Book
1 1 | flattery; and at the same time he was most~highly venerated
2 1 | as if he had abundance of~time, and without confusion,
3 1 | season, but even deferred the time; that I was~subjected to
4 1 | myself,~and who, at the same time, pleased me by his respect
5 1 | hope of my doing it~some time after, because they were
6 1 | that I did not waste my~time on writers of histories,
7 2 | efflux, and that a limit of time is fixed for thee, which
8 2 | distract thee? Give~thyself time to learn something new and
9 2 | bodies~themselves, but in time the remembrance of them;
10 2 | hundred, or an infinite time; and the second,~that the
11 2 | polity.~ Of human life the time is a point, and the substance
12 3 | for a longer or a shorter~time he shall have the soul inclosed
13 3 | lives only this present time,~which is an indivisible
14 3 | uncertain. Short then is the time which every man~lives, and
15 3 | so as to see at the same time~what kind of universe this
16 3 | and justice. At the same time however in things~indifferent
17 3 | man without at the same time~having a reference to things
18 4 | at the chaos of infinite time on~each side of the present,
19 4 | that within a very short time both thou and he will be
20 4 | who~have been buried from time so remote? For as here the
21 4 | after subsisting for some time are~transmuted and diffused,
22 4 | too late, which is in due~time for thee. Everything is
23 4 | also the~other epochs of time and of whole nations, and
24 4 | consequence of change.~ Time is like a river made up
25 4 | and all this in a short time. To conclude,~always observe
26 4 | through this little space of time conformably to~nature, and
27 4 | look to the immensity of~time behind thee, and to the
28 4 | behind thee, and to the time which is before thee, another~
29 5 | both of substance and of time, and of~motion and of things
30 5 | they vex him only for a time, and a short~time.~ Think
31 5 | for a time, and a short~time.~ Think of the universal
32 5 | portion; and of universal time, of which a short and indivisible~
33 5 | substance~and through all time by fixed periods (revolutions)
34 5 | another state? And until that time comes, what is~sufficient?
35 6 | and a mother at the same time, thou~wouldst be dutiful
36 6 | uninterrupted course of time is always renewing the~infinite
37 6 | who are living~at the same time and living with themselves;
38 6 | thyself about the~length of time in which thou shalt do this;
39 6 | in the same indivisible time take place~in each of us,
40 6 | exist in it at the same time.~ If any man should propose
41 6 | universe: all the present~time is a point in eternity.
42 6 | everything which will be for~time without end; for all things
43 6 | so be content with the time.~ Let us try to persuade
44 6 | tranquility, and at the same time employ the hindrance towards
45 6 | kind of acts? How soon will time cover all~things, and how
46 7 | very soon~overwhelmed in time.~ To the rational animal
47 7 | how many an Epictetus~has time already swallowed up? And
48 7 | subsists for a very short time. But it is no~hardship for
49 7 | hadst them not. At the~same time however take care that thou
50 7 | that~which lasts a long time is tolerable; and the mind
51 7 | and takes a view of all~time and of all substance, dost
52 7 | man~living such or such a time, at least one who is really
53 7 | how he may best live the~time that he has to live.~ Look
54 7 | thy life up to~the present time; and live according to nature
55 7 | because during so long a~time they must tolerate continually
56 8 | I repent of it? A little time and I am dead, and all is~
57 8 | universal; and in a little time thou~wilt be nobody and
58 8 | look at it, and~at the same time remembering that it is thy
59 8 | remembered~even for a short time, and others have become
60 8 | thou secure this present time to thyself: for those who~
61 8 | consider that the men of after time~will be exactly such as
62 8 | thee if these men of after~time utter this or that sound,
63 9 | thou now~waitest for the time when the child shall come
64 9 | womb,~so be ready for the time when thy soul shall fall
65 9 | experience, and ephemeral in~time, and worthless in the matter.
66 9 | is just as it was in~the time of those whom we have buried.~
67 9 | contemplate it; then~determine the time, the longest which a thing
68 9 | lived by others in~olden time, and the life of those who
69 9 | contemplating the eternity of time, and~observing the rapid
70 9 | thing, how short is the~time from birth to dissolution,
71 9 | dissolution, and the illimitable time before~birth as well as
72 9 | as the equally boundless time after dissolution.~ All
73 9 | form, and will be~such to time without end. What, then,
74 9 | any way. For at the same time that thou~dost remind thyself
75 10| pleasures? Nor yet desiring time wherein thou shalt~have
76 10| ridiculous~to affirm at the same time that the parts of the whole
77 10| change, and at the same time to be surprised or~vexed
78 10| belong to thee from the time of~generation. For all this
79 10| everything, that at the same~time the power of dealing with
80 10| tranquil and active at the same~time, and also cheerful and collected.~
81 10| contemplate the whole of time and the whole of substance,~
82 10| grain of~a fig, and as to time, the turning of a gimlet.~
83 10| elevated place. But a short time ago to how many they were
84 10| things; and after a little time consider in what a~condition
85 10| it is for its good at the time when nature~brings it.~ "
86 10| such as they now are, in time~past also were; and consider
87 10| thou reflectest at the same time that~what has once changed
88 10| the infinite~duration of time. But thou, in what a brief
89 10| in what a brief space of time is thy~existence? And why
90 10| pass through this short~time in an orderly way? What
91 10| would be eternal. A little time, and~thou shalt close thy
92 11| itself into the infinity of time, and embraces and~comprehends
93 11| that he has at the same time cut himself off~from the
94 11| will only be for a~short time, and then life will be at
95 11| moment, and after a short time we are all laid out dead.~
96 11| correctest his errors at the very time when~he is trying to do
97 12| this. If then, whatever the time may~be when thou shalt be
98 12| not because thou must some~time cease to live, but if thou
99 12| sense, and the things of time to come and of time that
100 12| things of time to come and of time that is past, and~wilt make
101 12| remains for thee up to the time of thy death, free from~
102 12| the~boundless abyss of time past and future, the feebleness
103 12| material, the purpose, and the time within which it must end.~
104 12| has ceased at its~proper time, suffers no evil because
105 12| if it cease at its proper time, suffers no~evil for this
106 12| this series at the proper time, has he been ill dealt with.
107 12| dealt with. But the~proper time and the limit nature fixes,
108 12| is from the seed to~the time of its receiving a soul,
109 12| great it is,~and at the same time also shouldst see at a glance
110 12| every man lives the present time only, and loses only this.~
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