Skip to content

Seneca · Moral Letters to Lucilius

Letter 66 — On Various Aspects of Virtue (§5)

A quote
The first day we investigated this problem: how can goods be equal if they are of three kinds? For certain of them, according to our philosophical tenets, are primary, such as joy, peace, and the welfare of one’s country. Others are of the second order, moulded in an unhappy material, such as the endurance of suffering, and self-control during severe illness. We shall pray outright for the goods of the first class; for the second class we shall pray only if the need shall arise. There is still a third variety, as, for example, a modest gait, a calm and honest countenance, and a bearing that suits the man of wisdom.
Seneca·Letter 66 — On Various Aspects of Virtue (§5)·trans. Gummere
Another quote →