Meditations / Book 9

Marcus Aurelius · George Long · public domain

Book 9

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
43
Primary text
20 min read
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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 9 · Unit 01

Meditation 01

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He who acts unjustly acts impiously. For since the universal nature has made rational animals for the sake of one another to help one another according to their deserts, but in no way to injure one another, he who transgresses her will, is clearly guilty of impiety towards the highest divinity. And he too who lies is guilty of impiety to the same divinity; for the universal nature is the nature of things that are; and things that are have a relation to all things that come into existence. And further, this universal nature is named truth, and is the prime cause of all things that are true. He then who lies intentionally is guilty of impiety inasmuch as he acts unjustly by deceiving; and he also who lies unintentionally, inasmuch as he is at variance with the universal nature, and inasmuch as he disturbs the order by fighting against the nature of the world; for he fights against it, who is moved of himself to that which is contrary to truth, for he had received powers from nature through the neglect of which he is not able now to distinguish falsehood from truth. And indeed he who pursues pleasure as good, and avoids pain as evil, is guilty of impiety. For of necessity such a man must often find fault with the universal nature, alleging that it assigns things to the bad and the good contrary to their deserts, because frequently the bad are in the enjoyment of pleasure and possess the things which procure pleasure, but the good have pain for their share and the things which cause pain. And further, he who is afraid of pain will sometimes also be afraid of some of the things which will happen in the world, and even this is impiety. And he who pursues pleasure will not abstain from injustice, and this is plainly impiety. Now with respect to the things towards which the universal nature is equally affected—for it would not have made both, unless it was equally affected towards both—towards these they who wish to follow nature should be of the same mind with it, and equally affected. With respect to pain, then, and pleasure, or death and life, or honour and dishonour, which the universal nature employs equally, whoever is not equally affected is manifestly acting impiously. And I say that the universal nature employs them equally, instead of saying that they happen alike to those who are produced in continuous series and to those who come after them by virtue of a certain original movement of Providence, according to which it moved from a certain beginning to this ordering of things, having conceived certain principles of the things which were to be, and having determined powers productive of beings and of changes and of suchlike successions.

Book 9 · Unit 02

Meditation 02

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It would be a man's happiest lot to depart from mankind without having had any taste of lying and hypocrisy and luxury and pride. However to breathe out one's life when a man has had enough of these things is the next best voyage, as the saying is. Hast thou determined to abide with vice, and has not experience yet induced thee to fly from this pestilence? For the destruction of the understanding is a pestilence, much more indeed than any such corruption and change of this atmosphere which surrounds us. For this corruption is a pestilence of animals so far as they are animals; but the other is a pestilence of men so far as they are men.

Book 9 · Unit 03

Meditation 03

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Do not despise death, but be well content with it, since this too is one of those things which nature wills. For such as it is to be young and to grow old, and to increase and to reach maturity, and to have teeth and beard and grey hairs, and to beget, and to be pregnant and to bring forth, and all the other natural operations which the seasons of thy life bring, such also is dissolution. This, then, is consistent with the character of a reflecting man, to be neither careless nor impatient nor contemptuous with respect to death, but to wait for it as one of the operations of nature. As thou now waitest for the time when the child shall come out of thy wife's womb, so be ready for the time when thy soul shall fall out of this envelope. But if thou requirest also a vulgar kind of comfort which shall reach thy heart, thou wilt be made best reconciled to death by observing the objects from which thou art going to be removed, and the morals of those with whom thy soul will no longer be mingled. For it is no way right to be offended with men, but it is thy duty to care for them and to bear with them gently; and yet to remember that thy departure will be not from men who have the same principles as thyself. For this is the only thing, if there be any, which could draw us the contrary way and attach us to life, to be permitted to live with those who have the same principles as ourselves. But now thou seest how great is the trouble arising from the discordance of those who live together, so that thou mayest say, Come quick, O death, lest perchance I, too, should forget myself.

Book 9 · Unit 04

Meditation 04

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He who does wrong does wrong against himself. He who acts unjustly acts unjustly to himself, because he makes himself bad.

Book 9 · Unit 05

Meditation 05

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He often acts unjustly who does not do a certain thing; not only he who does a certain thing.

Book 9 · Unit 06

Meditation 06

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Thy present opinion founded on understanding, and thy present conduct directed to social good, and thy present disposition of contentment with everything which happens—that is enough.

Book 9 · Unit 07

Meditation 07

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Wipe out imagination; check desire; extinguish appetite; keep the ruling faculty in its own power.

