Sunday, February 25, 2018

Meditations by Marcus Aurelius. Quotes V

-How can our principles become dead unless the impressions (thoughts) that correspond to them are extinguished?
-To recover your life is in your power. Look at things again as you used to look at them: for in this consists the recovery of your life.
-Every man is worth just so much as the things about which he busies himself.
-In discourse you must attend to what is said, and in every action you must observe what is being done. And in the latter you should see immediately what end is intended, but in the former watch carefully what thing is signified.
-Do not be ashamed to be helped.
-All things are mutually intertwined, and the bond is holy.
-Everything material soon disappears in the substance of the whole; and everything formal is very soon taken back into the universal reason; and the memory of everything is very soon overwhelmed in time.
-Be upright, or be made upright.
-What can take place without change?
-The wrongdoer has done you no harm, for he has not made your ruling faculty worse than it was before.
-When a man has done you wrong, immediately consider with what opinion about good or evil he has done wrong. For when you have seen this, you will pity him, and will neither wonder nor be angry.
-Think no too much of what you lack as of what you have.
-Retire into yourself. Confine yourself to the present.
-Think of your last hour. Let the wrong that is done by a man stay there where the wrong was done.
-Adorn yourself with simplicity and modesty and with indifference toward the things that lie between virtue and vice. Love mankind. Follow God.
-No man can escape his destiny. The next inquiry being how he may best live the time that he has to live.
-Only attend to yourself, and resolve to be a good man in every act that you do.
-The art of life is more like the wrestler's art than the dancer's in respect of this, that it should stand ready and firm to meet onsets that are sudden and unexpected.
-Every soul, the philosopher says, is involuntarily deprived of truth; consequently in the same way it is deprived of justice and temperance and benevolence and everything of the kind. It is most necessary to bear this constantly in mind, for thus you will be more gentle toward all.
-Very little indeed is necessary for living a happy life.

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