Marcus Aurelius : Meditations. Book V
Written 167 A.D.
Translated by George LONG
In he morning when thou
risest unwillingly, let this thought be present- I am rising
to the work of a human being. Why then am I dissatisfied if I
am going to do the things for which I exist and for which I was brought into
the world? Or have I been made for this, to lie in the bed-clothes and
keep myself warm?- But this is more pleasant.- Dost thou exist then to
take thy pleasure, and not at all for action or exertion? Dost thou not
see the little plants, the little birds, the ants, the spiders, the bees
working together to put in order their several parts of the universe? And
art thou unwilling to do the work of a human being, and dost thou not make
haste to do that which is according to thy nature?- But it is necessary to
take rest also.- It is necessary: however nature has fixed bounds to this
too: she has fixed bounds both to eating and drinking, and yet thou goest
beyond these bounds, beyond what is sufficient; yet in thy acts it is
not so, but thou stoppest short of what thou canst do. So thou lovest not
thyself, for if thou didst, thou wouldst love thy nature and her will. But
those who love their several arts exhaust themselves in working at them
unwashed and without food; but thou valuest thy own own nature less than
the turner values the turning art, or the dancer the dancing art, or
the lover of money values his money, or the vainglorious man his little glory.
And such men, when they have a violent affection to a thing, choose neither
to eat nor to sleep rather than to perfect the things which they care
for. But are the acts which concern society more vile in thy eyes and
less worthy of thy labour?
How easy it is to repel and to wipe away every impression which is
troublesome or unsuitable, and immediately to be in all tranquility.
Judge every word and deed which are according to nature to be fit for
thee; and be not diverted by the blame which follows from any people nor
by their words, but if a thing is good to be done or said, do not consider it
unworthy of thee. For those persons have their peculiar leading principle and
follow their peculiar movement; which things do not thou regard, but go
straight on, following thy own nature and the common nature; and the way
of both is one.
I go through the things which happen according to nature until I
shall fall and rest, breathing out my breath into that element out of which
I daily draw it in, and falling upon that earth out of which my father collected
the seed, and my mother the blood, and my nurse the milk; out of
which during so many years I have been supplied with food and drink; which
bears me when I tread on it and abuse it for so many purposes.
Thou sayest, Men cannot admire the sharpness of thy wits.- Be it so:
but there are many other things of which thou canst not say, I am not formed
for them by nature. Show those qualities then which are altogether in
thy power, sincerity, gravity, endurance of labour, aversion to pleasure, contentment
with thy portion and with few things, benevolence, frankness, no
love of superfluity, freedom from trifling magnanimity. Dost thou not see
how many qualities thou art immediately able to exhibit, in which there is
no excuse of natural incapacity and unfitness, and yet thou still remainest voluntarily
below the mark? Or art thou compelled through being defectively furnished
by nature to murmur, and to be stingy, and to flatter, and to find
fault with thy poor body, and to try to please men, and to make great display,
and to be so restless in thy mind? No, by the gods: but thou mightest have
been delivered from these things long ago. Only if in truth thou canst be
charged with being rather slow and dull of comprehension, thou must exert
thyself about this also, not neglecting it nor yet taking pleasure in
thy dulness.
One man, when he has done a service to another, is ready to set it
down to his account as a favour conferred. Another is not ready to do this,
but still in his own mind he thinks of the man as his debtor, and he
knows what he has done. A third in a manner does not even know what he
has done, but he is like a vine which has produced grapes, and seeks for
nothing more after it has once produced its proper fruit. As a horse when
he has run, a dog when he has tracked the game, a bee when it has made
the honey, so a man when he has done a good act, does not call out for
others to come and see, but he goes on to another act, as a vine goes on
to produce again the grapes in season.- Must a man then be one of these, who
in a manner act thus without observing it?- Yes.- But this very thing is
necessary, the observation of what a man is doing: for, it may be said, it
is characteristic of the social animal to perceive that he is working in
a social manner, and indeed to wish that his social partner also should perceive
it.- It is true what thou sayest, but thou dost not rightly understand what
is now said: and for this reason thou wilt become one of those of whom
I spoke before, for even they are misled by a certain show of reason. But
if thou wilt choose to understand the meaning of what is said, do not fear
that for this reason thou wilt omit any social act.
A prayer of the Athenians: Rain, rain, O dear Zeus, down on the ploughed
fields of the Athenians and on the plains.- In truth we ought not
to pray at all, or we ought to pray in this simple and noble fashion.
