No More Learning



MEDITATIONS

By Marcus Aurelius




CONTENTS


NOTES

INTRODUCTION

FIRST BOOK

SECOND BOOK

THIRD BOOK

FOURTH BOOK

FIFTH BOOK

SIXTH BOOK

SEVENTH BOOK

EIGHTH BOOK

NINTH BOOK

TENTH BOOK

ELEVENTH BOOK

TWELFTH BOOK

APPENDIX

GLOSSARY




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INTRODUCTION


MARCUS AURELIUS ANTONINUS was born on April 26, A.
D. 121. His real name
was M.
Annius Verus, and he was sprung of a noble family which claimed
descent from Numa, second King of Rome.
Thus the most religious of
emperors came of the blood of the most pious of early kings.
His father,
Annius Verus, had held high office in Rome, and his grandfather, of
the same name, had been thrice Consul.
Both his parents died young, but
Marcus held them in loving remembrance.
On his father's death Marcus
was adopted by his grandfather, the consular Annius Verus, and there was
deep love between these two.
On the very first page of his book Marcus
gratefully declares how of his grandfather he had learned to be gentle
and meek, and to refrain from all anger and passion.
The Emperor Hadrian
divined the fine character of the lad, whom he used to call not Verus
but Verissimus, more Truthful than his own name.
He advanced Marcus to
equestrian rank when six years of age, and at the age of eight made him
a member of the ancient Salian priesthood.
The boy's aunt, Annia Galeria
Faustina, was married to Antoninus Pius, afterwards emperor.
Hence it
came about that Antoninus, having no son, adopted Marcus, changing his
name to that which he is known by, and betrothed him to his daughter
Faustina.
His education was conducted with all care. The ablest teachers
were engaged for him, and he was trained in the strict doctrine of the
Stoic philosophy, which was his great delight.
He was taught to dress
plainly and to live simply, to avoid all softness and luxury.
His body
was trained to hardihood by wrestling, hunting, and outdoor games; and
though his constitution was weak, he showed great personal courage to
encounter the fiercest boars.
At the same time he was kept from the
extravagancies of his day.
The great excitement in Rome was the strife
of the Factions, as they were called, in the circus.
The racing drivers
used to adopt one of four colours--red, blue, white, or green--and their
partisans showed an eagerness in supporting them which nothing could
surpass.
Riot and corruption went in the train of the racing chariots;
and from all these things Marcus held severely aloof.


In 140 Marcus was raised to the consulship, and in 145 his betrothal
was consummated by marriage.
Two years later Faustina brought him a
daughter; and soon after the tribunate and other imperial honours were
conferred upon him.


Antoninus Pius died in 161, and Marcus assumed the imperial state.
He
at once associated with himself L.
Ceionius Commodus, whom Antoninus had
adopted as a younger son at the same time with Marcus, giving him the
name of Lucius Aurelius Verus.
Henceforth the two are colleagues in the
empire, the junior being trained as it were to succeed.
No sooner was
Marcus settled upon the throne than wars broke out on all sides.
In
the east, Vologeses III.
of Parthia began a long-meditated revolt by
destroying a whole Roman Legion and invading Syria (162).
Verus was sent
off in hot haste to quell this rising; and he fulfilled his trust by
plunging into drunkenness and debauchery, while the war was left to his
officers.
Soon after Marcus had to face a more serious danger at home in
the coalition of several powerful tribes on the northern frontier.
Chief
among those were the Marcomanni or Marchmen, the Quadi (mentioned in
this book), the Sarmatians, the Catti, the Jazyges.
In Rome itself there
was pestilence and starvation, the one brought from the east by Verus's
legions, the other caused by floods which had destroyed vast quantities
of grain.
After all had been done possible to allay famine and to supply
pressing needs--Marcus being forced even to sell the imperial jewels to
find money--both emperors set forth to a struggle which was to continue
more or less during the rest of Marcus's reign.
During these wars, in
169, Verus died.
We have no means of following the campaigns in detail;
but thus much is certain, that in the end the Romans succeeded in
crushing the barbarian tribes, and effecting a settlement which made the
empire more secure.
Marcus was himself commander-in-chief, and victory
was due no less to his own ability than to his wisdom in choice of
lieutenants, shown conspicuously in the case of Pertinax.
There were
several important battles fought in these campaigns; and one of them has
become celebrated for the legend of the Thundering Legion.
In a battle
against the Quadi in 174, the day seemed to be going in favour of
the foe, when on a sudden arose a great storm of thunder and rain the
lightning struck the barbarians with terror, and they turned to rout.

In later days this storm was said to have been sent in answer to the
prayers of a legion which contained many Christians, and the name
Thundering Legion should be given to it on this account.
The title of
Thundering Legion is known at an earlier date, so this part of the story
at least cannot be true; but the aid of the storm is acknowledged by one
of the scenes carved on Antonine's Column at Rome, which commemorates
these wars.


The settlement made after these troubles might have been more
satisfactory but for an unexpected rising in the east.
Avidius Cassius,
an able captain who had won renown in the Parthian wars, was at this
time chief governor of the eastern provinces.
By whatever means induced,
he had conceived the project of proclaiming himself emperor as soon as
Marcus, who was then in feeble health, should die; and a report having
been conveyed to him that Marcus was dead, Cassius did as he had
planned.
Marcus, on hearing the news, immediately patched up a peace and
returned home to meet this new peril.
The emperors great grief was that
he must needs engage in the horrors of civil strife.
He praised the
qualities of Cassius, and expressed a heartfelt wish that Cassius might
not be driven to do himself a hurt before he should have the opportunity
to grant a free pardon.
But before he could come to the east news had
come to Cassius that the emperor still lived; his followers fell away
from him, and he was assassinated.
Marcus now went to the east, and
while there the murderers brought the head of Cassius to him; but the
emperor indignantly refused their gift, nor would he admit the men to
his presence.