Book 9 · Unit 08

Meditation 08

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Among the animals which have not reason one life is distributed; but among reasonable animals one intelligent soul is distributed: just as there is one earth of all things which are of an earthy nature, and we see by one light, and breathe one air, all of us that have the faculty of vision and all that have life.

Book 9 · Unit 09

Meditation 09

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All things which participate in anything which is common to them all move towards that which is of the same kind with themselves. Everything which is earthy turns towards the earth, everything which is liquid flows together, and everything which is of an aerial kind does the same, so that they require something to keep them asunder, and the application of force. Fire indeed moves upwards on account of the elemental fire, but it is so ready to be kindled together with all the fire which is here, that even every substance which is somewhat dry, is easily ignited, because there is less mingled with it of that which is a hindrance to ignition. Accordingly then everything also which participates in the common intelligent nature moves in like manner towards that which is of the same kind with itself, or moves even more. For so much as it is superior in comparison with all other things, in the same degree also is it more ready to mingle with and to be fused with that which is akin to it. Accordingly among animals devoid of reason we find swarms of bees, and herds of cattle, and the nurture of young birds, and in a manner, loves; for even in animals there are souls, and that power which brings them together is seen to exert itself in the superior degree, and in such a way as never has been observed in plants nor in stones nor in trees. But in rational animals there are political communities and friendships, and families and meetings of people; and in wars, treaties and armistices. But in the things which are still superior, even though they are separated from one another, unity in a manner exists, as in the stars. Thus the ascent to the higher degree is able to produce a sympathy even in things which are separated. See, then, what now takes place. For only intelligent animals have now forgotten this mutual desire and inclination, and in them alone the property of flowing together is not seen. But still though men strive to avoid this union, they are caught and held by it, for their nature is too strong for them; and thou wilt see what I say, if thou only observest. Sooner, then, will one find anything earthy which comes in contact with no earthy thing than a man altogether separated from other men.

Book 9 · Unit 10

Meditation 10

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Both man and God and the universe produce fruit; at the proper seasons each produces it. But if usage has especially fixed these terms to the vine and like things, this is nothing. Reason produces fruit both for all and for itself, and there are produced from it other things of the same kind as reason itself.

Book 9 · Unit 11

Meditation 11

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If thou art able, correct by teaching those who do wrong; but if thou canst not, remember that indulgence is given to thee for this purpose. And the gods, too, are indulgent to such persons; and for some purposes they even help them to get health, wealth, reputation; so kind they are. And it is in thy power also; or say, who hinders thee?

Book 9 · Unit 12

Meditation 12

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Labour not as one who is wretched, nor yet as one who would be pitied or admired: but direct thy will to one thing only, to put thyself in motion and to check thyself, as the social reason requires.

Book 9 · Unit 13

Meditation 13

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Today I have got out of all trouble, or rather I have cast out all trouble, for it was not outside, but within and in my opinions.

Book 9 · Unit 14

Meditation 14

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All things are the same, familiar in experience, and ephemeral in time, and worthless in the matter. Everything now is just as it was in the time of those whom we have buried.

Book 9 · Unit 15

Meditation 15

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Things stand outside of us, themselves by themselves, neither knowing aught of themselves, nor expressing any judgement. What is it, then, which does judge about them? The ruling faculty.

Book 9 · Unit 16

Meditation 16

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Not in passivity, but in activity lie the evil and the good of the rational social animal, just as his virtue and his vice lie not in passivity, but in activity.

Book 9 · Unit 17

Meditation 17

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For the stone which has been thrown up it is no evil to come down, nor indeed any good to have been carried up.

Book 9 · Unit 18

Meditation 18

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Penetrate inwards into men's leading principles, and thou wilt see what judges thou art afraid of, and what kind of judges they are of themselves.

Book 9 · Unit 19

Meditation 19

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All things are changing: and thou thyself art in continuous mutation and in a manner in continuous destruction, and the whole universe too.

Book 9 · Unit 20

Meditation 20

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It is thy duty to leave another man's wrongful act there where it is.

Book 9 · Unit 21

Meditation 21

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Termination of activity, cessation from movement and opinion, and in a sense their death, is no evil. Turn thy thoughts now to the consideration of thy life, thy life as a child, as a youth, thy manhood, thy old age, for in these also every change was a death. Is this anything to fear? Turn thy thoughts now to thy life under thy grandfather, then to thy life under thy mother, then to thy life under thy father; and as thou findest many other differences and changes and terminations, ask thyself, Is this anything to fear? In like manner, then, neither are the termination and cessation and change of thy whole life a thing to be afraid of.

