Book
1 1 | principles necessary for life; and he never showed~anger
2 1 | way to the~commodity of life, and of which fortune gives
3 1 | was greatly attached to life, nor~out of regard to personal
4 1 | nature, and what kind of a~life that is, so that, so far
5 1 | so long in such a kind of life; that I never touched~either
6 1 | spent the~last years of her life with me; that, whenever
7 2 | thou doest~every act of thy life as if it were the last,
8 2 | of, he is able to live a life which flows~in quiet, and
9 2 | honouring thyself. Every man's~life is sufficient. But thine
10 2 | have wearied~themselves in life by their activity, and yet
11 2 | thou mayest depart from life this very~moment, regulate
12 2 | how can it make a man's life worse? But neither through
13 2 | But~death certainly, and life, honour and dishonour, pain
14 2 | that no man loses any~other life than this which he now lives,
15 2 | city and polity.~ Of human life the time is a point, and
16 2 | a dream and vapour, and life is a warfare and a~stranger'
17 3 | consider not only that our life is daily wasting away~and
18 3 | man should now depart from life, and~whatever else of the
19 3 | too at last~departed from life. Heraclitus, after so many
20 3 | out. If~indeed to another life, there is no want of gods,
21 3 | waste the remainder of thy life in thoughts about others,~
22 3 | men they live an impure~life. Accordingly, he does not
23 3 | signal which summons him~from life, and ready to go, having
24 3 | If thou findest in human life anything better than justice,
25 3 | of this only all through life, that his thoughts~turn
26 3 | skinned over. Nor is his~life incomplete when fate overtakes
27 3 | that all the rest of his life is~either past or it is
28 3 | is presented to thee in~life, and always to look at things
29 3 | simple,~modest, and contented life, he is neither angry with
30 3 | which leads to the end of life, to~which a man ought to
31 4 | universe is transformation:~life is opinion.~ If our intellectual
32 4 | also does not make~his life worse, nor does it harm
33 4 | follow after.~ Try how the life of the good man suits thee,
34 4 | good man suits thee, the life of him who~is satisfied
35 4 | to thee. In a word, thy life~is short. Thou must turn
36 4 | things which are useful for~life. He is an abscess on the
37 4 | pass through the rest of life like one who has~intrusted
38 4 | kingly power. Well then, that life of these people no~longer
39 4 | all~is the same. Their life too is gone. In like manner
40 4 | have tenaciously stuck to life. What~more then have they
41 4 | passed. Do not then~consider life a thing of any value. For
42 5 | But the things which have life are~superior to those which
43 5 | to those which have not life, and of those which have
44 5 | and of those which have life~the superior are those which
45 5 | everything else, is this, and thy life is directed by this.~ That
46 5 | thee, then get away~out of life, yet so as if thou wert
47 5 | that~the history of thy life is now complete and thy
48 5 | which are much valued in life are empty and rotten and
49 5 | power.~ Thou canst pass thy life in an equable flow of happiness,
50 6 | it is one of the acts of life, this act by~which we die:
51 6 | ought we to act all~through life, and where there are things
52 6 | and fitted~for political life, regards nothing else except
53 6 | conformable~to reason and social life, and he co-operates to this
54 6 | of this kind is the very life of~every man, like the exhalation
55 6 | in all the other parts of life; let us overlook~many things
56 6 | are either~things without life, or things without reason,
57 6 | letter? just so~then in this life also remember that every
58 6 | first to give way in this life,~when thy body does not
59 6 | and help men. Short is life. There is~only one fruit
60 6 | one fruit of this terrene life, a pious disposition and
61 6 | so it is in the whole of life; for all things~above, below,
62 6 | perishable and ephemeral life of man, as Menippus and
63 6 | great deal, to~pass thy life in truth and justice, with
64 7 | standest erect. To recover thy life is in thy power. Look at
65 7 | consists the~recovery of thy life.~ The idle business of show,
66 7 | the former sands, so in life the events which go~before
67 7 | him to~think that human life is anything great? it is
68 7 | gods and us give joy.~ ~ Life must be reaped like the
69 7 | to compute the hazard of life or death,~and should not