On this journey his wife, Faustina, died.
At his return the emperor
celebrated a triumph (176).
Immediately afterwards he repaired to
Germany, and took up once more the burden of war.
His operations were
followed by complete success; but the troubles of late years had been
too much for his constitution, at no time robust, and on March 17, 180,
he died in Pannonia.


The good emperor was not spared domestic troubles.
Faustina had borne
him several children, of whom he was passionately fond.
Their innocent
faces may still be seen in many a sculpture gallery, recalling with odd
effect the dreamy countenance of their father.
But they died one by
one, and when Marcus came to his own end only one of his sons still
lived--the weak and worthless Commodus.
On his father's death Commodus,
who succeeded him, undid the work of many campaigns by a hasty and
unwise peace; and his reign of twelve years proved him to be a ferocious
and bloodthirsty tyrant.
Scandal has made free with the name of Faustina
herself, who is accused not only of unfaithfulness, but of intriguing
with Cassius and egging him on to his fatal rebellion, it must be
admitted that these charges rest on no sure evidence; and the emperor,
at all events, loved her dearly, nor ever felt the slightest qualm of
suspicion.


As a soldier we have seen that Marcus was both capable and successful;
as an administrator he was prudent and conscientious.
Although steeped
in the teachings of philosophy, he did not attempt to remodel the world
on any preconceived plan.
He trod the path beaten by his predecessors,
seeking only to do his duty as well as he could, and to keep out
corruption.
He did some unwise things, it is true. To create a compeer
in empire, as he did with Verus, was a dangerous innovation which could
only succeed if one of the two effaced himself; and under Diocletian
this very precedent caused the Roman Empire to split into halves.
He
erred in his civil administration by too much centralising.
But the
strong point of his reign was the administration of justice.
Marcus
sought by-laws to protect the weak, to make the lot of the slaves
less hard, to stand in place of father to the fatherless.
Charitable
foundations were endowed for rearing and educating poor children.
The
provinces were protected against oppression, and public help was given
to cities or districts which might be visited by calamity.
The great
blot on his name, and one hard indeed to explain, is his treatment
of the Christians.
In his reign Justin at Rome became a martyr to
his faith, and Polycarp at Smyrna, and we know of many outbreaks of
fanaticism in the provinces which caused the death of the faithful.
It
is no excuse to plead that he knew nothing about the atrocities done in
his name: it was his duty to know, and if he did not he would have been
the first to confess that he had failed in his duty.
But from his own
tone in speaking of the Christians it is clear he knew them only from
calumny; and we hear of no measures taken even to secure that they
should have a fair hearing.
In this respect Trajan was better than he.

To a thoughtful mind such a religion as that of Rome would give small
satisfaction.
Its legends were often childish or impossible; its
teaching had little to do with morality.
The Roman religion was in fact
of the nature of a bargain: men paid certain sacrifices and rites, and
the gods granted their favour, irrespective of right or wrong.
In this
case all devout souls were thrown back upon philosophy, as they had
been, though to a less extent, in Greece.
There were under the early
empire two rival schools which practically divided the field between
them, Stoicism and Epicureanism.
The ideal set before each was nominally
much the same.
The Stoics aspired to the repression of all emotion, and
the Epicureans to freedom from all disturbance; yet in the upshot the
one has become a synonym of stubborn endurance, the other for unbridled
licence.
With Epicureanism we have nothing to do now; but it will be
worth while to sketch the history and tenets of the Stoic sect.
Zeno,
the founder of Stoicism, was born in Cyprus at some date unknown, but
his life may be said roughly to be between the years 350 and 250 B.
C.
Cyprus has been from time immemorial a meeting-place of the East and
West, and although we cannot grant any importance to a possible strain
of Phoenician blood in him (for the Phoenicians were no philosophers),
yet it is quite likely that through Asia Minor he may have come in touch
with the Far East.
He studied under the cynic Crates, but he did not
neglect other philosophical systems.
After many years' study he opened
his own school in a colonnade in Athens called the Painted Porch, or
Stoa, which gave the Stoics their name.
Next to Zeno, the School of the
Porch owes most to Chrysippus (280--207 b.
c. ), who organised Stoicism
into a system.
Of him it was said, 'But for Chrysippus, there had been
no Porch.
'

The Stoics regarded speculation as a means to an end and that end was,
as Zeno put it, to live consistently omologonuenws zhn or as it was
later explained, to live in conformity with nature.
This conforming of
the life to nature oralogoumenwz th fusei zhn.
was the Stoic idea of
Virtue.


This dictum might easily be taken to mean that virtue consists in
yielding to each natural impulse; but that was very far from the Stoic
meaning.
In order to live in accord with nature, it is necessary to know
what nature is; and to this end a threefold division of philosophy is
made--into Physics, dealing with the universe and its laws, the problems
of divine government and teleology; Logic, which trains the mind to
discern true from false; and Ethics, which applies the knowledge thus
gained and tested to practical life.
The Stoic system of physics was
materialism with an infusion of pantheism.
In contradiction to Plato's
view that the Ideas, or Prototypes, of phenomena alone really exist,
the Stoics held that material objects alone existed; but immanent in
the material universe was a spiritual force which acted through them,
manifesting itself under many forms, as fire, aether, spirit, soul,
reason, the ruling principle.


The universe, then, is God, of whom the popular gods are manifestations;
while legends and myths are allegorical.
The soul of man is thus an
emanation from the godhead, into whom it will eventually be re-absorbed.

The divine ruling principle makes all things work together for good,
but for the good of the whole.
The highest good of man is consciously
to work with God for the common good, and this is the sense in which
the Stoic tried to live in accord with nature.
In the individual it
is virtue alone which enables him to do this; as Providence rules the
universe, so virtue in the soul must rule man.


