Moral letters to Lucilius (Epistulae morales ad Lucilium)

The Epistulae Morales ad Lucilium (Latin for "Moral Letters to Lucilius"), also known as the Moral Epistles and Letters from a Stoic, is a collection of 124 letters that Seneca the Younger wrote at the end of his life, during his retirement, after he had worked for the Emperor Nero for more than ten years. They are addressed to Lucilius, the then procurator of Sicily, who is known only through Seneca's writings. Regardless of how Seneca and Lucilius actually corresponded, it is clear that Seneca crafted the letters with a broad readership in mind.

The letters often begin with an observation on daily life, and then proceed to an issue or principle abstracted from that observation. The result is like a diary, or handbook of philosophical meditations. The letters focus on many traditional themes of Stoic philosophy such as the contempt of death, the stout-heartedness of the sage, and virtue as the supreme good.

By : Lucius Annaeus Seneca (4 BCE - 65), translated by Richard M. Gummere (1883 - 1969)

001 - Introduction



002 - On Saving Time



003 - On Discursiveness in Reading



004 - On True and False Friendship



005 - On the Terrors of Death



006 - On the Philosopher's Mean



007 - On Sharing Knowledge



008 - On Crowds



009 - On the Philosopher's Seclusion



010 - On Philosophy and Friendship



011 - On Living to Onself



012 - On the Blush of Modesty



013 - On Old Age



014 - On Groundless Fears



015 - On the Reasons for Withdrawing from the World



016 - On Brawn and Brains



017 - On Philosophy, the Guide of Life



018 - On Philosophy and Riches



019 - On Festivals and Fasting



020 - On Worldliness and Retirement



021 - On Practising What You Preach



022 - On the Renown which My Writings Will Bring You



023 - On the Futility of Half-way Measures



024 - On the True Joy which Comes from Philosophy



025 - On Despising Death



026 - On Reformation



027 - On Old Age and Death



028 - On the Good which Abides



029 - On Travel as a Cure for Discontent



030 - On the Critical Condition of Marcellinus



031 - On Conquering the Conqueror



032 - On Siren Songs



033 - On Progress



034 - On the Futility of Learning Maxims



035 - On a Promising Pupil



036 - On the Friendship of Kindred Minds



037 - On the Value of Retirement



038 - On Allegiance to Virtue



039 - On Quiet Conversation



040 - On Noble Aspirations



041 - On the Proper Style for a Philosopher's Discourse



042 - On the God within Us



043 - On Values



044 - On the Relativity of Fame



045 - Of Philosophy and Pedigrees



046 - On Sophistical Argumentation



047 - On a New Book by Lucilius



048 - On Master and Slave



049 - On Quibbling as Unworthy of the Philosopher



050 - On the Shortness of Life



051 - On Our Blindness and Its Cure



052 - On Baiae and Morals



053 - On Choosing Our Teachers



054 - On the Faults of the Spirit



055 - On Asthma and Death



056 - On Vatia's Villa



057 - On Quiet and Study



058 - On the Trials of Travel



059 - On Being



060 - On Pleasure and Joy



061 - On Harmful Prayers



062 - On Meeting Death Cheerfully



063 - On Good Company



064 - On Grief for Lost Friends



065 - On the Philosopher's Task



066 - On the First Cause



067 - On Various Aspects of Virtue



068 - On Ill-health and Endurance of Suffering



069 - On Wisdom and Retirement



070 - On Rest and Restlessness



071 - On the Proper Time to Slip the Cable



072 - On the Supreme Good



073 - On Business as the Enemy of Philosophy



074 - On Philosophers and Kings



075 - On Virtue as a Refuge from Worldly Distractions



076 - On the Diseases of the Soul



077 - On Learning Wisdom in Old Age



078 - On Taking One's Own Life



079 - On the Healing Power of the Mind



080 - On the Rewards of Scientific Discovery



081 - On Worldly Deceptions



082 - On Benefits



083 - On the Natural Fear of Death



084 - On Drunkenness



085 - On Gathering Ideas



086 - On Some Vain Syllogisms



087 - On Scipio's Villa



088 - Some Arguments in Favour of the Simple Life



089 - On Liberal and Vocational Studies



090 - On the Parts of Philosophy



091 - On the Part Played by Philosophy in the Progress of Man



092 - On the Lesson to be Drawn from the Burning of Lyons



093 - On the Happy Life



094 - On the Quality, as Contrasted with the Length, of Life



095 - On the Value of Advice



096 - On the Usefulness of Basic Principles



097 - On Facing Hardships



098 - On the Degeneracy of the Age



099 - On the Fickleness of Fortune



100 - On Consolation of the Bereaved



101 - On the Writings of Fabianus



102 - On the Futility of Planning Ahead



103 - On the Intimations of Our Immortality



104 - On the Dangers of Association with Our Fellow-Men



105 - On Care of Health and Peace of Mind



