Book 7 · Unit 54

Meditation 54

#

Everywhere and at all times it is in thy power piously to acquiesce in thy present condition, and to behave justly to those who are about thee, and to exert thy skill upon thy present thoughts, that nothing shall steal into them without being well examined.

Book 7 · Unit 55

Meditation 55

#

Do not look around thee to discover other men's ruling principles, but look straight to this, to what nature leads thee, both the universal nature through the things which happen to thee, and thy own nature through the acts which must be done by thee. But every being ought to do that which is according to its constitution; and all other things have been constituted for the sake of rational beings, just as among irrational things the inferior for the sake of the superior, but the rational for the sake of one another.

Book 7 · Unit 56

Meditation 56

#

The prime principle then in man's constitution is the social. And the second is not to yield to the persuasions of the body, for it is the peculiar office of the rational and intelligent motion to circumscribe itself, and never to be overpowered either by the motion of the senses or of the appetites, for both are animal; but the intelligent motion claims superiority and does not permit itself to be overpowered by the others. And with good reason, for it is formed by nature to use all of them. The third thing in the rational constitution is freedom from error and from deception. Let then the ruling principle holding fast to these things go straight on, and it has what is its own.

Book 7 · Unit 57

Meditation 57

#

Consider thyself to be dead, and to have completed thy life up to the present time; and live according to nature the remainder which is allowed thee.

Book 7 · Unit 58

Meditation 58

#

Love that only which happens to thee and is spun with the thread of thy destiny. For what is more suitable?

Book 7 · Unit 59

Meditation 59

#

In everything which happens keep before thy eyes those to whom the same things happened, and how they were vexed, and treated them as strange things, and found fault with them: and now where are they? Nowhere. Why then dost thou too choose to act in the same way? And why dost thou not leave these agitations which are foreign to nature, to those who cause them and those who are moved by them? And why art thou not altogether intent upon the right way of making use of the things which happen to thee? For then thou wilt use them well, and they will be a material for thee to work on. Only attend to thyself, and resolve to be a good man in every act which thou doest: and remember …

Book 7 · Unit 60

Meditation 60

#

Look within. Within is the fountain of good, and it will ever bubble up, if thou wilt ever dig.

Book 7 · Unit 61

Meditation 61

#

The body ought to be compact, and to show no irregularity either in motion or attitude. For what the mind shows in the face by maintaining in it the expression of intelligence and propriety, that ought to be required also in the whole body. But all of these things should be observed without affectation.

Book 7 · Unit 62

Meditation 62

#

The art of life is more like the wrestler's art than the dancer's, in respect of this, that it should stand ready and firm to meet onsets which are sudden and unexpected.

Book 7 · Unit 63

Meditation 63

#

Constantly observe who those are whose approbation thou wishest to have, and what ruling principles they possess. For then thou wilt neither blame those who offend involuntarily, nor wilt thou want their approbation, if thou lookest to the sources of their opinions and appetites.

Book 7 · Unit 64

Meditation 64

#

Every soul, the philosopher says, is involuntarily deprived of truth; consequently in the same way it is deprived of justice and temperance and benevolence and everything of the kind. It is most necessary to bear this constantly in mind, for thus thou wilt be more gentle towards all.

Book 7 · Unit 65

Meditation 65

#

In every pain let this thought be present, that there is no dishonour in it, nor does it make the governing intelligence worse, for it does not damage the intelligence either so far as the intelligence is rational or so far as it is social. Indeed in the case of most pains let this remark of Epicurus aid thee, that pain is neither intolerable nor everlasting, if thou bearest in mind that it has its limits, and if thou addest nothing to it in imagination: and remember this too, that we do not perceive that many things which are disagreeable to us are the same as pain, such as excessive drowsiness, and the being scorched by heat, and the having no appetite. When then thou art discontented about any of these things, say to thyself, that thou art yielding to pain.

Book 7 · Unit 66

Meditation 66

#

Take care not to feel towards the inhuman, as they feel towards men.