In Logic, the Stoic system is noteworthy for their theory as to the test
of truth, the Criterion.
They compared the new-born soul to a sheet of
paper ready for writing.
Upon this the senses write their impressions,
fantasias and by experience of a number of these the soul unconsciously
conceives general notions koinai eunoiai or anticipations.
prolhyeis
When the impression was such as to be irresistible it was called
(katalnptikh fantasia) one that holds fast, or as they explained it,
one proceeding from truth.
Ideas and inferences artificially produced by
deduction or the like were tested by this 'holding perception.
' Of the
Ethical application I have already spoken.
The highest good was the
virtuous life.
Virtue alone is happiness, and vice is unhappiness.
Carrying this theory to its extreme, the Stoic said that there could
be no gradations between virtue and vice, though of course each has
its special manifestations.
Moreover, nothing is good but virtue, and
nothing but vice is bad.
Those outside things which are commonly called
good or bad, such as health and sickness, wealth and poverty, pleasure
and pain, are to him indifferent adiofora.
All these things are merely
the sphere in which virtue may act.
The ideal Wise Man is sufficient
unto himself in all things, autarkhs and knowing these truths, he will
be happy even when stretched upon the rack.
It is probable that no Stoic
claimed for himself that he was this Wise Man, but that each strove
after it as an ideal much as the Christian strives after a likeness to
Christ.
The exaggeration in this statement was, however, so obvious,
that the later Stoics were driven to make a further subdivision of
things indifferent into what is preferable (prohgmena) and what is
undesirable.
They also held that for him who had not attained to the
perfect wisdom, certain actions were proper.
(kaqhkonta) These were
neither virtuous nor vicious, but, like the indifferent things, held a
middle place.
Two points in the Stoic system deserve special mention.
One is a careful distinction between things which are in our power and
things which are not.
Desire and dislike, opinion and affection, are
within the power of the will; whereas health, wealth, honour, and other
such are generally not so.
The Stoic was called upon to control his
desires and affections, and to guide his opinion; to bring his whole
being under the sway of the will or leading principle, just as the
universe is guided and governed by divine Providence.
This is a special
application of the favourite Greek virtue of moderation, (swfrosuum) and
has also its parallel in Christian ethics.
The second point is a strong
insistence on the unity of the universe, and on man's duty as part of a
great whole.
Public spirit was the most splendid political virtue of the
ancient world, and it is here made cosmopolitan.
It is again instructive
to note that Christian sages insisted on the same thing.
Christians
are taught that they are members of a worldwide brotherhood, where is
neither Greek nor Hebrew, bond nor free and that they live their lives
as fellow-workers with God.


Such is the system which underlies the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius.

Some knowledge of it is necessary to the right understanding of the
book, but for us the chief interest lies elsewhere.
We do not come to
Marcus Aurelius for a treatise on Stoicism.
He is no head of a school to
lay down a body of doctrine for students; he does not even contemplate
that others should read what he writes.
His philosophy is not an eager
intellectual inquiry, but more what we should call religious feeling.

The uncompromising stiffness of Zeno or Chrysippus is softened and
transformed by passing through a nature reverent and tolerant, gentle
and free from guile; the grim resignation which made life possible to
the Stoic sage becomes in him almost a mood of aspiration.
His book
records the innermost thoughts of his heart, set down to ease it, with
such moral maxims and reflections as may help him to bear the burden of
duty and the countless annoyances of a busy life.


It is instructive to compare the Meditations with another famous book,
the Imitation of Christ.
There is the same ideal of self-control in
both.
It should be a man's task, says the Imitation, 'to overcome
himself, and every day to be stronger than himself.
' 'In withstanding of
the passions standeth very peace of heart.
' 'Let us set the axe to the
root, that we being purged of our passions may have a peaceable mind.
'
To this end there must be continual self-examination.
'If thou may not
continually gather thyself together, namely sometimes do it, at least
once a day, the morning or the evening.
In the morning purpose, in the
evening discuss the manner, what thou hast been this day, in word, work,
and thought.
' But while the Roman's temper is a modest self-reliance,
the Christian aims at a more passive mood, humbleness and meekness,
and reliance on the presence and personal friendship of God.
The Roman
scrutinises his faults with severity, but without the self-contempt
which makes the Christian 'vile in his own sight.
' The Christian, like
the Roman, bids 'study to withdraw thine heart from the love of things
visible'; but it is not the busy life of duty he has in mind so much as
the contempt of all worldly things, and the 'cutting away of all
lower delectations.
' Both rate men's praise or blame at their real
worthlessness; 'Let not thy peace,' says the Christian, 'be in the
mouths of men.
' But it is to God's censure the Christian appeals, the
Roman to his own soul.
The petty annoyances of injustice or unkindness
are looked on by each with the same magnanimity.
'Why doth a little
thing said or done against thee make thee sorry?
It is no new thing; it
is not the first, nor shall it be the last, if thou live long.
At best
suffer patiently, if thou canst not suffer joyously.
' The Christian
should sorrow more for other men's malice than for our own wrongs; but
the Roman is inclined to wash his hands of the offender.
'Study to be
patient in suffering and bearing other men's defaults and all manner
infirmities,' says the Christian; but the Roman would never have thought
to add, 'If all men were perfect, what had we then to suffer of other
men for God?
' The virtue of suffering in itself is an idea which does
not meet us in the Meditations.
Both alike realise that man is one of a
great community.
'No man is sufficient to himself,' says the Christian;
'we must bear together, help together, comfort together.
' But while
he sees a chief importance in zeal, in exalted emotion that is, and
avoidance of lukewarmness, the Roman thought mainly of the duty to be
done as well as might be, and less of the feeling which should go with
the doing of it.
To the saint as to the emperor, the world is a poor
thing at best.
'Verily it is a misery to live upon the earth,' says the
Christian; few and evil are the days of man's life, which passeth away
suddenly as a shadow.