Book 9 · Unit 22

Meditation 22

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Hasten to examine thy own ruling faculty and that of the universe and that of thy neighbour: thy own that thou mayest make it just: and that of the universe, that thou mayest remember of what thou art a part; and that of thy neighbour, that thou mayest know whether he has acted ignorantly or with knowledge, and that thou mayest also consider that his ruling faculty is akin to thine.

Book 9 · Unit 23

Meditation 23

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As thou thyself art a component part of a social system, so let every act of thine be a component part of social life. Whatever act of thine then has no reference either immediately or remotely to a social end, this tears asunder thy life, and does not allow it to be one, and it is of the nature of a mutiny, just as when in a popular assembly a man acting by himself stands apart from the general agreement.

Book 9 · Unit 24

Meditation 24

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Quarrels of little children and their sports, and poor spirits carrying about dead bodies, such is everything; and so what is exhibited in the representation of the mansions of the dead strikes our eyes more clearly.

Book 9 · Unit 25

Meditation 25

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Examine into the quality of the form of an object, and detach it altogether from its material part, and then contemplate it; then determine the time, the longest which a thing of this peculiar form is naturally made to endure.

Book 9 · Unit 26

Meditation 26

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Thou hast endured infinite troubles through not being contented with thy ruling faculty, when it does the things which it is constituted by nature to do. But enough of this.

Book 9 · Unit 27

Meditation 27

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When another blames thee or hates thee, or when men say about thee anything injurious, approach their poor souls, penetrate within, and see what kind of men they are. Thou wilt discover that there is no reason to take any trouble that these men may have this or that opinion about thee. However thou must be well disposed towards them, for by nature they are friends. And the gods too aid them in all ways, by dreams, by signs, towards the attainment of those things on which they set a value.

Book 9 · Unit 28

Meditation 28

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The periodic movements of the universe are the same, up and down from age to age. And either the universal intelligence puts itself in motion for every separate effect, and if this is so, be thou content with that which is the result of its activity; or it puts itself in motion once, and everything else comes by way of sequence in a manner; or indivisible elements are the origin of all things.—In a word, if there is a god, all is well; and if chance rules, do not thou also be governed by it.

Book 9 · Unit 29

Meditation 29

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Soon will the earth cover us all: then the earth, too, will change, and the things also which result from change will continue to change forever, and these again forever. For if a man reflects on the changes and transformations which follow one another like wave after wave and their rapidity, he will despise everything which is perishable.

Book 9 · Unit 30

Meditation 30

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The universal cause is like a winter torrent: it carries everything along with it. But how worthless are all these poor people who are engaged in matters political, and, as they suppose, are playing the philosopher! All drivellers. Well then, man: do what nature now requires. Set thyself in motion, if it is in thy power, and do not look about thee to see if anyone will observe it; nor yet expect Plato's Republic: but be content if the smallest thing goes on well, and consider such an event to be no small matter. For who can change men's opinions? And without a change of opinions what else is there than the slavery of men who groan while they pretend to obey? Come now and tell me of Alexander and Philip and Demetrius of Phalerum. They themselves shall judge whether they discovered what the common nature required, and trained themselves accordingly. But if they acted like tragedy heroes, no one has condemned me to imitate them. Simple and modest is the work of philosophy. Draw me not aside to indolence and pride.

Book 9 · Unit 31

Meditation 31

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Look down from above on the countless herds of men and their countless solemnities, and the infinitely varied voyagings in storms and calms, and the differences among those who are born, who live together, and die. And consider, too, the life lived by others in olden time, and the life of those who will live after thee, and the life now lived among barbarous nations, and how many know not even thy name, and how many will soon forget it, and how they who perhaps now are praising thee will very soon blame thee, and that neither a posthumous name is of any value, nor reputation, nor anything else.

Book 9 · Unit 32

Meditation 32

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Let there be freedom from perturbations with respect to the things which come from the external cause; and let there be justice in the things done by virtue of the internal cause, that is, let there be movement and action terminating in this, in social acts, for this is according to thy nature.

Book 9 · Unit 33

Meditation 33

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Thou canst remove out of the way many useless things among those which disturb thee, for they lie entirely in thy opinion; and thou wilt then gain for thyself ample space by comprehending the whole universe in thy mind, and by contemplating the eternity of time, and observing the rapid change of every several thing, how short is the time from birth to dissolution, and the illimitable time before birth as well as the equally boundless time after dissolution.

