THE ENERGY ENHANCEMENT MEDITATION COURSE BY VIDEO
|
Glyn Hughes' Squashed
Philosophers The Condensed
Edition of "...We live but for a moment" |
INTRODUCTION
Few of the greats of philosophy have had
proper jobs. True, Spinoza was a lens-grinder and Mill an exports clerk, but
Marcus Aurelius was emperor of Rome and ruler of his world. Known as one of the
'Five Good Emperors' he seems to have genuinely tried to improve the lot of
slaves and the poor. His 'Meditations' are a collections of his notes on the
philosophy of Stoicism which was so much favoured by the Roman elite. Founded by
Zeno, who taught in the Stoa Poikile (Painted Colonnades) of 3rd century BC
Cyprus it held an intense reverence for the cosmic order, a devotion to rule, a
view that free-will and determinism were not incompatible, and an acceptance
that all religions have a common goal. An ideal set of views for an imperial
state, and one which has echoes to this day.
THE VERY SQUASHED
VERSION
My grandfather Verus
taught me to be candid and to control my temper. I thank the gods that my
relatives and servants were almost all good persons, that my wife is
deferential, affectionate and frugal, and that, when I came to philosophy I did
not waste time in logic or reading. Put away your books and face the matter
itself. As for your body, value it no more than if you were just expiring; it is
nothing but a little blood and bones. Your breath is but a little air pumped in
and out. But the third part is your mind. Here make a stand.
Remember that you are a man and a Roman, and let your actions be done with
dignity, gravity, humanity, freedom and justice; let every action be done as
though it were your last. Have neither insincerity nor self-love. Pleasure and
pain, riches and poverty - all these are common to the virtuous and the
depraved, and therefore intrinsically neither good not evil.
Do not spend your thoughts upon other people, nor pry into the talk, fancies and
projects of another, nor guess at what he is about, or why he is doing it. Let
your choice run all one way, and be resolute for that which is best. And to this
end be always provided with a few short, uncontested notions, to keep your
understanding true. The whole world is but one commonwealth, for there is no
other society in which mankind can be incorporated. Whatever is agreeable to
You, O Universe, is so to me, too. Mankind are poor, transitory things; one day
in life, and the next turned to ashes. Go straight forward, pursuing your own
and the common interest. We ought to live with the gods. But let all be done out
of mere love and kindness. Reflect upon those who have made the most glorious
figure or have met with the greatest misfortunes. Where are they all now? They
are vanished like a little smoke.
ABOUT THIS
SQUASHED EDITION
This abridgement reduces
the original 66,000 words to about 4,200 and is largely based on the translation
by George Long.
Meditations
by Marcus
Aelius Aurelius Antoninus. c180AD
Squashed edition
edited by
Glyn Hughes
© 2004
Marcus Aurelius Antoninus, Emperor of Rome, his First Book, concerning himself. Wherein he recordeth, what and of whom, whether Parents, Friends, or Masters; by their good examples, or good advice and counsel, he had learned:
I - THE CULTIVATION OF A
PHILOSOPHICAL MIND
THE example of my grandfather Verus taught me to be candid and to control my
temper. By the memory of my father's character I learnt to be modest and manly.
My mother taught me regard for religion, to be generous and open-handed, and
neither to do an ill turn to anyone nor even to think of it. She bred me also to
a plain and inexpensive way of living.
I owe it to my grandfather that I had not a public education, but had good
masters at home. From my tutor I learnt not to identify myself with popular
sporting interests, but to work hard, endure fatigue, and not to meddle with
other people's affairs. Diognetus taught me to bear freedom and plain dealing in
others, and gave me a taste for philosophy. Rusticus first set me to improve my
character, and prevented me from running after the vanity of the Sophists.
Apollonius showed me how to give my mind its due freedom, to disregard
everything that was not true and reasonable and to maintain an equable temper
under the most trying circumstances. Sextus taught me good humour, to be
obliging and to bear with the ignorant and thoughtless. From Maximus I learnt to
command myself and to put through business efficiently, without drudging or
complaint.
From my adoptive father I learnt a smooth and inoffensive temper and a greatness
proof against vanity and the impressions of pomp and power; I learnt that it was
the part of a prince to check flattery, to have his exchequer well furnished, to
be frugal in his expenses, not to worship the gods to superstition, but to be
reserved, vigilant and well poised.