But there is one great difference between the two books we are
considering.
The Imitation is addressed to others, the Meditations
by the writer to himself.
We learn nothing from the Imitation of
the author's own life, except in so far as he may be assumed to have
practised his own preachings; the Meditations reflect mood by mood the
mind of him who wrote them.
In their intimacy and frankness lies their
great charm.
These notes are not sermons; they are not even confessions.
There is always an air of self-consciousness in confessions; in such
revelations there is always a danger of unctuousness or of vulgarity for
the best of men.
St. Augus-tine is not always clear of offence, and John
Bunyan himself exaggerates venial peccadilloes into heinous sins.
But
Marcus Aurelius is neither vulgar nor unctuous; he extenuates nothing,
but nothing sets down in malice.
He never poses before an audience; he
may not be profound, he is always sincere.
And it is a lofty and serene
soul which is here disclosed before us.
Vulgar vices seem to have no
temptation for him; this is not one tied and bound with chains which
he strives to break.
The faults he detects in himself are often such as
most men would have no eyes to see.
To serve the divine spirit which
is implanted within him, a man must 'keep himself pure from all violent
passion and evil affection, from all rashness and vanity, and from all
manner of discontent, either in regard of the gods or men': or, as he
says elsewhere, 'unspotted by pleasure, undaunted by pain.
' Unwavering
courtesy and consideration are his aims.
'Whatsoever any man either
doth or saith, thou must be good;' 'doth any man offend?
It is against
himself that he doth offend: why should it trouble thee?
' The offender
needs pity, not wrath; those who must needs be corrected, should be
treated with tact and gentleness; and one must be always ready to learn
better.
'The best kind of revenge is, not to become like unto them. '
There are so many hints of offence forgiven, that we may believe the
notes followed sharp on the facts.
Perhaps he has fallen short of his
aim, and thus seeks to call his principles to mind, and to strengthen
himself for the future.
That these sayings are not mere talk is plain
from the story of Avidius Cassius, who would have usurped his imperial
throne.
Thus the emperor faithfully carries out his own principle, that
evil must be overcome with good.
For each fault in others, Nature (says
he) has given us a counteracting virtue; 'as, for example, against the
unthankful, it hath given goodness and meekness, as an antidote.
'

One so gentle towards a foe was sure to be a good friend; and indeed his
pages are full of generous gratitude to those who had served him.
In his
First Book he sets down to account all the debts due to his kinsfolk
and teachers.
To his grandfather he owed his own gentle spirit, to
his father shamefastness and courage; he learnt of his mother to be
religious and bountiful and single-minded.
Rusticus did not work in
vain, if he showed his pupil that his life needed amending.

Desire and dislike, opinion and affection, are
within the power of the will; whereas health, wealth, honour, and other
such are generally not so.
The Stoic was called upon to control his
desires and affections, and to guide his opinion; to bring his whole
being under the sway of the will or leading principle, just as the
universe is guided and governed by divine Providence.
This is a special
application of the favourite Greek virtue of moderation, (swfrosuum) and
has also its parallel in Christian ethics.
The second point is a strong
insistence on the unity of the universe, and on man's duty as part of a
great whole.
Public spirit was the most splendid political virtue of the
ancient world, and it is here made cosmopolitan.
It is again instructive
to note that Christian sages insisted on the same thing.
Christians
are taught that they are members of a worldwide brotherhood, where is
neither Greek nor Hebrew, bond nor free and that they live their lives
as fellow-workers with God.


Such is the system which underlies the Meditations of Marcus Aurelius.

Some knowledge of it is necessary to the right understanding of the
book, but for us the chief interest lies elsewhere.
We do not come to
Marcus Aurelius for a treatise on Stoicism.
He is no head of a school to
lay down a body of doctrine for students; he does not even contemplate
that others should read what he writes.
His philosophy is not an eager
intellectual inquiry, but more what we should call religious feeling.

The uncompromising stiffness of Zeno or Chrysippus is softened and
transformed by passing through a nature reverent and tolerant, gentle
and free from guile; the grim resignation which made life possible to
the Stoic sage becomes in him almost a mood of aspiration.
His book
records the innermost thoughts of his heart, set down to ease it, with
such moral maxims and reflections as may help him to bear the burden of
duty and the countless annoyances of a busy life.


It is instructive to compare the Meditations with another famous book,
the Imitation of Christ.
There is the same ideal of self-control in
both.
It should be a man's task, says the Imitation, 'to overcome
himself, and every day to be stronger than himself.
' 'In withstanding of
the passions standeth very peace of heart.
' 'Let us set the axe to the
root, that we being purged of our passions may have a peaceable mind.
'
To this end there must be continual self-examination.
'If thou may not
continually gather thyself together, namely sometimes do it, at least
once a day, the morning or the evening.
In the morning purpose, in the
evening discuss the manner, what thou hast been this day, in word, work,
and thought.
' But while the Roman's temper is a modest self-reliance,
the Christian aims at a more passive mood, humbleness and meekness,
and reliance on the presence and personal friendship of God.
The Roman
scrutinises his faults with severity, but without the self-contempt
which makes the Christian 'vile in his own sight.
' The Christian, like
the Roman, bids 'study to withdraw thine heart from the love of things
visible'; but it is not the busy life of duty he has in mind so much as
the contempt of all worldly things, and the 'cutting away of all
lower delectations.
' Both rate men's praise or blame at their real
worthlessness; 'Let not thy peace,' says the Christian, 'be in the
mouths of men.
' But it is to God's censure the Christian appeals, the
Roman to his own soul.
The petty annoyances of injustice or unkindness
are looked on by each with the same magnanimity.
'Why doth a little
thing said or done against thee make thee sorry?
It is no new thing; it
is not the first, nor shall it be the last, if thou live long.
At best
suffer patiently, if thou canst not suffer joyously.
' The Christian
should sorrow more for other men's malice than for our own wrongs; but
the Roman is inclined to wash his hands of the offender.
'Study to be
patient in suffering and bearing other men's defaults and all manner
infirmities,' says the Christian; but the Roman would never have thought
to add, 'If all men were perfect, what had we then to suffer of other
men for God?
' The virtue of suffering in itself is an idea which does
not meet us in the Meditations.
Both alike realise that man is one of a
great community.
'No man is sufficient to himself,' says the Christian;
'we must bear together, help together, comfort together.
' But while
he sees a chief importance in zeal, in exalted emotion that is, and
avoidance of lukewarmness, the Roman thought mainly of the duty to be
done as well as might be, and less of the feeling which should go with
the doing of it.
To the saint as to the emperor, the world is a poor
thing at best.
'Verily it is a misery to live upon the earth,' says the
Christian; few and evil are the days of man's life, which passeth away
suddenly as a shadow.