Book 7 · Unit 67

Meditation 67

#

How do we know if Telauges was not superior in character to Socrates? For it is not enough that Socrates died a more noble death, and disputed more skilfully with the sophists, and passed the night in the cold with more endurance, and that when he was bid to arrest Leon of Salamis, he considered it more noble to refuse, and that he walked in a swaggering way in the streets—though as to this fact one may have great doubts if it was true. But we ought to inquire, what kind of a soul it was that Socrates possessed, and if he was able to be content with being just towards men and pious towards the gods, neither idly vexed on account of men's villainy, nor yet making himself a slave to any man's ignorance, nor receiving as strange anything that fell to his share out of the universal, nor enduring it as intolerable, nor allowing his understanding to sympathize with the affects of the miserable flesh.

Book 7 · Unit 68

Meditation 68

#

Nature has not so mingled the intelligence with the composition of the body, as not to have allowed thee the power of circumscribing thyself and of bringing under subjection to thyself all that is thy own; for it is very possible to be a divine man and to be recognised as such by no one. Always bear this in mind; and another thing too, that very little indeed is necessary for living a happy life. And because thou hast despaired of becoming a dialectician and skilled in the knowledge of nature, do not for this reason renounce the hope of being both free and modest and social and obedient to God.

Book 7 · Unit 69

Meditation 69

#

It is in thy power to live free from all compulsion in the greatest tranquility of mind, even if all the world cry out against thee as much as they choose, and even if wild beasts tear in pieces the members of this kneaded matter which has grown around thee. For what hinders the mind in the midst of all this from maintaining itself in tranquility and in a just judgement of all surrounding things and in a ready use of the objects which are presented to it, so that the judgement may say to the thing which falls under its observation: This thou art in substance [reality], though in men's opinion thou mayest appear to be of a different kind; and the use shall say to that which falls under the hand: Thou art the thing that I was seeking; for to me that which presents itself is always a material for virtue both rational and political, and in a word, for the exercise of art, which belongs to man or God. For everything which happens has a relationship either to God or man, and is neither new nor difficult to handle, but usual and apt matter to work on.

Book 7 · Unit 70

Meditation 70

#

The perfection of moral character consists in this, in passing every day as the last, and in being neither violently excited nor torpid nor playing the hypocrite.

Book 7 · Unit 71

Meditation 71

#

The gods who are immortal are not vexed because during so long a time they must tolerate continually men such as they are and so many of them bad; and besides this, they also take care of them in all ways. But thou, who art destined to end so soon, art thou wearied of enduring the bad, and this too when thou art one of them?

Book 7 · Unit 72

Meditation 72

#

It is a ridiculous thing for a man not to fly from his own badness, which is indeed possible, but to fly from other men's badness, which is impossible.

Book 7 · Unit 73

Meditation 73

#

Whatever the rational and political [social] faculty finds to be neither intelligent nor social, it properly judges to be inferior to itself.

Book 7 · Unit 74

Meditation 74

#

When thou hast done a good act and another has received it, why dost thou look for a third thing besides these, as fools do, either to have the reputation of having done a good act or to obtain a return?

Book 7 · Unit 75

Meditation 75

#

No man is tired of receiving what is useful. But it is useful to act according to nature. Do not then be tired of receiving what is useful by doing it to others.

Book 7 · Unit 76

Meditation 76

#

The nature of the All moved to make the universe. But now either everything that takes place comes by way of consequence or continuity; or even the chief things towards which the ruling power of the universe directs its own movement are governed by no rational principle. If this is remembered it will make thee more tranquil in many things.

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

What is evil? It is what you have seen many times before. With everything that happens, keep this in mind: it is what you have seen many times before. Everywhere, up and down, you will find the same things—the things that fill the old histories, the middle ages, and our own day; the things that fill cities and households now. Nothing is new: all things are both familiar and short-lived.

Unit 02

02

How can our principles die unless the thoughts that sustain them are allowed to go out? But it is in your power to fan those thoughts back into flame at any time. I can hold the right opinion about anything—and if I can, why am I disturbed? Things outside my mind have no relation to my mind at all. Let this be the state of your dispositions, and you stand upright. To recover your life is in your power. Look at things again as you once looked at them; in that consists the recovery of your life.