Book 9 · Unit 34

Meditation 34

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All that thou seest will quickly perish, and those who have been spectators of its dissolution will very soon perish too. And he who dies at the extremest old age will be brought into the same condition with him who died prematurely.

Book 9 · Unit 35

Meditation 35

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What are these men's leading principles, and about what kind of things are they busy, and for what kind of reasons do they love and honour? Imagine that thou seest their poor souls laid bare. When they think that they do harm by their blame or good by their praise, what an idea!

Book 9 · Unit 36

Meditation 36

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Loss is nothing else than change. But the universal nature delights in change, and in obedience to her all things are now done well, and from eternity have been done in like form, and will be such to time without end. What, then, dost thou say? That all things have been and all things always will be bad, and that no power has ever been found in so many gods to rectify these things, but the world has been condemned to be found in never ceasing evil?

Book 9 · Unit 37

Meditation 37

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The rottenness of the matter which is the foundation of everything! Water, dust, bones, filth: or again, marble rocks, the callosities of the earth; and gold and silver, the sediments; and garments, only bits of hair; and purple dye, blood; and everything else is of the same kind. And that which is of the nature of breath is also another thing of the same kind, changing from this to that.

Book 9 · Unit 38

Meditation 38

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Enough of this wretched life and murmuring and apish tricks. Why art thou disturbed? What is there new in this? What unsettles thee? Is it the form of the thing? Look at it. Or is it the matter? Look at it. But besides these there is nothing. Towards the gods, then, now become at last more simple and better. It is the same whether we examine these things for a hundred years or three.

Book 9 · Unit 39

Meditation 39

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If any man has done wrong, the harm is his own. But perhaps he has not done wrong.

Book 9 · Unit 40

Meditation 40

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Either all things proceed from one intelligent source and come together as in one body, and the part ought not to find fault with what is done for the benefit of the whole; or there are only atoms, and nothing else than mixture and dispersion. Why, then, art thou disturbed? Say to the ruling faculty, Art thou dead, art thou corrupted, art thou playing the hypocrite, art thou become a beast, dost thou herd and feed with the rest?

Book 9 · Unit 41

Meditation 41

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Either the gods have no power or they have power. If, then, they have no power, why dost thou pray to them? But if they have power, why dost thou not pray for them to give thee the faculty of not fearing any of the things which thou fearest, or of not desiring any of the things which thou desirest, or not being pained at anything, rather than pray that any of these things should not happen or happen? for certainly if they can cooperate with men, they can cooperate for these purposes. But perhaps thou wilt say, the gods have placed them in thy power. Well, then, is it not better to use what is in thy power like a free man than to desire in a slavish and abject way what is not in thy power? And who has told thee that the gods do not aid us even in the things which are in our power? Begin, then, to pray for such things, and thou wilt see. One man prays thus: How shall I be able to lie with that woman? Do thou pray thus: How shall I not desire to lie with her? Another prays thus: How shall I be released from this? Another prays: How shall I not desire to be released? Another thus: How shall I not lose my little son? Thou thus: How shall I not be afraid to lose him? In fine, turn thy prayers this way, and see what comes.

Book 9 · Unit 42

Meditation 42

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Epicurus says, In my sickness my conversation was not about my bodily sufferings, nor, says he, did I talk on such subjects to those who visited me; but I continued to discourse on the nature of things as before, keeping to this main point, how the mind, while participating in such movements as go on in the poor flesh, shall be free from perturbations and maintain its proper good. Nor did I, he says, give the physicians an opportunity of putting on solemn looks, as if they were doing something great, but my life went on well and happily. Do, then, the same that he did both in sickness, if thou art sick, and in any other circumstances; for never to desert philosophy in any events that may befall us, nor to hold trifling talk either with an ignorant man or with one unacquainted with nature, is a principle of all schools of philosophy; but to be intent only on that which thou art now doing and on the instrument by which thou doest it.