But there is one great difference between the two books we are
considering.
The Imitation is addressed to others, the Meditations
by the writer to himself.
We learn nothing from the Imitation of
the author's own life, except in so far as he may be assumed to have
practised his own preachings; the Meditations reflect mood by mood the
mind of him who wrote them.
In their intimacy and frankness lies their
great charm.
These notes are not sermons; they are not even confessions.
There is always an air of self-consciousness in confessions; in such
revelations there is always a danger of unctuousness or of vulgarity for
the best of men.
St. Augus-tine is not always clear of offence, and John
Bunyan himself exaggerates venial peccadilloes into heinous sins.
But
Marcus Aurelius is neither vulgar nor unctuous; he extenuates nothing,
but nothing sets down in malice.
He never poses before an audience; he
may not be profound, he is always sincere.
And it is a lofty and serene
soul which is here disclosed before us.
Vulgar vices seem to have no
temptation for him; this is not one tied and bound with chains which
he strives to break.
The faults he detects in himself are often such as
most men would have no eyes to see.
To serve the divine spirit which
is implanted within him, a man must 'keep himself pure from all violent
passion and evil affection, from all rashness and vanity, and from all
manner of discontent, either in regard of the gods or men': or, as he
says elsewhere, 'unspotted by pleasure, undaunted by pain.
' Unwavering
courtesy and consideration are his aims.
'Whatsoever any man either
doth or saith, thou must be good;' 'doth any man offend?
It is against
himself that he doth offend: why should it trouble thee?
' The offender
needs pity, not wrath; those who must needs be corrected, should be
treated with tact and gentleness; and one must be always ready to learn
better.
'The best kind of revenge is, not to become like unto them. '
There are so many hints of offence forgiven, that we may believe the
notes followed sharp on the facts.
Perhaps he has fallen short of his
aim, and thus seeks to call his principles to mind, and to strengthen
himself for the future.
That these sayings are not mere talk is plain
from the story of Avidius Cassius, who would have usurped his imperial
throne.
Thus the emperor faithfully carries out his own principle, that
evil must be overcome with good.
For each fault in others, Nature (says
he) has given us a counteracting virtue; 'as, for example, against the
unthankful, it hath given goodness and meekness, as an antidote.
'

One so gentle towards a foe was sure to be a good friend; and indeed his
pages are full of generous gratitude to those who had served him.
In his
First Book he sets down to account all the debts due to his kinsfolk
and teachers.
To his grandfather he owed his own gentle spirit, to
his father shamefastness and courage; he learnt of his mother to be
religious and bountiful and single-minded.
Rusticus did not work in
vain, if he showed his pupil that his life needed amending.
Apollonius
taught him simplicity, reasonableness, gratitude, a love of true
liberty.
So the list runs on; every one he had dealings with seems
to have given him something good, a sure proof of the goodness of his
nature, which thought no evil.


If his was that honest and true heart which is the Christian ideal, this
is the more wonderful in that he lacked the faith which makes Christians
strong.
He could say, it is true, 'either there is a God, and then all
is well; or if all things go by chance and fortune, yet mayest thou use
thine own providence in those things that concern thee properly; and
then art thou well.
' Or again, 'We must needs grant that there is a
nature that doth govern the universe.
' But his own part in the scheme
of things is so small, that he does not hope for any personal happiness
beyond what a serene soul may win in this mortal life.
'O my soul, the
time I trust will be, when thou shalt be good, simple, more open and
visible, than that body by which it is enclosed;' but this is said of
the calm contentment with human lot which he hopes to attain, not of a
time when the trammels of the body shall be cast off.
For the rest, the
world and its fame and wealth, 'all is vanity.
' The gods may perhaps
have a particular care for him, but their especial care is for the
universe at large: thus much should suffice.
His gods are better than
the Stoic gods, who sit aloof from all human things, untroubled and
uncaring, but his personal hope is hardly stronger.
On this point he
says little, though there are many allusions to death as the natural
end; doubtless he expected his soul one day to be absorbed into the
universal soul, since nothing comes out of nothing, and nothing can be
annihilated.
His mood is one of strenuous weariness; he does his duty as
a good soldier, waiting for the sound of the trumpet which shall sound
the retreat; he has not that cheerful confidence which led Socrates
through a life no less noble, to a death which was to bring him into the
company of gods he had worshipped and men whom he had revered.