Just as we must understand when it is said, That Aesculapius prescribed to
this man horse-exercise, or bathing in cold water or going without shoes; so
we must understand it when it is said, That the nature of the universe prescribed
to this man disease or mutilation or loss or anything else of the
kind. For in the first case Prescribed means something like this: he prescribed
this for this man as a thing adapted to procure health; and in
the second case it means: That which happens to (or, suits) every man is
fixed in a manner for him suitably to his destiny. For this is what we
mean when we say that things are suitable to us, as the workmen say of
squared stones in walls or the pyramids, that they are suitable, when they
fit them to one another in some kind of connexion. For there is altogether one
fitness, harmony. And as the universe is made up out of all bodies to
be such a body as it is, so out of all existing causes necessity (destiny) is
made up to be such a cause as it is. And even those who are completely ignorant
understand what I mean, for they say, It (necessity, destiny) brought
this to such a person.- This then was brought and this was precribed to
him. Let us then receive these things, as well as those which Aesculapius prescribes.
Many as a matter of course even among his prescriptions are disagreeable,
but we accept them in the hope of health. Let the perfecting and
accomplishment of the things, which the common nature judges to be good,
be judged by thee to be of the same kind as thy health. And so accept everything
which happens, even if it seem disagreeable, because it leads to
this, to the health of the universe and to the prosperity and felicity of
Zeus (the universe). For he would not have brought on any man what he has
brought, if it were not useful for the whole. Neither does the nature of
anything, whatever it may be, cause anything which is not suitable to that
which is directed by it. For two reasons then it is right to be content with
that which happens to thee; the one, because it was done for thee and
prescribed for thee, and in a manner had reference to thee, originally from
the most ancient causes spun with thy destiny; and the other, because even
that which comes severally to every man is to the power which administers the
universe a cause of felicity and perfection, nay even of its very continuance.
For the integrity of the whole is mutilated, if thou cuttest
off anything whatever from the conjunction and the
continuity either of the parts or of the causes. And thou
dost cut off, as far as it is in thy power, when thou art
dissatisfied, and in a manner triest to put anything out of the way.
Be not disgusted, nor discouraged, nor dissatisfied, if thou dost not
succeed in doing everything according to right principles; but when thou
bast failed, return back again, and be content if the greater part of
what thou doest is consistent with man's nature, and love this to which thou
returnest; and do not return to philosophy as if she were a master, but
act like those who have sore eyes and apply a bit of sponge and egg, or
as another applies a plaster, or drenching with water. For thus thou wilt
not fail to obey reason, and thou wilt repose in it. And remember that
philosophy requires only the things which thy nature requires; but thou
wouldst have something else which is not according to nature.- It may
be objected, Why what is more agreeable than this which I am doing?- But
is not this the very reason why pleasure deceives us? And consider if
magnanimity, freedom, simplicity, equanimity, piety, are not more agreeable. For
what is more agreeable than wisdom itself, when thou thinkest of the security
and the happy course of all things which depend on the faculty of
understanding and knowledge?
Things are in such a kind of envelopment that they have seemed to
philosophers, not a few nor those common philosophers, altogether
unintelligible; nay even to the Stoics themselves they seem
difficult to understand. And all our assent is changeable;
for where is the man who never changes? Carry thy thoughts
then to the objects themselves, and consider how short-lived they
are and worthless, and that they may be in the possession of a filthy wretch
or a whore or a robber. Then turn to the morals of those who live with
thee, and it is hardly possible to endure even the most agreeable of
them, to say nothing of a man being hardly able to endure himself. In such
darkness then and dirt and in so constant a flux both of substance and
of time, and of motion and of things moved, what there is worth being highly
prized or even an object of serious pursuit, I cannot imagine. But on
the contrary it is a man's duty to comfort himself, and to wait for the
natural dissolution and not to be vexed at the delay, but to rest in
these principles only: the one, that nothing will happen to me which is
not conformable to the nature of the universe; and the other, that it is
in my power never to act contrary to my god and daemon: for there is no
man who will compel me to this.
About what am I now employing my own soul? On every occasion I must
ask myself this question, and inquire, what have I now in this part of
me which they call the ruling principle? And whose soul have I now? That
of a child, or of a young man, or of a feeble woman, or of a tyrant, or
of a domestic animal, or of a wild beast?
What kind of things those are which appear good to the many, we may
learn even from this. For if any man should conceive certain things as
being really good, such as prudence, temperance, justice, fortitude, he
would not after having first conceived these endure to listen to anything which
should not be in harmony with what is really good. But if a man has first
conceived as good the things which appear to the many to be good, he
will listen and readily receive as very applicable that which was said by
the comic writer. Thus even the many perceive the difference. For were it
not so, this saying would not offend and would not be rejected in the first
case, while we receive it when it is said of wealth, and of the means which
further luxury and fame, as said fitly and wittily. Go on then and ask
if we should value and think those things to be good, to which after their
first conception in the mind the words of the comic writer might be
aptly applied- that he who has them, through pure abundance has not a
place to ease himself in.