70 7 | there~must be no love of life: but as to these matters
71 7 | the filth of the~terrene life.~ This is a fine saying
72 7 | have contemplated human life for forty years is the same
73 7 | and to have completed thy life up to~the present time;
74 7 | affectation.~ The art of life is more like the wrestler'
75 7 | necessary for living a happy life. And~because thou hast despaired
76 8 | have lived the whole of thy~life, or at least thy life from
77 8 | thy~life, or at least thy life from thy youth upwards,
78 8 | philosopher; and thy~plan of life also opposes it. If then
79 8 | shalt live the rest of thy life in such wise as~thy nature
80 8 | finding fault with the court life or~with thy own.~ Repentance
81 8 | and~ignominy, death and life, he has such and such opinions,
82 8 | disgusting- so is every part of life and everything.~ Lucilla
83 8 | is thy duty to order thy life well in every single act;
84 8 | thinking of the whole of thy life. Let not~thy thoughts at
85 8 | thy departure then from life contentedly, just~as he
86 8 | external effusion, nor in life be so busy as~to have no
87 9 | and pleasure, or death and life, or honour and dishonour,
88 9 | However to breathe out one's life when a man has had enough
89 9 | which the seasons of thy life bring, such also is dissolution.
90 9 | contrary way and attach us to life, to be permitted to live~
91 9 | which have not reason one life is distributed; but~among
92 9 | vision and all that have life.~ All things which participate
93 9 | the~consideration of thy life, thy life as a child, as
94 9 | consideration of thy life, thy life as a child, as a youth,
95 9 | thy thoughts now to thy life under thy~grandfather, then
96 9 | grandfather, then to thy life under thy mother, then to
97 9 | thy mother, then to thy life under~thy father; and as
98 9 | and change of thy~whole life a thing to be afraid of.~
99 9 | component part of social life. Whatever act of~thine then
100 9 | this tears asunder thy life, and does not allow it to
101 9 | And consider, too, the life lived by others in~olden
102 9 | others in~olden time, and the life of those who will live after
103 9 | live after thee, and the~life now lived among barbarous
104 9 | Enough of this wretched life and murmuring and apish
105 9 | something great, but my life went on well and~happily.
106 10| these things are done so, life must flow on~happily, just
107 10| mayest observe that the life of a citizen is~happy, who
108 10| and~wilt enter on another life. For to continue to be such
109 10| pieces and defiled in such a life,~is the character of a very
110 10| and one overfond of his life,~and like those half-devoured
111 10| even~depart at once from life, not in passion, but with
112 10| laudable thing at least in~thy life, to have gone out of it
113 10| which remains to thee of life. Live as on a~mountain.
114 10| rent asunder from social life? Is it~melted into and mixed
115 10| and motion, and~in fine life and strength and other things;
116 10| the things which happen in life?~Persevere then until thou
117 10| as to this material (our life) can be done or~said in
118 10| am going away from such a life, in which even my~associates
119 10| power of persuasion, this is life, this, if~one may so say,
120 11| end,~wherever the limit of life may be fixed. Not as in
121 11| this rule also to thy whole life.~ What a soul that is which
122 11| which happens.~ ~And~ ~ Life's harvest reap like the
123 11| not another condition of life~so well suited for philosophising
124 11| has continued to~have one life with it, is not like that
125 11| for a~short time, and then life will be at an end. Besides,
126 11| vexed or grieved, that man's life~is only a moment, and after
127 11| always the same object in life, cannot be one~and the same
128 11| the same all through his life. But what I have said is
129 11| Much more is this so in life.~ A slave thou art: free
130 12| little body, a~little breath (life), intelligence. Of these
131 12| envelops thee or in the breath (life), which is by nature~associated
132 12| only what is really thy life, that~is, the present- then
133 12| to pass that portion of life~which remains for thee up
134 12| consider the shortness of life, the~boundless abyss of
135 12| anything which happens in life.~ Either there is a fatal
136 12| all the~acts, which is our life, if it cease at its proper
137 12| Therefore the termination of life for every man is no evil,~
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