106 - On Facing the World with Confidence



107 - On the Corporeality of Virtue



108 - On Obedience to the Universal Will



109 - On the Approaches to Philosophy



110 - On the Fellowship of Wise Men



111 - On True and False Riches



112 - On the Vanity of Mental Gymnastics



113 - On Reforming Hardened Sinners



114 - On the Vitality of the Soul and Its Attributes



115 - On Style as a Mirror of Character



116 - On the Superficial Blessings



117 - On Self-Control



118 - On Real Ethics as Superior to Syllogistic Subtleties



119 - On the Vanity of Place-Seeking



120 - On Nature as Our Best Provider



121 - More About Virtue



122 - On Instinct in Animals



123 - On Darkness as a Veil for Wickedness



124 - On the Conflict between Pleasure and Virtue



125 - On the True Good as Attained by Reason


Among the personalities of the early Roman Empire there are few who offer to the readers of to-day such dramatic interest as does Lucius Annaeus Seneca, the author of the Epistles which are translated in this volume. Born in a province, educated at Rome, prominent at the bar, a distinguished exile, a trusted minister of State, and a doomed victim of a capricious emperor, Seneca is so linked with the age in which he lived that in reading his works we read those of a true representative of the most thrilling period of Roman history.

Seneca was born in the year 4 B.C., a time of great opportunity, at Corduba, in Spain, son of the talented rhetorician, Annaeus Seneca. We gather that the family moved to Rome during the boyhood of Lucius, that he was educated for the bar, and that he was soon attracted by the Stoic philosophy, the stern nurse of heroes during the first century of the Empire. That his social connexions were distinguished we infer from the prominence and refinement of his brother Gallio, – the Gallio of the New Testament, – from the fact that he himself was noticed and almost condemned to death by the Emperor Caligula soon after he began to speak in public, and especially because his aunt, whom he visited in Egypt, was the wife of the governor of that country.

Up to the year 41 he prospered. He makes mention of his children, of his mother who, like the mother of Goethe, seems to have imbued him with idealism and a certain amount of mysticism, and of many valued friends. But during that year, as a result of court intrigue, he was banished to the island of Corsica. The charge against him was a too great intimacy with Iulia Livilla, unfortunate sister of the late emperor, and the arch-foe of Messalina, whose husband, Claudius, had recalled the princess from exile. We may discount any crime on Seneca's part because even the gossip-laden Suetonius says: "The charge was vague and the accused was given no opportunity to defend himself."

The eight years of exile were productive of much literary work. The tragedies, which have had such influence on later drama, are the fruit of this period, besides certain essays on philosophic subjects, and a rather cringing letter to Polybius, a rich freedman at the court of Claudius. In 49, however, Fortune, whom Seneca as a Stoic so often ridicules, came to his rescue. Agrippina had him recalled and appointed tutor to her young son, later to become the Emperor Nero. Holding the usual offices of state, and growing in prominence, Seneca administered the affairs of the prince, in partnership with Burrus, the praetorian. Together they maintained the balance of power between throne and Senate until the death of Burrus in the year 62. After that time, a philosopher without the support of military power was unable to cope with the vices and whims of the monster on the throne.

The last two years of Seneca's life were spent in travelling about southern Italy, composing essays on natural history and relieving his burdened soul by correspondence with his friend Lucilius. In the year 65 came his suicide, anticipating an act of violence on the Emperor's part; in this deed of heroism he was nobly supported by his young wife Paulina. The best account of these dark days is given in Tacitus.

These letters are all addressed to Lucilius. From internal evidence we gather that the native country of this Lucilius was Campania, and his native city Pompeii or Naples. He was a Roman knight, having gained that position, as Seneca tells us, by sheer industry. Prominent in the civil service, he had filled many important positions and was, at the time when the Letters were written, procurator in Sicily. He seems to have had Epicurean tendencies, like so many men from this part of Italy; the author argues and tries to win him over to Stoicism, in the kindliest manner. Lucilius wrote books, was interested in philosophy and geography, knew intimately many persons in high places, and is thought by some to be the author of the extant poem Aetna.