But although Marcus Aurelius may have held intellectually that his soul
was destined to be absorbed, and to lose consciousness of itself, there
were times when he felt, as all who hold it must sometimes feel, how
unsatisfying is such a creed.
Then he gropes blindly after something
less empty and vain.
'Thou hast taken ship,' he says, 'thou hast sailed,
thou art come to land, go out, if to another life, there also shalt
thou find gods, who are everywhere.
' There is more in this than the
assumption of a rival theory for argument's sake.
If worldly things
'be but as a dream, the thought is not far off that there may be an
awakening to what is real.
When he speaks of death as a necessary
change, and points out that nothing useful and profitable can be brought
about without change, did he perhaps think of the change in a corn of
wheat, which is not quickened except it die?
Nature's marvellous power
of recreating out of Corruption is surely not confined to bodily things.

Many of his thoughts sound like far-off echoes of St.
Paul; and it is
strange indeed that this most Christian of emperors has nothing good
to say of the Christians.
To him they are only sectaries 'violently and
passionately set upon opposition.


Profound as philosophy these Meditations certainly are not; but Marcus
Aurelius was too sincere not to see the essence of such things as
came within his experience.
Ancient religions were for the most
part concerned with outward things.
Do the necessary rites, and you
propitiate the gods; and these rites were often trivial, sometimes
violated right feeling or even morality.
Even when the gods stood on the
side of righteousness, they were concerned with the act more than with
the intent.
But Marcus Aurelius knows that what the heart is full of,
the man will do.
'Such as thy thoughts and ordinary cogitations are,' he
says, 'such will thy mind be in time.
' And every page of the book shows
us that he knew thought was sure to issue in act.
He drills his soul, as
it were, in right principles, that when the time comes, it may be guided
by them.
To wait until the emergency is to be too late. He sees also the
true essence of happiness.
'If happiness did consist in pleasure,
how came notorious robbers, impure abominable livers, parricides, and
tyrants, in so large a measure to have their part of pleasures?
' He who
had all the world's pleasures at command can write thus 'A happy lot and
portion is, good inclinations of the soul, good desires, good actions.
'

By the irony of fate this man, so gentle and good, so desirous of quiet
joys and a mind free from care, was set at the head of the Roman Empire
when great dangers threatened from east and west.
For several years he
himself commanded his armies in chief.
In camp before the Quadi he dates
the first book of his Meditations, and shows how he could retire within
himself amid the coarse clangour of arms.
The pomps and glories which
he despised were all his; what to most men is an ambition or a dream, to
him was a round of weary tasks which nothing but the stern sense of duty
could carry him through.
And he did his work well. His wars were slow
and tedious, but successful.
With a statesman's wisdom he foresaw the
danger to Rome of the barbarian hordes from the north, and took measures
to meet it.
As it was, his settlement gave two centuries of respite
to the Roman Empire; had he fulfilled the plan of pushing the imperial
frontiers to the Elbe, which seems to have been in his mind, much more
might have been accomplished.
But death cut short his designs.

Truly a rare opportunity was given to Marcus Aurelius of showing what
the mind can do in despite of circumstances.
Most peaceful of warriors,
a magnificent monarch whose ideal was quiet happiness in home life, bent
to obscurity yet born to greatness, the loving father of children who
died young or turned out hateful, his life was one paradox.
That nothing
might lack, it was in camp before the face of the enemy that he passed
away and went to his own place.


Translations THE following is a list of the chief English translations
of Marcus Aurelius: (1) By Meric Casaubon, 1634; (2) Jeremy Collier,
1701; (3) James Thomson, 1747; (4) R.
Graves, 1792; (5) H. McCormac,
1844; (6) George Long, 1862; (7) G.
H. Rendall, 1898; and (8) J.
Jackson, 1906.
Renan's "Marc-Aurèle"--in his "History of the Origins of
Christianity," which appeared in 1882--is the most vital and original
book to be had relating to the time of Marcus Aurelius.
Pater's "Marius
the Epicurean" forms another outside commentary, which is of service in
the imaginative attempt to create again the period.





MARCUS AURELIUS ANTONINUS THE ROMAN EMPEROR




HIS FIRST BOOK

concerning HIMSELF:

Wherein Antoninus recordeth, What and of whom, whether Parents, Friends,
or Masters; by their good examples, or good advice and counsel, he had
learned:

Divided into Numbers or Sections.


ANTONINUS Book vi.
Num. xlviii. Whensoever thou wilt rejoice thyself,
think and meditate upon those good parts and especial gifts, which thou
hast observed in any of them that live with thee:

as industry in one, in another modesty, in another bountifulness, in
another some other thing.
For nothing can so much rejoice thee, as
the resemblances and parallels of several virtues, eminent in the
dispositions of them that live with thee, especially when all at once,
as it were, they represent themselves unto thee.
See therefore, that
thou have them always in a readiness.



THE FIRST BOOK

I.
Of my grandfather Verus I have learned to be gentle and meek, and to
refrain from all anger and passion.
From the fame and memory of him that
begot me I have learned both shamefastness and manlike behaviour.
Of my
mother I have learned to be religious, and bountiful; and to forbear,
not only to do, but to intend any evil; to content myself with a spare
diet, and to fly all such excess as is incidental to great wealth.
Of my
great-grandfather, both to frequent public schools and auditories, and
to get me good and able teachers at home; and that I ought not to think
much, if upon such occasions, I were at excessive charges.


II.
Of him that brought me up, not to be fondly addicted to either of
the two great factions of the coursers in the circus, called Prasini,
and Veneti: nor in the amphitheatre partially to favour any of the
gladiators, or fencers, as either the Parmularii, or the Secutores.

Moreover, to endure labour; nor to need many things; when I have
anything to do, to do it myself rather than by others; not to meddle
with many businesses; and not easily to admit of any slander.