Unit 03

03

The idle business of spectacle: plays on the stage, flocks of sheep, herds, exercises with spears, a bone thrown to puppies, a crumb dropped into fishponds, the labouring of ants and their load-carrying, the scurrying of frightened mice, puppets pulled by strings—all the same. Your duty, in the midst of such things, is to show good humour without arrogance, while understanding that every person is worth exactly as much as the things he busies himself with.

Unit 04

04

In conversation, attend to what is being said; in every action, observe what is being done. In the one, see at once what end it aims at; in the other, watch carefully what it signifies.

Unit 05

05

Is my understanding sufficient for this, or not? If it is, I use it as an instrument given by universal nature. If it is not, then either I stand aside and yield to someone who can do it better—unless there is reason I should not—or I do it as well as I can, taking as a partner whoever can help my governing reason accomplish what is now fit and useful for the common good. For whatever I do, whether alone or with another, should be directed to one thing only: what is useful and suited to the community.

Unit 06

06

How many, after being celebrated by fame, have been handed over to oblivion; and how many who once celebrated the fame of others have themselves long been dead.

Unit 07

07

Do not be ashamed of being helped. Your business is to do your duty like a soldier storming a wall. What if you are lame and cannot scale the battlements alone, but with another's help it becomes possible?

Unit 08

08

Do not let future things disturb you. You will come to them, if you must, carrying the same reason you now use for present things.

Unit 09

09

All things are bound up with one another, and the bond is sacred. Hardly anything exists unconnected to every other thing, for all things have been coordinated, and they combine to form one ordered universe. There is one universe made up of all things, one God pervading all things, one substance, one law, one common reason in all intelligent beings, and one truth—if indeed there is also one perfection for all beings of the same stock who share in the same reason.

Unit 10

10

Everything material soon dissolves back into the substance of the whole; every cause is soon taken back into the universal reason; and the memory of everything is soon overwhelmed by time.

Unit 11

11

For a rational being, the same act is both natural and rational.

Unit 12

12

Stand upright, or be set upright.

Unit 13

13

Just as it is with the limbs of a single body, so it is with rational beings, though they exist apart—they have been made for one cooperation. This will strike you more clearly if you often say to yourself: I am a member of the system of rational beings. But if you say only that you are a part, you do not yet love others from the heart; doing good does not yet delight you for its own sake. You still do it merely as a duty, not yet as something good for yourself.

Unit 14

14

Let whatever will fall upon the parts of me that can feel it. Those parts may complain if they choose. But I, unless I judge what has happened to be an evil, am not injured. And it is in my power not to judge it so.

Unit 15

15

Whatever anyone does or says, I must be good—just as if gold, or emerald, or purple were always saying: whatever anyone does or says, I must be emerald and keep my colour.

Unit 16

16

The ruling faculty does not disturb itself—it does not frighten itself or cause itself pain. If anything else can frighten or pain it, let it try; the faculty itself will not, by its own judgement, turn in that direction. Let the body take care, if it can, that it suffers nothing, and let it speak if it suffers. But the soul—the thing subject to fear and pain, which has complete power to form opinions about these—will suffer nothing, for it will never deviate into such a judgement. The ruling principle in itself wants nothing unless it creates the want; and therefore it is free from perturbation and unimpeded, so long as it does not disturb and impede itself.

Unit 17

17

Happiness is a good spirit—or simply, a good thing. What, then, are you doing here, imagination? Go away, I beg you by the gods, just as you came; I do not need you. But you have come in your old way. I am not angry with you—only go away.

Unit 18

18

Is anyone afraid of change? But what can happen without it? What is more pleasing or more suited to universal nature? Can you take a hot bath unless the firewood changes? Can you be nourished unless your food changes? Can anything useful be accomplished without change? Do you not see, then, that your own change is just the same—and equally necessary for universal nature?

Unit 19

19

Through the universal substance, as through a rushing torrent, all bodies are carried—by nature united with and cooperating with the whole, as the parts of our body cooperate with one another. How many a Chrysippus, how many a Socrates, how many an Epictetus has time already swallowed up? Let the same thought occur to you with every person and every thing.

Unit 20

20

One thing alone troubles me: that I might do something that human nature does not allow, or in a way it does not allow, or at a time it does not allow.

Unit 21

21

Near is your forgetting of all things, and near is the world's forgetting of you.

