Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 267 pages of information about Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus.

Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 267 pages of information about Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus.

9.  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 co-ordinated, 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,[A] 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 reason.

    [A] “One substance,” p. 42, note 1.

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.

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

12.  Be thou erect, or be made erect (iii. 5).

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 co-operation.  And the perception of this will be more apparent to thee if thou often sayest to thyself that I am a member [Greek:  melos] of the system of rational beings.  But if [using the letter r] thou sayest that thou art a part [Greek:  meros], thou dost not yet love men from thy heart; beneficence does not yet delight thee for its own sake;[A] thou still doest it barely as a thing of propriety, and not yet as doing good to thyself.

    [A] I have used Gataker’s conjecture [Greek:  katalektikos]
    instead of the common reading [Greek:  kataleptikos]:  compare
    iv. 20; ix. 42.

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.

15.  Whatever any one does or says, I must be good; just as if the gold, or the emerald, or the purple, were always saying this.  Whatever any one does or says, I must be emerald and keep my color.

16.  The ruling faculty does not disturb itself; I mean, does not frighten itself or cause itself pain.+ But if any one 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 it 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 judgment.  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.

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Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius Antoninus from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.