III.
Of Diognetus, not to busy myself about vain things, and not easily
to believe those things, which are commonly spoken, by such as take upon
them to work wonders, and by sorcerers, or prestidigitators, and
impostors; concerning the power of charms, and their driving out of
demons, or evil spirits; and the like.
Not to keep quails for the game;
nor to be mad after such things.
Not to be offended with other men's
liberty of speech, and to apply myself unto philosophy.
Him also I must
thank, that ever I heard first Bacchius, then Tandasis and Marcianus,
and that I did write dialogues in my youth; and that I took liking to
the philosophers' little couch and skins, and such other things, which
by the Grecian discipline are proper to those who profess philosophy.


IV.
To Rusticus I am beholding, that I first entered into the conceit
that my life wanted some redress and cure.
And then, that I did not
fall into the ambition of ordinary sophists, either to write tracts
concerning the common theorems, or to exhort men unto virtue and the
study of philosophy by public orations; as also that I never by way of
ostentation did affect to show myself an active able man, for any kind
of bodily exercises.
And that I gave over the study of rhetoric and
poetry, and of elegant neat language.
That I did not use to walk about
the house in my long robe, nor to do any such things.
Moreover I learned
of him to write letters without any affectation, or curiosity; such as
that was, which by him was written to my mother from Sinuessa: and to be
easy and ready to be reconciled, and well pleased again with them that
had offended me, as soon as any of them would be content to seek unto
me again.
To read with diligence; not to rest satisfied with a light and
superficial knowledge, nor quickly to assent to things commonly spoken
of: whom also I must thank that ever I lighted upon Epictetus his
Hypomnemata, or moral commentaries and common-factions: which also he
gave me of his own.


V.
From Apollonius, true liberty, and unvariable steadfastness, and not
to regard anything at all, though never so little, but right and reason:
and always, whether in the sharpest pains, or after the loss of a child,
or in long diseases, to be still the same man; who also was a present
and visible example unto me, that it was possible for the same man to
be both vehement and remiss: a man not subject to be vexed, and offended
with the incapacity of his scholars and auditors in his lectures and
expositions; and a true pattern of a man who of all his good gifts
and faculties, least esteemed in himself, that his excellent skill and
ability to teach and persuade others the common theorems and maxims of
the Stoic philosophy.
Of him also I learned how to receive favours and
kindnesses (as commonly they are accounted:) from friends, so that I
might not become obnoxious unto them, for them, nor more yielding upon
occasion, than in right I ought; and yet so that I should not pass them
neither, as an unsensible and unthankful man.


VI.
Of Sextus, mildness and the pattern of a family governed with
paternal affection; and a purpose to live according to nature: to be
grave without affectation: to observe carefully the several dispositions
of my friends, not to be offended with idiots, nor unseasonably to set
upon those that are carried with the vulgar opinions, with the theorems,
and tenets of philosophers: his conversation being an example how a man
might accommodate himself to all men and companies; so that though his
company were sweeter and more pleasing than any flatterer's cogging and
fawning; yet was it at the same time most respected and reverenced: who
also had a proper happiness and faculty, rationally and methodically to
find out, and set in order all necessary determinations and instructions
for a man's life.
A man without ever the least appearance of anger, or
any other passion; able at the same time most exactly to observe the
Stoic Apathia, or unpassionateness, and yet to be most tender-hearted:
ever of good credit; and yet almost without any noise, or rumour: very
learned, and yet making little show.


VII.
From Alexander the Grammarian, to be un-reprovable myself, and not
reproachfully to reprehend any man for a barbarism, or a solecism, or
any false pronunciation, but dextrously by way of answer, or testimony,
or confirmation of the same matter (taking no notice of the word) to
utter it as it should have been spoken; or by some other such close and
indirect admonition, handsomely and civilly to tell him of it.


VIII.
Of Fronto, to how much envy and fraud and hypocrisy the state of a
tyrannous king is subject unto, and how they who are commonly called
[Eupatridas Gk.
], i. e. nobly born, are in some sort incapable, or void
of natural affection.


IX.
Of Alexander the Platonic, not often nor without great necessity to
say, or to write to any man in a letter, 'I am not at leisure'; nor in
this manner still to put off those duties, which we owe to our friends
and acquaintances (to every one in his kind) under pretence of urgent
affairs.


X.
Of Catulus, not to contemn any friend's expostulation, though unjust,
but to strive to reduce him to his former disposition: freely and
heartily to speak well of all my masters upon any occasion, as it is
reported of Domitius, and Athenodotus: and to love my children with true
affection.


XI.
From my brother Severus, to be kind and loving to all them of my
house and family; by whom also I came to the knowledge of Thrasea and
Helvidius, and Cato, and Dio, and Brutus.
He it was also that did put me
in the first conceit and desire of an equal commonwealth, administered
by justice and equality; and of a kingdom wherein should be regarded
nothing more than the good and welfare of the subjects.
Of him also,
to observe a constant tenor, (not interrupted, with any other cares and
distractions,) in the study and esteem of philosophy: to be bountiful
and liberal in the largest measure; always to hope the best; and to
be confident that my friends love me.
In whom I moreover observed open
dealing towards those whom he reproved at any time, and that his friends
might without all doubt or much observation know what he would, or would
not, so open and plain was he.


XII.
From Claudius Maximus, in all things to endeavour to have power
of myself, and in nothing to be carried about; to be cheerful and
courageous in all sudden chances and accidents, as in sicknesses: to
love mildness, and moderation, and gravity: and to do my business,
whatsoever it be, thoroughly, and without querulousness.
Whatsoever
he said, all men believed him that as he spake, so he thought, and
whatsoever he did, that he did it with a good intent.
His manner was,
never to wonder at anything; never to be in haste, and yet never
slow: nor to be perplexed, or dejected, or at any time unseemly, or
excessively to laugh: nor to be angry, or suspicious, but ever ready to
do good, and to forgive, and to speak truth; and all this, as one that
seemed rather of himself to have been straight and right, than ever to
have been rectified or redressed; neither was there any man that ever
thought himself undervalued by him, or that could find in his heart, to
think himself a better man than he.
He would also be very pleasant and
gracious.