Unit 22

22

It is distinctly human to love even those who do wrong. This comes when you remember that they are kin, that they err through ignorance and without intention, that soon both of you will die, and above all, that the wrongdoer has done you no real harm—for he has not made your ruling faculty worse than it was before.

Unit 23

23

Universal nature, out of the universal substance—as if it were wax—now moulds a horse; when it has broken this up, it uses the material for a tree, then for a man, then for something else. Each of these forms lasts a very short time. But it is no hardship for a vessel to be broken up, just as there was none in its being put together.

Unit 24

24

A scowling face is altogether unnatural; when the expression is worn habitually, all beauty dies away, and at last is so completely extinguished that it cannot be rekindled. Try to draw this conclusion from the fact itself: it is contrary to reason. For if even the awareness of doing wrong should fade, what reason is there for living any longer?

Unit 25

25

The nature that governs the whole will soon change everything you see, and out of their substance make other things, and out of those still others, so that the world is always new.

Unit 26

26

When someone has wronged you, consider at once what opinion of good or evil led him to do it. When you see that, you will pity him, and feel neither wonder nor anger. For either you yourself hold the same thing to be good, or something like it, and therefore you should forgive; or if you no longer regard such things as good or evil, you will find it still easier to be well-disposed toward someone who is mistaken.

Unit 27

27

Think not so much of what you lack as of what you have. From what you have, select the best, and then reflect how eagerly you would have sought it if you did not possess it. But at the same time, take care not to become so pleased with these things that you overvalue them—so that you would be disturbed if you ever lost them.

Unit 28

28

Withdraw into yourself. The rational principle that governs has this nature: it is content with itself when it does what is just, and so secures tranquility.

Unit 29

29

Wipe out the impression. Stop the puppet-strings. Confine yourself to the present moment. Understand clearly what happens to you or to another. Divide every object into its cause and its matter. Think of your last hour. Let the wrong done by someone remain where it was done.

Unit 30

30

Direct your attention to what is said. Let your understanding enter into the things being done and the agents doing them.

Unit 31

31

Adorn yourself with simplicity and modesty, and with indifference toward the things that lie between virtue and vice. Love humankind. Follow God. The poet says that law rules all—and it is enough to remember that law rules all.

Unit 32

32

On death: whether it is a dispersion, a dissolution into atoms, or annihilation—it is either extinction or change.

Unit 33

33

On pain: pain that is intolerable carries us off; pain that lasts a long time is tolerable. The mind maintains its own tranquility by withdrawing into itself, and the ruling faculty is not made worse. As for the parts of the body harmed by pain—let them, if they can, register their complaint.

Unit 34

34

On fame: look at the minds of those who pursue it—observe what they are, what they avoid, what they chase. Consider that, as heaps of sand piled on one another bury what lies beneath, so in life the events that follow soon cover the events that came before.

Unit 35

35

From Plato: the man who possesses an elevated mind and surveys all time and all existence—do you think it possible for him to regard human life as anything great? It is not possible, he said. Then such a man will consider death no evil either? Certainly not.

Unit 36

36

From Antisthenes: it is kingly to do good and be reviled for it. It is base for the face to obey the mind's commands, composing and arranging itself as it is told, while the mind itself is not composed and arranged by its own effort.

Unit 37

37

It is not right to be angry at things, for they care nothing about it.

Unit 38

38

Give joy to the immortal gods and to us.

Unit 39

39

Life must be reaped like ripe ears of grain: one is born, another dies.

Unit 40

40

If the gods care not for me and my children, there is a reason for it.

Unit 41

41

For the good is with me, and the just.

Unit 42

42

No joining in the wailing of others, no violent emotion.

Unit 43

43

From Plato: I would give this man a sufficient answer, which is this: you are wrong if you think that a man worth anything at all should weigh the risk of life or death. He should look to one thing only in all that he does—whether he is acting justly or unjustly, and whether his works are those of a good or a bad man.

Unit 44

44

For this is the truth, men of Athens: wherever a man has stationed himself thinking it the best place, or has been stationed by his commander, there in my judgement he ought to remain and face the danger, reckoning nothing—neither death nor anything else—before the disgrace of deserting his post.