Book 9 · Unit 43

Meditation 43

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When thou art offended with any man's shameless conduct, immediately ask thyself, Is it possible, then, that shameless men should not be in the world? It is not possible. Do not, then, require what is impossible. For this man also is one of those shameless men who must of necessity be in the world. Let the same considerations be present to thy mind in the case of the knave, and the faithless man, and of every man who does wrong in any way. For at the same time that thou dost remind thyself that it is impossible that such kind of men should not exist, thou wilt become more kindly disposed towards every one individually. It is useful to perceive this, too, immediately when the occasion arises, what virtue nature has given to man to oppose to every wrongful act. For she has given to man, as an antidote against the stupid man, mildness, and against another kind of man some other power. And in all cases it is possible for thee to correct by teaching the man who is gone astray; for every man who errs misses his object and is gone astray. Besides wherein hast thou been injured? For thou wilt find that no one among those against whom thou art irritated has done anything by which thy mind could be made worse; but that which is evil to thee and harmful has its foundation only in the mind. And what harm is done or what is there strange, if the man who has not been instructed does the acts of an uninstructed man? Consider whether thou shouldst not rather blame thyself, because thou didst not expect such a man to err in such a way. For thou hadst means given thee by thy reason to suppose that it was likely that he would commit this error, and yet thou hast forgotten and art amazed that he has erred. But most of all when thou blamest a man as faithless or ungrateful, turn to thyself. For the fault is manifestly thy own, whether thou didst trust that a man who had such a disposition would keep his promise, or when conferring thy kindness thou didst not confer it absolutely, nor yet in such way as to have received from thy very act all the profit. For what more dost thou want when thou hast done a man a service? Art thou not content that thou hast done something conformable to thy nature, and dost thou seek to be paid for it? Just as if the eye demanded a recompense for seeing, or the feet for walking. For as these members are formed for a particular purpose, and by working according to their several constitutions obtain what is their own; so also as man is formed by nature to acts of benevolence, when he has done anything benevolent or in any other way conducive to the common interest, he has acted conformably to his constitution, and he gets what is his own.

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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

Whoever acts unjustly acts impiously. For since universal nature made rational beings for the sake of one another—to help one another according to their deserts, and in no way to harm one another—the person who transgresses that will is plainly guilty of impiety toward the highest divinity. And the liar too is guilty of impiety toward the same divinity, for universal nature is the nature of all that exists, and all that exists is related to all that comes into being. This universal nature is also called truth, and is the first cause of everything true. Whoever lies deliberately commits impiety insofar as he deceives and so acts unjustly; and whoever lies without meaning to is still at odds with universal nature, still disturbs order by fighting against the way the world is made—for anyone who drifts toward what is contrary to truth fights against it, having received from nature the faculties whose neglect now leaves him unable to tell falsehood from truth. And indeed whoever pursues pleasure as a good and avoids pain as an evil is guilty of impiety. Such a person will inevitably find fault with universal nature, complaining that it distributes things to the bad and the good contrary to their deserts, since often the bad enjoy pleasure and the things that produce it, while the good receive pain and its causes. Furthermore, the person who fears pain will sometimes fear things that are bound to happen in the world, and even this is impiety. And the person who chases pleasure will not abstain from injustice—plainly impious. Now, with respect to those things toward which universal nature is neutral—for it would not have made both unless it were neutral toward both—those who wish to follow nature should share its neutrality. Whoever is not equally disposed toward pain and pleasure, death and life, honour and dishonour—things that universal nature employs without preference—is manifestly acting against it. When I say that universal nature employs these things equally, I mean that they happen alike, in unbroken succession, to all who have come into being by virtue of an original movement of Providence, which from a certain beginning set this ordering of things in motion, having conceived the principles of what was to be and determined the powers that generate beings, changes, and all such successions.

Unit 02

02

The happiest lot would be to leave this life without ever having tasted lying, hypocrisy, luxury, or pride. But to breathe one's last after having had enough of these things is the next best voyage, as the saying goes. Have you resolved to stay with vice? Has experience not yet driven you to flee this pestilence? For the corruption of the understanding is a pestilence far worse than any infection of the air around us. That kind of plague attacks animals insofar as they are animals; this kind attacks human beings insofar as they are human.

Unit 03

03

Do not despise death, but be content with it, since it too is one of the things nature wills. To be young, to grow old, to reach maturity, to get teeth and beard and grey hair, to beget, to carry and give birth, and all the other natural operations the seasons of life bring—dissolution is of the same kind. It is therefore fitting for a reflective person to be neither careless nor impatient nor contemptuous about death, but to wait for it as one of nature's operations. As you now wait for the child to come from your wife's womb, so be ready for the moment when your soul slips out of this covering. But if you need a rougher kind of comfort that reaches the heart, you will be best reconciled to death by observing the things from which you are about to be removed, and the character of those with whom your soul will no longer be mixed. It is not right to be angry with people—it is your duty to care for them and bear with them gently—and yet you must remember that your departure will not be from people who share your principles. For this alone, if anything, could pull us the other way and attach us to life: being allowed to live among those who think as we do. But now see how great is the trouble that arises from the discord of those who live together, so that you may say: Come quickly, death, before I too forget myself.