I thank the gods that my grandfathers, parents, sister, preceptors, relatives,
friends and domestics were almost all persons of probity and that I never
happened to disoblige any of them. By the goodness of the gods I was not
provoked to expose my infirmities. I owe it to them also that my wife is so
deferential, affectionate and frugal; and that when I had a mind to look into
philosophy I did not spend too much time in reading or logic-chopping. All these
points could never have been guarded without a protection from above.
II - PHILOSOPHY, THE MIND'S GREATEST
SOLACE
PUT yourself in mind, every morning, that before that night you will meet with
some meddlesome, ungrateful and abusive fellow, with some envious or unsociable
churl. Remember that their perversity proceeds from ignorance of good and evil;
and that since it has fallen to my share to understand the natural beauty of a
good action and the deformity of an ill one; since I am satisfied that the
disobliging person is of kin to me, our minds being both extracted from the
Deity; since no man can do me a real injury because no man can force me to
misbehave myself; I cannot therefore hate or be angry with one of my own nature
and family. For we are all made for mutual assistance, no less than the parts of
the body are for the service of the whole; whence it follows that clashing and
opposition are utterly unnatural.
This being of mine consists of body, breath and that part which governs. Put
away your books and face the matter itself. As for your body, value it no more
than if you were just expiring; it is nothing but a little blood and bones. Your
breath is but a little air pumped in and out. But the third part is your mind.
Here make a stand. Consider that you are an old man, and do not let this noble
part of you languish in slavery any longer. Let it not be overborne with selfish
passions; let it not quarrel with fate, or be uneasy at the present, or afraid
of the future. Providence shines clearly through the work of the gods. Let these
reflections satisfy you, and make them your rule to live by. As for books, cease
to be eager for them, that you may die in good humour heartily thanking the gods
for what you have had.
Remember that you are a man and a Roman, and let your actions be done with
dignity, gravity, humanity, freedom and justice; let every action be done as
though it were your last. Have neither insincerity nor self-love. Man has to
gain but few points in order to live a happy and godlike life.
And what, after all, is there to be afraid of in death? If the gods exist, you
can suffer no harm; and if they do not exist, or take no care of us mortals, a
world without gods or Providence is not worth a man's while to live in. But the
being of the gods, and their concern in human affairs, is beyond dispute; and
they have put it in every man's power not to fall into any calamity properly so
called.
Living and dying, honour and infamy. Pleasure and pain, riches and poverty - all
these are common to the virtuous and the depraved, and therefore intrinsically
neither good not evil. We live but for a moment; our being is in a perpetual
flux, our faculties are dim, our bodies tend ever to corruption; the soul is an
eddy, fortune is not to be guessed at and posthumous fame is oblivion. To what,
then, may we trust? Why, to nothing but philosophy. This is, to keep the
interior divinity from injury and disgrace, and superior to pleasure and pain,
without any dissembling and pretence, and to acquiesce in one's appointed lot.
III - OF RESOLUTENESS FOR THAT WHICH
IS BEST
OBSERVE that the least things and effects in nature are not without charm and
beauty, as the little cracks in the crust of a loaf, though not intended by the
baker, are agreeable and invite the appetite. Thus figs, when they are ripest,
open and gape; and olives, when they are near decaying, are peculiarly
attractive. The bending of an ear of corn, the frown of a lion, the foam of a
boar, and many other like things, if you take them singly, are far from
beautiful; but seen in their natural relations are characteristic and effective.
So if a man have but inclination and thought to examine the product of the
universe, he will find that the most unpromising appearances have their own
appropriate charm.
Do not spend your thoughts upon other people, nor pry into the talk, fancies and
projects of another, nor guess at what he is about, or why he is doing it. Think
upon nothing but what you could willingly tell about, so that if your soul were
laid open there would appear nothing but what was sincere, good-natured and
public-spirited. A man thus qualified is a sort of priest and minister of the
gods, and makes a right use of the divinity within him. Be cheerful; depend not
at all on foreign supports, nor beg your happiness of another; do not throw away
your legs to stand upon crutches.