I am composed of the formal and the material; and neither of them will
perish into non-existence, as neither of them came into existence out
of non-existence. Every part of me then will be reduced by change into some
part of the universe, and that again will change into another part of
the universe, and so on for ever. And by consequence of such a change I
too exist, and those who begot me, and so on for ever in the other direction. For
nothing hinders us from saying so, even if the universe is administered according
to definite periods of revolution.
Reason and the reasoning art (philosophy) are powers which are sufficient
for themselves and for their own works. They move then from a
first principle which is their own, and they make their way to the end which
is proposed to them; and this is the reason why such acts are named catorthoseis
or right acts, which word signifies that they proceed by the right
road.
None of these things ought to be called a man's, which do not belong to
a man, as man. They are not required of a man, nor does man's nature promise
them, nor are they the means of man's nature attaining its end. Neither
then does the end of man lie in these things, nor yet that which aids
to the accomplishment of this end, and that which aids towards this end
is that which is good. Besides, if any of these things did belong to man,
it would not be right for a man to despise them and to set himself against
them; nor would a man be worthy of praise who showed that he did not
want these things, nor would he who stinted himself in any of them be
good, if indeed these things were good. But now the more of these things a
man deprives himself of, or of other things like them, or even when he is
deprived of any of them, the more patiently he endures the loss, just in
the same degree he is a better man.
Such as are thy habitual thoughts, such also will be the character of
thy mind; for the soul is dyed by the thoughts. Dye it then with a continuous series
of such thoughts as these: for instance, that where a man can live, there
he can also live well. But he must live in a palace;- well then, he
can also live well in a palace. And again, consider that for whatever purpose
each thing has been constituted, for this it has been constituted, and
towards this it is carried; and its end is in that towards which it is
carried; and where the end is, there also is the advantage and the good of
each thing. Now the good for the reasonable animal is society; for that we
are made for society has been shown above. Is it not plain that the inferior
exist for the sake of the superior? But the things which have life
are superior to those which have not life, and of those which have life
the superior are those which have reason.
To seek what is impossible is madness: and it is impossible that the
bad should not do something of this kind.
Nothing happens to any man which he is not formed by nature to bear.
The same things happen to another, and either because he does not see
that they have happened or because he would show a great spirit he is
firm and remains unharmed. It is a shame then that ignorance and conceit should
be stronger than wisdom.
Things themselves touch not the soul, not in the least degree; nor
have they admission to the soul, nor can they turn or move the soul: but
the soul turns and moves itself alone, and whatever judgements it may think
proper to make, such it makes for itself the things which present themselves
to it.
In one respect man is the nearest thing to me, so far as I must do
good to men and endure them. But so far as some men make themselves obstacles
to my proper acts, man becomes to me one of the things which are
indifferent, no less than the sun or wind or a wild beast. Now it is true
that these may impede my action, but they are no impediments to my affects
and disposition, which have the power of acting conditionally and changing:
for the mind converts and changes every hindrance to its activity into
an aid; and so that which is a hindrance is made a furtherance to an
act; and that which is an obstacle on the road helps us on this road.
Reverence that which is best in the universe; and this is that which
makes use of all things and directs all things. And in like manner also
reverence that which is best in thyself; and this is of the same kind as
that. For in thyself also, that which makes use of everything else, is
this, and thy life is directed by this.
That which does no harm to the state, does no harm to the citizen. In
the case of every appearance of harm apply this rule: if the state is not
harmed by this, neither am I harmed. But if the state is harmed, thou must
not be angry with him who does harm to the state. Show him where his error
is.
Often think of the rapidity with which things pass by and disappear, both
the things which are and the things which are produced. For substance is
like a river in a continual flow, and the activities of things are in constant
change, and the causes work in infinite varieties; and there is hardly
anything which stands still. And consider this which is near to thee,
this boundless abyss of the past and of the future in which all things disappear.
How then is he not a fool who is puffed up with such things or
plagued about them and makes himself miserable? for they vex him only for
a time, and a short time.
Think of the universal substance, of which thou hast a very small portion;
and of universal time, of which a short and indivisible interval has
been assigned to thee; and of that which is fixed by destiny, and how small
a part of it thou art.
Does another do me wrong? Let him look to it. He has his own disposition, his
own activity. I now have what the universal nature wills me to have; and
I do what my nature now wills me to do.