Unit 04

04

Whoever does wrong does wrong against himself. Whoever acts unjustly acts unjustly toward himself, because he makes himself bad.

Unit 05

05

A person often acts unjustly by failing to do something, not only by doing something.

Unit 06

06

Your present opinion grounded in understanding, your present conduct directed toward the common good, and your present disposition of contentment with whatever happens—that is enough.

Unit 07

07

Wipe out idle fancy. Check desire. Extinguish appetite. Keep the ruling faculty in its own power.

Unit 08

08

Among animals without reason, one life is shared; among rational animals, one intelligent soul is shared—just as there is one earth for all earthy things, and we see by one light, and breathe one air, all of us who have sight and all who have life.

Unit 09

09

All things that share in something common move toward what is of the same kind. Everything earthy turns toward the earth; everything liquid flows together; everything of an aerial nature does the same, so that force is needed to keep them apart. Fire rises on account of the elemental fire above, and is so ready to kindle together with all fire here below that even slightly dry matter ignites easily, because it has less in it of what resists burning. Accordingly, everything that shares in the common intelligent nature moves toward what is akin to it—or moves even more strongly. For in proportion as it is superior to other things, it is also readier to mingle and fuse with its own kind. Thus among animals without reason we already find swarms of bees, herds of cattle, the care of nestlings, and something resembling love; for even in animals there are souls, and the binding power is seen to work more intensely the higher the creature—in a way never observed in plants, stones, or trees. Among rational animals there are political communities, friendships, families, and assemblies; even in wars there are treaties and truces. Among still higher beings, unity persists even across separation, as with the stars. So the ascent to a higher order is able to produce sympathy even among things that are far apart. See, then, what now happens. Only intelligent beings have forgotten this mutual desire and inclination; in them alone the natural tendency to flow together is not visible. Yet though people try to resist this union, they are caught and held by it, for their nature is too strong. You will see what I mean if you look. Sooner will you find something earthy that touches no other earthy thing than a human being entirely cut off from other human beings.

Unit 10

10

Man, God, and the universe all bear fruit, each in its proper season. If common usage reserves the word for vines and the like, that is nothing. Reason too bears fruit—both for all things and for itself—and from it are produced other things of the same kind as reason.

Unit 11

11

If you can, correct those who do wrong by teaching them. If you cannot, remember that the capacity for patience was given to you for exactly this. The gods too are patient with such people; for some purposes they even help them gain health, wealth, and reputation—so generous they are. It is in your power to do the same; or tell me, who prevents you?

Unit 12

12

Do not work as one who is wretched, nor as one who seeks pity or admiration. Direct your will to one thing only: to set yourself in motion and to restrain yourself, as social reason requires.

Unit 13

13

Today I escaped all trouble—or rather, I cast out all trouble, for it was not outside me but within, in my opinions.

Unit 14

14

All things are the same: familiar in experience, fleeting in time, worthless in their matter. Everything now is just as it was in the time of those we have buried.

Unit 15

15

Things stand outside us, in themselves, by themselves, knowing nothing of themselves and passing no judgement. What, then, judges them? The ruling faculty.

Unit 16

16

The evil and the good of the rational social animal lie not in passivity but in activity, just as virtue and vice lie not in what is suffered but in what is done.

Unit 17

17

For the stone thrown upward, it is no evil to come down, nor was it any good to have been carried up.

Unit 18

18

Look inward into people's governing principles, and you will see what kind of judges you are afraid of—and what kind of judges they are of themselves.

Unit 19

19

All things are changing. You yourself are in continuous mutation and, in a sense, continuous destruction—and so is the whole universe.

Unit 20

20

It is your duty to leave another person's wrongful act where it is.

Unit 21

21

The ending of activity, the cessation of movement and opinion, and in a sense their death, is no evil. Turn now to the stages of your life—childhood, youth, manhood, old age—for in these too every change was a kind of death. Is that anything to fear? Turn now to your life under your grandfather, then under your mother, then under your father; and as you find many other differences, changes, and endings, ask yourself: Is this anything to fear? In the same way, then, neither is the termination and cessation and change of your whole life anything to be afraid of.

Unit 22

22

Make haste to examine your own ruling faculty, and that of the universe, and that of your neighbour: your own, so that you may make it just; the universe's, so that you may remember what you are a part of; your neighbour's, so that you may know whether he acted from ignorance or from knowledge, and so that you may also consider that his ruling faculty is akin to yours.