If, in the whole compass of human life, you find anything preferable to justice
and truth, temperance and fortitude, or to a mind self-satisfied with its own
rational conduct and entirely resigned to fate, then turn to it as to your
supreme happiness. But if there be nothing more valuable than the divinity
within you, if all things are trifles in comparison with this, then do not
divide your allegiance. Let your choice run all one way, and be resolute for
that which is best. As for other speculations, throw them once for all out of
your head.
IV - OF LOYALTY TO THE PRINCIPLES OF
WISDOM
IT is the custom of people to go to unfrequented places and to the seashore and
to the hills for retirement; and you yourself have often desired this solitude.
But, after all, this is only a vulgar fancy, for it is in your power to withdraw
into yourself whenever you have a mind to it. One's own heart is a place the
most free from crowd and noise in the world if only one's thoughts are serene
and the mind well ordered. Make, therefore, frequent use of this retirement,
therein to refresh your virtue. And to this end be always provided with a few
short, uncontested notions, to keep your understanding true. Do not forget to
retire to this solitude of yours; let there be no straining or struggling in the
matter, but move at ease.
If understanding be common to us all, then reason, its cause, must be common,
too. And so also must the reason which governs conduct by commands and
prohibitions be common to us all. Mankind is therefore under one common law and
so are fellow-citizens; and the whole world is but one commonwealth, for there
is no other society in which mankind can be incorporated.
Do not suppose that you are hurt, and your complaint will cease.
If a man affronts you, do not defer to his opinion, or think just as he would
have you do.
No; look upon things as reality presents them. When incense is thrown upon the
altar, one grain usually falls before another; but it matters not.
Adhere to the principles of wisdom, and those who now take you for a monkey or a
beast will make a god of you in a week.
A thing is neither better nor worse for being praised. Do virtues stand in need
of a good word, or are they the worse for a bad one? An emerald will shine none
the less though its worth be not spoken of.
Whatever is agreeable to You, O Universe, is so to me, too. Your operations are
never mis-timed. Whatever Your seasons bring is fruit for me, O Nature. From You
all things proceed, subsist in You, and return to You. The poet said, 'Dear City
of Cecrops'; shall we not say, 'Dear City of God'?
The greater part of what we say and do is unnecessary; and if this were only
retrenched we should have more leisure and less disturbance. This applies to our
thoughts also, for impertinence of thought leads to unnecessary action.
Mankind are poor, transitory things; one day in life, and the next turned to
ashes. Therefore manage this minute wisely and part with it cheerfully; and like
a ripe fruit, when you drop, make your acknowledgments to the tree that bore
you.
V - OF SINCERITY IN ACTIONS
WHEN you feel unwilling to rise early in the morning, make this short speech to
yourself: 'I am getting up now to do the business of a man; and am I out of
humour for going about that I was made for, and for the sake of which I was sent
into the world? Was I then designed for nothing but to doze beneath the
counterpane?' Surely action is the end of your being. Look upon the plants and
birds, the ants, spiders and bees, and you will see that they are all exerting
their nature and busy in their station. Shall not a man act like a man?
Be not ashamed of any action which is in accordance with nature, and never be
misled by the fear of censure or reproach. Where honesty prompts you to say or
do anything, let not the opinion of others hold you back. Go straight forward,
pursuing your own and the common interest.
Some men, when they do you a kindness, ask for the payment of gratitude; others,
more modest, remember the favour and look upon you as their debtor. But there
are yet other benefactors who forget their good deeds; and these are like the
vine, which is satisfied by being fruitful in its kind and bears a bunch of
grapes without expecting any thanks for it. A truly kind man never talks of a
good turn that he has done, but does another as soon as he can, just like a vine
that bears again the next season.
We commonly say that Aesculapius has prescribed riding for one patient, walking
for another, a cold bath for a third. In the same way we may say that the nature
of the universe has ordered this or that person a disease, loss of limbs or
estate, or some such other calamity; For as, in the first case, the word
'prescribed' means a direction for the health of the patient, so, in the latter,
it means an application suitable for his constitution and destiny.
Be not uneasy, discouraged or out of humour, because practice falls short of
precept in some particulars. If you happen to be vanquished, come on again, and
be glad if most of what you do is worthy of a man.
We ought to live with the gods. This is done by being contented with the
appointment of providence and by obeying the orders of that divinity which is
God's deputy; and this divine authority is no more or less than that soul and
reason which every man carries within him.