Let the part of thy soul which leads and governs be undisturbed by
the movements in the flesh, whether of pleasure or of pain; and let it
not unite with them, but let it circumscribe itself and limit those affects
to their parts. But when these affects rise up to the mind by virtue of
that other sympathy that naturally exists in a body which is all one, then
thou must not strive to resist the sensation, for it is natural: but let
not the ruling part of itself add to the sensation the opinion that it
is either good or bad.
Live with the gods. And he does live with the gods who constantly shows
to them, his own soul is satisfied with that which is assigned to him,
and that it does all that the daemon wishes, which Zeus hath given to
every man for his guardian and guide, a portion of himself. And this is
every man's understanding and reason.
Art thou angry with him whose armpits stink? Art thou angry with him
whose mouth smells foul? What good will this danger do thee? He has such
a mouth, he has such arm-pits: it is necessary that such an emanation must
come from such things- but the man has reason, it will be said, and he
is able, if he takes pain, to discover wherein he offends- I wish thee well
of thy discovery. Well then, and thou hast reason: by thy rational faculty
stir up his rational faculty; show him his error, admonish him. For
if he listens, thou wilt cure him, and there is no need of anger. Neither tragic
actor nor whore...
As thou intendest to live when thou art gone out,...so it is in thy
power to live here. But if men do not permit thee, then get away out of
life, yet so as if thou wert suffering no harm. The house is smoky, and
I quit it. Why dost thou think that this is any trouble? But so long as
nothing of the kind drives me out, I remain, am free, and no man shall hinder
me from doing what I choose; and I choose to do what is according to
the nature of the rational and social animal.
The intelligence of the universe is social. Accordingly it has made
the inferior things for the sake of the superior, and it has fitted the
superior to one another. Thou seest how it has subordinated, co-ordinated and
assigned to everything its proper portion, and has brought together into
concord with one another the things which are the best.
How hast thou behaved hitherto to the gods, thy parents, brethren, children,
teachers, to those who looked after thy infancy, to thy friends, kinsfolk,
to thy slaves? Consider if thou hast hitherto behaved to all in
such a way that this may be said of thee:
Never has wronged a man in deed or word. And call to recollection both
how many things thou hast passed through, and how many things thou hast
been able to endure: and that the history of thy life is now complete and
thy service is ended: and how many beautiful things thou hast seen: and
how many pleasures and pains thou hast despised; and how many things called
honourable thou hast spurned; and to how many ill-minded folks thou hast
shown a kind disposition.
Why do unskilled and ignorant souls disturb him who has skill and knowledge?
What soul then has skill and knowledge? That which knows beginning and
end, and knows the reason which pervades all substance and through all
time by fixed periods (revolutions) administers the universe.
Soon, very soon, thou wilt be ashes, or a skeleton, and either a
name or not even a name; but name is sound and echo. And the things which are
much valued in life are empty and rotten and trifling, and like little dogs
biting one another, and little children quarrelling, laughing, and then
straightway weeping. But fidelity and modesty and justice and truth are
fled
Up to Olympus from the wide-spread earth. What then is there which still
detains thee here? If the objects of sense are easily changed and never
stand still, and the organs of perception are dull and easily receive false
impressions; and the poor soul itself is an exhalation from blood. But
to have good repute amidst such a world as this is an empty thing. Why
then dost thou not wait in tranquility for thy end, whether it is extinction or
removal to another state? And until that time comes, what is sufficient? Why,
what else than to venerate the gods and bless them, and to do good to
men, and to practise tolerance and self-restraint; but as to everything which
is beyond the limits of the poor flesh and breath, to remember that this
is neither thine nor in thy power.
Thou canst pass thy life in an equable flow of happiness, if thou canst
go by the right way, and think and act in the right way. These two things
are common both to the soul of God and to the soul of man, and to the
soul of every rational being, not to be hindered by another; and to hold
good to consist in the disposition to justice and the practice of it,
and in this to let thy desire find its termination.
If this is neither my own badness, nor an effect of my own badness, and
the common weal is not injured, why am I troubled about it? And what is
the harm to the common weal?
Do not be carried along inconsiderately by the appearance of things, but
give help to all according to thy ability and their fitness; and if they
should have sustained loss in matters which are indifferent, do not imagine
this to be a damage. For it is a bad habit. But as the old man, when
he went away, asked back his foster-child's top, remembering that it
was a top, so do thou in this case also.
When thou art calling out on the Rostra, hast thou forgotten, man, what
these things are?- Yes; but they are objects of great concern to these people-
wilt thou too then be made a fool for these things?- I was once a
fortunate man, but I lost it, I know not how.- But fortunate means that a
man has assigned to himself a good fortune: and a good fortune is good disposition
of the soul, good emotions, good actions.