Unit 23

23

As you yourself are a part of a social whole, so let every act of yours be a part of social life. Any act that has no reference, near or remote, to a social end tears your life apart and prevents it from being one. It is a kind of mutiny—like a man in a popular assembly who breaks from the general agreement to act on his own.

Unit 24

24

Children's quarrels and children's games, and feeble spirits carrying dead bodies around—that is what everything amounts to. The scene in the pageant of the underworld strikes the eyes more clearly.

Unit 25

25

Examine the form of a thing and separate it entirely from its matter; then contemplate it. Then determine the longest time a thing of this particular form is naturally made to last.

Unit 26

26

You have endured endless trouble because you were not content with your ruling faculty when it did the things it is constituted by nature to do. But enough of this.

Unit 27

27

When someone blames you or hates you, or when people say anything injurious about you, go toward their souls, look inside, and see what kind of people they are. You will find there is no reason to trouble yourself about what opinion they hold of you. Yet you must remain well disposed toward them, for by nature they are your friends. The gods too help them in every way—by dreams, by signs—toward the things they value.

Unit 28

28

The periodic movements of the universe are the same, up and down, from age to age. Either the universal intelligence sets itself in motion for each separate effect—and if so, accept what results from its activity—or it set itself in motion once and everything else follows in sequence; or indivisible elements are the origin of all things. In a word: if there is a god, all is well; if chance rules, do not let it rule you too.

Unit 29

29

Soon the earth will cover us all; then the earth too will change, and what results from that change will go on changing forever, and so again forever. If you reflect on these transformations following one another like wave after wave, and on their speed, you will hold everything perishable in contempt.

Unit 30

30

The universal cause is like a winter torrent: it carries everything along. How worthless are all these poor people occupied with politics, supposing themselves philosophers! All drivellers. Well then: do what nature now requires. Set yourself in motion, if it is in your power, and do not look around to see whether anyone is watching. Do not expect Plato's Republic. Be content if the smallest thing goes well, and regard that outcome as no small matter. For who can change people's opinions? And without a change of opinions, what is left but the slavery of those who groan while pretending to obey? Go on—tell me about Alexander and Philip and Demetrius of Phalerum. Let them judge for themselves whether they discovered what the common nature required and trained themselves accordingly. If they acted like heroes in a tragedy, no one has sentenced me to imitate them. The work of philosophy is simple and modest. Do not draw me aside into indolence and pride.

Unit 31

31

Look down from above on the countless herds of people and their countless ceremonies, the infinitely varied voyages in storm and calm, and the differences among those who are born, who live together, and who die. Consider too the lives lived in ancient times, and the lives of those who will come after you, and the lives now lived among distant peoples; how many do not even know your name, how many will soon forget it, and how those who perhaps now praise you will very soon blame you. Neither posthumous fame nor reputation nor anything else of the kind has value.

Unit 32

32

Let there be freedom from disturbance regarding what comes from outside, and justice in what proceeds from within—that is, let every impulse and action end in social acts, for this is according to your nature.

Unit 33

33

You can clear away many of the useless things that disturb you, for they lie entirely in your opinion. You will then gain ample space by holding the whole universe in your mind, contemplating the eternity of time, and observing the rapid change of each particular thing—how short the interval from birth to dissolution, how limitless the time before birth and equally boundless the time after dissolution.

Unit 34

34

All that you see will quickly perish, and those who witness its dissolution will very soon perish too. The one who dies at the extremity of old age will be brought to the same condition as the one who died before his time.

Unit 35

35

What are these people's governing principles? What occupies them, and for what reasons do they love and admire? Imagine you see their bare souls. When they suppose that their blame can harm or their praise can help—what a notion!

Unit 36

36

Loss is nothing other than change. The universal nature delights in change, and in obedience to it all things are now done well, have been done in like manner from eternity, and will continue so without end. What, then, do you say—that all things have always been bad and always will be, that no power among so many gods has ever been found to set them right, and that the world stands condemned to unceasing evil?

Unit 37

37

The rottenness of the matter at the foundation of everything! Water, dust, bones, filth. Or again: marble—calluses of the earth; gold and silver—sediments; garments—bits of hair; purple dye—blood. And everything else is of the same kind. Even that which has the nature of breath is another such thing, changing from this to that.

Unit 38

38

Enough of this wretched life and murmuring and apish tricks. Why are you disturbed? What is new in this? What unsettles you? The form of the thing? Look at it. The matter? Look at it. Beyond these two there is nothing. Toward the gods, then, become at last simpler and better. It is the same whether we examine these things for a hundred years or three.