VI - OF LIBERALITY IN OUTLOOK
THE best way of revenge is not to imitate the injury. Be always doing something
serviceable to mankind; and let this constant generosity be your pleasure, not
forgetting a due regard to God.
The world is either an aggregation of atoms, or it is a unity ruled by law and
providence. If the first, what should I stay for, where nature is a chaos and
things are blindly jumbled together? But if there is a providence, I adore the
great Governor of the world, and am at ease and cheerful in the prospect of
protection.
Suppose you had a stepmother and a mother at the same time; though you would pay
regard to the first, your converse would be principally with the latter. Let the
court and philosophy represent these two relations to me.
If an antagonist in the circus tears our flesh with his nails, or tilts against
us with his head, we do not cry out foul play, nor are we offended, nor do we
suspect him afterwards as a dangerous person. Let us act thus in the other
instances of life. When we receive a blow, let us think that we are but at a
trial of skill and depart without malice or ill will.
It is enough to do my duty; as for other things, I will not be disturbed about
them.
The vast continents of Europe and of Asia are but corners of the creation; the
ocean is but a drop, and Mount Athos but a grain in respect of the universe; and
the present instant of time is but a point to the extent of eternity.
When you have a mind to divert your fancy, try to consider the good qualities of
your acquaintance - such as the enterprising vigour of this man, the modesty of
another, the liberality of a third, and so on. Let this practice be always at
hand.
VII - OF PATIENCE AND TOLERATION
WHAT is wickedness? It is nothing new. When you are in danger of being shocked,
consider that the sight is nothing but what you have frequently seen already.
All ages and histories towns and families, are full of the same stories; there
is nothing new to be met with, but all things are common and quickly over.
Nature works up the matter of the universe like wax; now it is a horse; soon you
will find it melted down and run into the figure of a tree, then a man, then
something else. Only for a brief time is it fixed in any species.
Antisthenes said: 'It is the fate of princes to be ill spoken of for their good
deeds.'
Consider the course of the stars as if you were driving through the sky and kept
them company. Such contemplations as these scour off the rust contracted by
conversing here below.
Rational creatures are designed for the advantage of each other. A sociable
temper is that for which human nature was principally intended.
It is a saying of Plato's that no one misses the truth by his own goodwill. The
same may be said of honesty, sobriety, good nature and the like. Remember this
for it will help to sweeten your temper.
Though the gods are immortal, and have had their patience tried through so many
ages, yet they even provide liberally for us. And are you tired with evil men
already, who are an unhappy mortal yourself?
VIII - OF THE TRIPLE RESPONSIBILITY
EVERY man has three relations to acquit himself in; his body, God, and his
neighbours.
Have you seen a hand or a foot cut off and removed from the body? Just such a
thing is the man who is discontented with destiny or cuts himself off by
selfishness from the interest of mankind. But here is the fortunate aspect of
the case - it lies in his power to set the limb on again. Consider the peculiar
bounty of God to man in this privilege: He has set him above the necessity of
breaking off from nature and providence at all; but supposing this misfortune to
have occurred, it is in man's power to rejoin the body, and grow together again.
Do not take your whole life into your head at a time, nor burden yourself with
the weight of the future. Neither what is past nor what is to come need afflict
you, for you have only to deal with the present; and this is strangely lessened
if you take it singly and by itself. Chide your fancy, therefore, if it grow
faint.
Throw me into what climate or state your please, for all that I will keep my
soul content. Is any misadventure big enough to ruffle my peace, or to make my
mind mean, craving and servile? What is there that can justify such disorders?
Be not heavy in business, nor disturbed in conversation, nor rambling in
thought. Do not burden yourself with too much employment. Do men curse you? This
cannot prevent you from keeping a wise, temperature and upright mind. If a man
standing by a lovely spring should rail at it, the water is none the worse for
his foul language; and if he throw in dirt it will soon disappear and the
fountain will be as wholesome as ever. How are you to keep your springs always
running, that they may never stagnate into a pool? You must preserve in in the
virtues of freedom, sincerity, moderation and good nature.
IX - OF MODERATION IN DEED AND WISH
DO not drudge like a galley-slave, nor do business in a laborious manner, as if
you wish to be pitied or wondered at.
As virtue and vice consist in action, and not in the impressions of the senses,
so it is not what they feel, but what they do, that makes mankind happy or
miserable.