Unit 45

45

But, my friend, consider whether what is noble and good might not be something different from saving and being saved. For a man who is truly a man, the question of how long he lives is one to set aside; there must be no clinging to life. In these matters, one must trust the deity and believe what the women say—that no one escapes his destiny—and ask only how best to live the time that remains.

Unit 46

46

Look at the courses of the stars as if you were moving among them, and constantly consider the changes of the elements into one another; for such thoughts cleanse the mind of the dust of earthly life.

Unit 47

47

This is a fine saying of Plato: whoever speaks about human beings should also look down at earthly things as if from some height—at assemblies, armies, farms, marriages, treaties, births, deaths, noisy courtrooms, deserted places, various foreign peoples, festivals, laments, and markets: a mixture of everything, an orderly combination of opposites.

Unit 48

48

Consider the past—those great upheavals of political power. You can foresee the future as well, for it will certainly take the same form; it cannot depart from the pattern of what happens now. To have observed human life for forty years, then, is the same as to have observed it for ten thousand. For what more will you see?

Unit 49

49

What has grown from the earth returns to the earth; what has sprung from heavenly seed returns to the heavenly realms.

Unit 50

50

This is either a dissolution of the atoms' mutual entanglement, or a similar scattering of insensible elements.

Unit 51

51

With food and drink and cunning arts, turning the stream aside to escape from death. The wind that heaven sends we must endure, and labour without complaint.

Unit 52

52

Another may be more skilled at throwing his opponent, but he is not more social, more modest, better prepared to meet whatever happens, or more considerate toward the faults of his neighbours.

Unit 53

53

Where any work can be done in accord with the reason shared by gods and men, there is nothing to fear. Where we can gain by activity that succeeds and proceeds according to our constitution, no harm is to be suspected.

Unit 54

54

Everywhere and at all times it is in your power to accept your present condition with reverence, to act justly toward those around you, and to examine your present thoughts with care, so that nothing enters them without scrutiny.

Unit 55

55

Do not look around to discover other people's governing principles. Look straight at what nature leads you toward—both universal nature, through the things that happen to you, and your own nature, through the acts required of you. Every being ought to do what accords with its constitution; all other things have been made for the sake of rational beings, just as among irrational things the lower exists for the higher, and among rational beings each exists for the sake of the others.

Unit 56

56

The first principle in human nature is the social. The second is not to yield to the body's persuasions, for it is the proper work of rational intelligence to set its own limits and never be overpowered by the motions of sense or appetite—both of which are animal. Intelligence claims superiority and will not allow itself to be overruled, and rightly so, since it is formed by nature to govern them all. The third principle is freedom from error and deception. Let the ruling faculty hold fast to these three, and it goes forward with what is its own.

Unit 57

57

Consider yourself already dead, and your life up to this moment complete. Then live the remainder that is given to you according to nature.

Unit 58

58

Love only what happens to you and is woven into the thread of your destiny. For what could suit you better?

Unit 59

59

In everything that happens, keep before your eyes those to whom the same things happened—how they were vexed, treated events as strange, found fault with them. And where are they now? Nowhere. Why, then, do you choose to act in the same way? Why not leave these disturbances, which are foreign to nature, to those who cause them and those who are moved by them? Why not direct yourself entirely to the right use of what happens to you? For then you will use events well, and they will be material for you to work on. Only attend to yourself, and resolve to be a good person in every act you do. And remember…

Unit 60

60

Look within. Within is the fountain of good, and it will always spring up if you always dig.

Unit 61

61

The body should be composed, showing no irregularity in motion or bearing. What the mind achieves in the face—maintaining an expression of intelligence and dignity—should be required of the whole body. But all this must be done without affectation.

Unit 62

62

The art of life is more like wrestling than dancing: it must stand ready and firm to meet blows that are sudden and unexpected.

Unit 63

63

Constantly observe who the people are whose approval you seek and what principles govern them. Then you will neither blame those who offend unintentionally nor need their approval, once you see the sources of their opinions and desires.

Unit 64

64

Every soul, the philosopher says, is deprived of truth involuntarily. The same holds for justice, temperance, benevolence, and every kindred virtue. It is most necessary to bear this constantly in mind, for it will make you gentler toward everyone.