Unit 39

39

If someone has done wrong, the harm is his own. But perhaps he has not done wrong.

Unit 40

40

Either all things proceed from one intelligent source and come together as in one body—and the part ought not to fault what is done for the good of the whole—or there are only atoms, and nothing but mixture and dispersion. Why, then, are you disturbed? Say to your ruling faculty: Are you dead? Are you corrupted? Are you playing the hypocrite? Have you become a beast, herding and feeding with the rest?

Unit 41

41

Either the gods have no power, or they have power. If they have no power, why pray to them? If they have power, why not pray that they give you the ability not to fear what you fear, not to desire what you desire, not to be pained by what pains you—rather than praying that these things not happen or happen? For certainly if they can cooperate with human beings, they can cooperate to these ends. But perhaps you will say the gods have placed these things in your own power. Well then, is it not better to use what is in your power like a free person than to grovel slavishly after what is not? And who told you the gods do not help us even in the things that are in our power? Begin, then, to pray this way, and see what happens. One person prays: How can I sleep with that woman? You pray: How can I stop wanting to? Another prays: How can I be rid of this? You pray: How can I stop needing to be rid of it? Another: How can I not lose my child? You: How can I not be afraid of losing him? Turn your prayers in this direction, and see what comes.

Unit 42

42

Epicurus says: In my sickness I did not talk about my bodily sufferings, nor did I discuss such things with those who visited me. I went on discoursing about the nature of things as before, keeping to this main point—how the mind, while sharing in the movements of this poor flesh, can remain free from disturbance and preserve its proper good. Nor, he says, did I give the physicians a chance to put on solemn faces, as though they were doing something great; my life went on well and happily. Do the same, then, whether in sickness or in any other circumstance. Never to desert philosophy in whatever befalls, and never to engage in idle talk with the ignorant or with those unacquainted with nature—this is a principle common to every school. Attend only to what you are doing now and to the faculty by which you do it.

Unit 43

43

When you are offended by someone's shameless conduct, immediately ask yourself: Is it possible that shameless people should not exist in the world? It is not possible. Do not, then, demand the impossible. This person is one of those shameless people who must necessarily exist. Keep the same thought at hand for the knave, the faithless person, and everyone who does wrong in any way. The moment you remind yourself that such people cannot not exist, you will become more kindly disposed toward each one individually. It is also useful to recognize at once what virtue nature has given as a counterweight to each kind of wrong. Against stupidity she has given mildness; against other faults, other powers. And in every case it is open to you to correct by teaching the person who has gone astray, for everyone who errs has missed his mark and lost his way. Besides, in what have you actually been harmed? You will find that none of the people you are angry with has done anything that could make your mind worse; and whatever is truly evil or harmful to you has its foundation only in the mind. What is strange or damaging if an uninstructed person does the acts of an uninstructed person? Consider whether you should not blame yourself instead, for failing to expect that such a person would err in such a way. Your reason gave you the means to anticipate this error, and yet you forgot and are now amazed that he erred. Above all, when you blame someone as faithless or ungrateful, turn to yourself. The fault is plainly your own: either you trusted that a person of such a disposition would keep his word, or in doing your kindness you did not do it unconditionally—you did not do it in such a way as to receive the full return from the act itself. For what more do you want after doing someone a service? Is it not enough that you have done something in accord with your nature—must you be paid for it too? That is as if the eye demanded a fee for seeing, or the feet for walking. For just as these organs are formed for a specific function and by performing according to their nature receive what is properly theirs, so too a human being is formed by nature for acts of benevolence, and when he has done something benevolent or otherwise conducive to the common good, he has acted in accord with his constitution and receives what is his own.

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.

Moral plague

Book IX is harsher in its moral register than some of the surrounding books. Injustice, lying, self-indulgence, and social betrayal are treated not as surface errors but as corruptions of the specifically human faculty. The severity is deliberate: Marcus wants to feel the ugliness of vice without surrendering to hatred.

Community includes omission

What this book sharpens is the civic dimension of Stoicism. Not doing what justice requires can be as blameworthy as doing what it forbids. The social bond is not optional decoration added to inward discipline; it is part of what inward discipline is for.

Prayer revised

One of the book's strongest turns is theological and practical at once: do not pray for a different sequence of events, pray for a different relation to the events that arrive. That is a concise statement of the whole Stoic adjustment. The world may remain as it is; the question is whether the soul has abandoned its post within it.