This man prays that he may gain such a woman; but do you rather pray that you
may have no such inclination. Another invokes the gods to set him free from some
troublesome circumstance; but let it be your petition that your mind may not be
set upon such a wish. A third is devout in order to prevent the loss of his son;
but I would have you pray rather against the fear of losing him. Let this be the
rule for your devotions, and watch the event.
X - OF SINCERITY AND ITS REWARDS
O MY soul, are you ever to be rightly good, sincere and uniform, and made more
visible to yourself than the body that hangs about you? Are you ever likely to
relish good nature and general kindness as you ought? Will you ever be fully
satisfied, rise above wanting and wishing, and never desire to obtain your
pleasure out of anything foreign, either living or inanimate? Are you ever
likely to be so happily qualified as to converse with the gods and men in such a
manner as neither to complaint of them nor to be condemned by them?
Put it out of the power of all men to give you a bad name, and if anyone reports
you not to be an honest or a good man let your practice give him the lie. This
is quite feasible; for who can hinder you from being just and sincere?
There is no one so happy in his family and friends but that some of them, when
they see him going, will rejoice at a good riddance. Let him be a person of
never so much probity and prudence, yet someone will say at his grave:
Well, our man of order and gravity is gone; we shall be no more troubled with
his discipline.' This is the best treatment a good man must expect.
XI - OF CALMNESS UNDER ILL USAGE
WHAT a brave soul it is that is always ready to depart from the body and is
unconcerned as to whether she will be extinguished, scattered, or removed! But
she must be prepared upon reasonable grounds, and not out of mere obstinacy like
the Christians; her fortitude must have nothing of noise or of tragic
ostentation, but must be grave and seemly.
How fulsome and hollow does that man seem who cries: 'I'm resolved to deal
sincerely with you!' Hark you, friend, what need of all this flourish? Let your
actions speak. Your face ought to vouch for you. I would have virtue look out of
the eye no less apparently than love does. A man of integrity and good nature
can never be concealed, for his character is wrought into his countenance.
Gentleness and good humour are invincible, provided they are of the right stamp
and without hypocrisy. This is the way to disarm the most outrageous person - to
continue kind and unmoved under ill usage and to strike in at the right
opportunity with advice. But let all be done out of mere love and kindness.
XII - THE FORTITUDE THAT IS ROMAN
I HAVE often wondered how it is that everyone should love himself best and yet
value his neighbour's opinion of him more than his own. If any man should be
ordered to turn his inside outwards and publish every thought and fancy as fast
as they came into his head, he would not submit to so much as a day of this
discipline. Thus it is that we dread our neighbour's judgement more than our
own.
What a mighty privilege man is born to, since it is in his power not to do
anything but what God Almighty approves, and to be satisfied with all the
distributions of providence!
Reflect upon those who have made the most glorious figure or have met with the
greatest misfortunes. Where are they all now? They are vanished like a little
smoke; they are nothing but ashes, and a tale - or not even a tale. Recollect
likewise everything of this sort: what Fabius Catullinus did at his country
seat; Lucius Lupus, in his garden; Stertinius, at Baiae; Tiberius, at Capreae;
Rufus, at Velia: in short, the overweening importance attached to anything
whatsoever. The prize is insignificant and the game not worth the candle. It is
much more becoming to a philosopher to stand clear of affectation, to be honest
and moderate upon all occasions and to follow cheerfully wherever the gods lead
on, remembering that nothing is more scandalous than a man who is proud of his
humility.
Listen, friend! You have been a burgher of this great city. What matter though
you have lived in it fewer years or more? If you have kept the laws of the
corporation, the length or shortness of the time makes no difference. Where is
the hardship, then, if nature, that planted you here, orders your removal? You
cannot say you are sent off by an unjust tyrant. No! You quit the stage as
fairly as a player does who has his discharge from the master of the revels.
'But I have only gone through three acts, and not held out to the end of the
fifth!'
True; but in life three acts may complete the play. He is the only judge of
completeness who first ordered your entrance and now orders your exit; you are
accountable for neither the one nor the other. Retire, therefore, in serenity,
as He who dismisses you is serene.
MARCUS AELIUS AURELIUS ANTONINUS
121-180AD
Marcus Aurelius died, probably from the plague, in Vienna on March 17,
180
His remains are now in the Mausoleum of Hadrian in Rome