When their friendship began we cannot say. The Naturales Quaestiones and the Letters are the work of Seneca's closing years. Both are addressed to Lucilius. The essay De Providentia, which was also dedicated to him, is of doubtful date, and may be fixed at any time between the beginning of the exile in Corsica and the period when the Letters were written.

In spite of the many problems which confront us, it may be safely said that the years 63-65 constitute the period of the Letters. We find possible allusions to the Campanian earthquake of 63, a reference to the conflagration at Lyons, which took place either in 64 or in 65, and various hints that the philosopher was travelling about Italy in order to forget politics.

The form of this work, as Bacon says, is a collection of essays rather than of letters. The recipient is often mentioned by name; but his identity is secondary to the main purpose. The language at the beginning of the seventy-fifth letter, for example, might lead one to suppose that they were dashed off in close succession: "You complain that you receive from me letters which are rather carelessly written;" but the ingenious juxtaposition of effective words, the balance in style and thought, and the continual striving after point, indicate that the language of the diatribe had affected the informality of the epistle.

The structure of each letter is interesting. A concrete fact, such as the mention of an illness, a voyage by sea or land, an incident like the adventure in the Naples tunnel, a picnic party, or an assemblage of friends who discuss questions from Plato, or Aristotle, or Epicurus, – these are the elements which serve to justify the reflections which follow. After such an introduction, the writer takes up his theme; he deals with abstract subjects, such as the contempt of death, the stout-heartedness of the sage, or the quality of the Supreme Good. We shall not mention the sources of all these topics in footnotes, but shall aim only to explain that which is obscure in meaning or unusual in its import. Plato's Theory of Ideas, Aristotle's Categories, Theophrastus on Friendship, Epicurus on Pleasure, and all the countless doctrinal shades of difference which we find in the Stoic leaders, are at least sketched in outline.

But we must give full credit to the philosopher's own originality. In these letters, it is impossible to ignore the advance from a somewhat stiff and Ciceronian point of view into the attractive and debatable land of what one may fairly call modern ideas. The style of the Epistles is bold, and so is the thought.

Considered en masse, the letters form a fruitful and helpful handbook, of the very widest scope and interest. The value of intelligent reading and the studies which make for culture is presented to Lucilius with frequency, notably in Nos. II. and LXXXVIII. Seneca agrees with the definition of higher studies as "those which have no reference to mere utility." The dignity of the orator's profession (XL. and CXIV.) is brought to the attention of a young self-made merchant who seems inclined towards platform display. The modern note is struck when the author protests against the swinish and debasing effects of slavery or gladiatorial combats (XLVII. and LXX.); preaches against the degeneracy of drunkenness (LXXXIII.); portrays the charms of plain living and love of nature (LVII., LXVII., LXXIX., LXXXVI., LXXXVII., XC., XCIV.); recommends retirement (XVIII., LI., LVI., LXXX., CXXII.); or manifests a Baconian interest in scientific inventions (LVII., LXXIX.). Most striking of all is the plea (XCIV.) for the equality of the sexes and for conjugal fidelity in the husband, to be interpreted no less strictly than honour on the part of the wife. The craze for athletics is also analyzed and rebuked (XV.).

The Epistles contain also, of course, the usual literary types which every Roman epistolographer would feel bound to introduce. There is the consolatio; there is the theme of friendship; there are second-hand lectures on philosophy taken from Plato and Aristotle and Theophrastus, as we have indicated above; and several characteristically Roman laudations of certain old men (including the author himself) who wrestle with physical infirmities. But the Stoic doctrine is interpreted better, from the Roman point of view, by no other Latin writer. The facts of Seneca's life prove the sincerity of his utterances, and blunt the edge of many of the sneers which we find in Dio Cassius, regarding the fabulous sums which he had out at interest and the costly tables purchased for the palace of a millionaire.

Finally, in no pagan author, save perhaps Vergil, is the beauty of holiness (XLI.) so sincerely presented from a Roman standpoint. Although his connexion with the early Church has been disproved, Seneca shows the modern, the Christian, spirit. Three of the ideals mentioned above, the hatred of combats in the arena, the humane treatment of slaves, and the sanctity of marriage, draw us towards Seneca as towards a teacher like Jeremy Taylor.

There is no pretence of originality in the Latin text; the translator has adopted, with very few deviations, that of O. Hense's second edition. This text he has found to be excellent, and he has also derived assistance from the notes accompanying the Selected Letters of W. C. Summers.

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