Unit 65

65

In every pain, let this thought be present: there is no dishonour in it, and it does not make the governing intelligence worse—for it damages the intelligence neither in its rational nor in its social capacity. In most cases of pain, let this remark of Epicurus help you: pain is neither intolerable nor everlasting, so long as you keep its limits in mind and add nothing to it in imagination. Remember this too: many things we find disagreeable are really the same as pain—excessive drowsiness, oppressive heat, loss of appetite. When you are discontented with any of these, tell yourself that you are yielding to pain.

Unit 66

66

Take care not to feel toward the inhumane as they feel toward other people.

Unit 67

67

How do we know that Telauges was not superior in character to Socrates? It is not enough that Socrates died a nobler death, argued more deftly with the sophists, endured the cold more stubbornly, thought it nobler to refuse when ordered to arrest Leon of Salamis, or walked through the streets with a swagger—though even this last may not be true. What we ought to ask is: what kind of soul did Socrates have? Could he be content with being just toward others and reverent toward the gods, neither pointlessly angered by human wickedness nor enslaved to anyone's ignorance, neither taking what the universe assigned him as strange nor enduring it as intolerable, nor allowing his mind to share in the sufferings of the flesh?

Unit 68

68

Nature has not so entangled the intelligence with the body as to remove your power to set your own limits and bring what is yours under your own control. It is entirely possible to be a godlike person and be recognised as such by no one. Always keep this in mind, and this too: very little is needed for a happy life. And do not, because you have given up hope of becoming a dialectician or a natural philosopher, abandon the hope of being free, modest, social, and obedient to God.

Unit 69

69

It is in your power to live in the deepest tranquility, free from all compulsion, even if the whole world cries out against you and wild beasts tear apart the flesh that has grown around you. For what prevents the mind, in the midst of all this, from maintaining its tranquility, its just judgement of surrounding things, and its ready use of what is presented to it? So that judgement says to whatever appears: this is what you are in reality, however different you may seem in common opinion. And practical use says to whatever comes to hand: you are what I was looking for—for whatever presents itself is always material for rational and social virtue, for the exercise of the art that belongs to human beings and to God. Everything that happens is related either to God or to humanity, and is neither new nor difficult to work with, but familiar and fit material.

Unit 70

70

The perfection of moral character consists in this: to pass every day as if it were the last, neither violently agitated nor torpid nor playing the hypocrite.

Unit 71

71

The gods, who are immortal, are not vexed at having to tolerate for so long, and in such numbers, people as bad as these—and they even care for them in every way. But you, who are destined to end so soon, are you weary of enduring the bad? And this when you yourself are one of them?

Unit 72

72

It is absurd to flee from the badness of others—which is impossible—while not fleeing from your own badness, which is possible.

Unit 73

73

Whatever the rational and social faculty finds to be neither intelligent nor social, it rightly judges to be beneath itself.

Unit 74

74

When you have done a good act and another has received it, why do you still look for a third thing—as fools do—either the reputation of having done good, or a return?

Unit 75

75

No one tires of receiving what is useful. But it is useful to act according to nature. Do not, then, tire of receiving what is useful by doing it for others.

Unit 76

76

The nature of the whole set itself in motion to create the universe. Now either everything that happens follows by consequence or continuity from that original impulse, or even the highest aims toward which the ruling power of the universe directs itself are governed by no rational principle. Remembering this will make you more tranquil about many things.

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.

A drill book of reminders

Book VII is abundant, aphoristic, and deliberately repetitive. It should not be forced into a single argumentative line. Marcus is drilling first principles into memory by rotation: fame is nothing, death is natural, others err in ignorance, the good belongs to the ruling faculty, and the present task is enough.

Human sameness and gentleness

The book repeatedly turns the sameness of human error into an argument against surprise and against hatred. Once wrongdoing is seen as structurally familiar rather than personally astonishing, patience becomes more intelligible. This is one of the books in which Stoic social feeling is least icy and most humane.

Height, brevity, steadiness

The famous aerial perspective is everywhere in this book, whether explicit or implied. From above, reputations collapse, generations repeat themselves, and even dramatic suffering takes on a different outline. What remains valuable under that pressure is not spectacle but steady character: calm honesty, justice, readiness, and an inward source that does not run dry.