XIII.
In my father, I observed his meekness; his constancy without
wavering in those things, which after a due examination and
deliberation, he had determined.
How free from all vanity he carried
himself in matter of honour and dignity, (as they are esteemed:) his
laboriousness and assiduity, his readiness to hear any man, that had
aught to say tending to any common good: how generally and impartially
he would give every man his due; his skill and knowledge, when rigour
or extremity, or when remissness or moderation was in season; how he did
abstain from all unchaste love of youths; his moderate condescending to
other men's occasions as an ordinary man, neither absolutely requiring
of his friends, that they should wait upon him at his ordinary meals,
nor that they should of necessity accompany him in his journeys; and
that whensoever any business upon some necessary occasions was to be put
off and omitted before it could be ended, he was ever found when he
went about it again, the same man that he was before.
His accurate
examination of things in consultations, and patient hearing of others.

He would not hastily give over the search of the matter, as one easy to
be satisfied with sudden notions and apprehensions.
His care to preserve
his friends; how neither at any time he would carry himself towards them
with disdainful neglect, and grow weary of them; nor yet at any time
be madly fond of them.
His contented mind in all things, his cheerful
countenance, his care to foresee things afar off, and to take order for
the least, without any noise or clamour.
Moreover how all acclamations
and flattery were repressed by him: how carefully he observed all things
necessary to the government, and kept an account of the common expenses,
and how patiently he did abide that he was reprehended by some for this
his strict and rigid kind of dealing.
How he was neither a superstitious
worshipper of the gods, nor an ambitious pleaser of men, or studious of
popular applause; but sober in all things, and everywhere observant of
that which was fitting; no affecter of novelties: in those things which
conduced to his ease and convenience, (plenty whereof his fortune
did afford him,) without pride and bragging, yet with all freedom and
liberty: so that as he did freely enjoy them without any anxiety or
affectation when they were present; so when absent, he found no want
of them.
Moreover, that he was never commended by any man, as either a
learned acute man, or an obsequious officious man, or a fine orator; but
as a ripe mature man, a perfect sound man; one that could not endure to
be flattered; able to govern both himself and others.
Moreover, how much
he did honour all true philosophers, without upbraiding those that were
not so; his sociableness, his gracious and delightful conversation, but
never unto satiety; his care of his body within bounds and measure,
not as one that desired to live long, or over-studious of neatness, and
elegancy; and yet not as one that did not regard it: so that through his
own care and providence, he seldom needed any inward physic, or outward
applications: but especially how ingeniously he would yield to any that
had obtained any peculiar faculty, as either eloquence, or the knowledge
of the laws, or of ancient customs, or the like; and how he concurred
with them, in his best care and endeavour that every one of them might
in his kind, for that wherein he excelled, be regarded and esteemed: and
although he did all things carefully after the ancient customs of his
forefathers, yet even of this was he not desirous that men should take
notice, that he did imitate ancient customs.
Again, how he was not
easily moved and tossed up and down, but loved to be constant, both in
the same places and businesses; and how after his great fits of headache
he would return fresh and vigorous to his wonted affairs.
Again, that
secrets he neither had many, nor often, and such only as concerned
public matters: his discretion and moderation, in exhibiting of the
public sights and shows for the pleasure and pastime of the people: in
public buildings.
congiaries, and the like. In all these things,
having a respect unto men only as men, and to the equity of the things
themselves, and not unto the glory that might follow.
Never wont to
use the baths at unseasonable hours; no builder; never curious, or
solicitous, either about his meat, or about the workmanship, or colour
of his clothes, or about anything that belonged to external beauty.

In all his conversation, far from all inhumanity, all boldness, and
incivility, all greediness and impetuosity; never doing anything with
such earnestness, and intention, that a man could say of him, that
he did sweat about it: but contrariwise, all things distinctly, as at
leisure; without trouble; orderly, soundly, and agreeably.
A man might
have applied that to him, which is recorded of Socrates, that he knew
how to want, and to enjoy those things, in the want whereof, most men
show themselves weak; and in the fruition, intemperate: but to hold out
firm and constant, and to keep within the compass of true moderation and
sobriety in either estate, is proper to a man, who hath a perfect and
invincible soul; such as he showed himself in the sickness of Maximus.


XIV.
From the gods I received that I had good grandfathers, and parents,
a good sister, good masters, good domestics, loving kinsmen, almost all
that I have; and that I never through haste and rashness transgressed
against any of them, notwithstanding that my disposition was such,
as that such a thing (if occasion had been) might very well have been
committed by me, but that It was the mercy of the gods, to prevent such
a concurring of matters and occasions, as might make me to incur this
blame.
That I was not long brought up by the concubine of my father;
that I preserved the flower of my youth.
That I took not upon me to be
a man before my time, but rather put it off longer than I needed.
That
I lived under the government of my lord and father, who would take
away from me all pride and vainglory, and reduce me to that conceit and
opinion that it was not impossible for a prince to live in the court
without a troop of guards and followers, extraordinary apparel, such
and such torches and statues, and other like particulars of state and
magnificence; but that a man may reduce and contract himself almost to
the state of a private man, and yet for all that not to become the more
base and remiss in those public matters and affairs, wherein power and
authority is requisite.
That I have had such a brother, who by his own
example might stir me up to think of myself; and by his respect and
love, delight and please me.
That I have got ingenuous children, and
that they were not born distorted, nor with any other natural deformity.

That I was no great proficient in the study of rhetoric and poetry, and
of other faculties, which perchance I might have dwelt upon, if I had
found myself to go on in them with success.