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Seneca · Moral Letters to Lucilius

Letter 76 — On Learning Wisdom in Old Age (§13)

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The same thing holds good regarding men as regarding things. A ship is said to be good not when it is decorated with costly colours, nor when its prow is covered with silver or gold or its figure-head embossed in ivory, nor when it is laden with the imperial revenues or with the wealth of kings, but when it is steady and staunch and taut, with seams that keep out the water, stout enough to endure the buffeting of the waves’ obedient to its helm, swift and caring naught for the winds.
Seneca·Letter 76 — On Learning Wisdom in Old Age (§13)·trans. Gummere
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