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Glyn Hughes' Squashed Philosophers
The Condensed Edition of
Marcus Tullius Cicero's
On Friendship
and
On Old Age
... in 4,900 words
"Virtue is the foundation of friendship"
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INTRODUCTION to Marcus Tullius Cicero's On Friendship
and Old Age
Marcus Tullius Cicero was a poet, philosopher,
humorist, and one of the greatest forensic orators Rome
ever produced. True to his belief that res publica
("the public affair") was a citizen's highest duty,
he successfully defended a man prosecuted unjustly by a
crony of the bloodthirsty dictator Sulla. In 69 BC, he
brought to order the corrupt Sicilian governor Verres.
As consul he helped put down the Catilinarian
conspiracy, and was exiled for refusing to join the
First Triumvirate. Late in life he led the Senate
against the brutality of Antony, and was, not
surprisingly, rewarded by being murdered.
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THE VERY SQUASHED VERSION
Friendship cannot be except among good men
who live in honour, justice and liberality,
who follow nature as far as they can.
Friendship consists of a perfect conformity
of opinion upon all subjects. Friendship
transcends everything else; it throws a
brilliant gleam of hope over the future and
banishes despondency. Friendship is not of
self-advantage, which is recognised even by
the animals. Let this be the rule of
friendship- never to make disgraceful
requests, and never to grant them. Some say
1: we ought to feel towards our friend
exactly as we feel towards ourselves. That
would never do; for we do things for our
friends that we never do for ourselves. 2:
kindness to a friend should be in proportion
to his kindness to us. This is a miserable
theory; friendship is generous. 3: that we
should act upon our friend's estimate of
themselves. This is the worst principle of
the three. In the friendship of upright men,
there ought to be an unrestricted
communication. Scipio used to say that men
were more careful about their sheep and
goats than about their friends. Choose men
of constancy, solidity and firmness. If it
is necessary to break off a friendship, that
should be done gradually, avoiding
animosity. Friendship should be entered into
with the greatest care, avoiding adulation,
for comradeship has within it all that men
most desire.
Old age brings problems. But old age
qualifies a man for public affairs, and not
disqualifies him. It is said that old age
impairs the memory; but mental powers become
blunted chiefly when they are disused. Old
age impairs our strength. But it is enough
if we exert with spirit such strength as we
have, unlike old Milo of Croton who cried
when he watched the athletes. If a man be
temperate, the decay of his strength will
not be intolerable. Old age is said to be
without pleasures. If is from these dangers
that old age delivers us, and very grateful
we ought to be to old age. But an old man
need not be without his convivial pleasures.
I do not know any part of life that is
passed more agreeably than the learned
leisure of a virtuous old age. But there
remains a fourth reason why men are often
filled with anxiety at the approach of old
age. But death is as common to other periods
of life, and there is no young man who can
promise himself that he shall live until
sunset. Again, though the young may only
hope for long life, the old have already
possessed it, and if long life be an
advantage, the advantage is with the old. If
death is the end then it is nothing, if it
is a transition to eternity, then it is a
good. We die as nature intended, to join our
ancestors. Every event that is agreeable to
nature is a real good, and nothing is more
natural than for an old man to die. |
ABOUT
THIS SQUASHED VERSION
This condensed edition of 4,900 words is adapted
from the original 29,000 words (16%), largely based on
the earlier abridged version edited by Sir John
Hammerton.
On
Friendship
and
On Old Age
by Marcus
Tullius Cicero, c50BC
Squashed version edited by
Glyn
Hughes
© 2005
Concerning Friendship
FANNIUS: I agree with you Laelius; never was man better
known for justice or for glory than Scipio Africanus.
That is why everyone in Rome is looking to you; everyone
is asking me how the wise Laelius is bearing the loss of
his dead friend. For they call you wise, you know, in
the same sense as the oracle called Socrates wise,
because you believe that your happiness depends on
yourself alone and that virtue can fortify the soul
against every calamity. May we know, then, how you bear
your sorrow?
SCAEVOLA: He says truly; many have asked me the same
question. I tell them that you are composed and patient,
though deeply touched by the death of your dearest
friend, and one of the greatest of men.
LAELIUS: You have answered well. True it is that I
sorrow for a friend whose like I shall never see again;
but it is also true that I need no consolations, since I
believe that no evil has befallen
SCIPIO. Whatever misfortune there is, is my misfortune,
and any immoderate distress would show self-love, not
love for him. What a man he was! Well, he is in heaven;
and I sometimes hope that the friendship of Scipio and
Laelius may live in human memory.
FANNIUS: Yes- your friendship; what do you believe about
friendship?
LAELIUS: Who am I, to speak on such a subject all on a
sudden? You should go to those Greek professionals, who
can spin you a discourse on anything at a moment's
notice. For my part, I can only advise this- prize
friendship above all earthly things. We seem to be made
for friendship; it is our great stand-by whether in weal
or woe.
Yet I can say this too: friendship cannot be except
among the good. I don't mean a fantastical and
unattainable pitch of goodness such as the philosophers
prate about; I mean the genuine, commonplace goodness of
flesh and blood that actually exists. I mean such men as
live in honour, justice and liberality, and are
consistent, neither covetous nor licentious or
brazen-faced; such men are good enough for us, because
they follow nature as far as they can.
Friendship consists of a perfect conformity of opinion
upon all subjects, divine and human, together with a
feeling of kindness and attachment. And though some
prefer riches, health, power, honours, or even pleasure,
no greater boon than friendship, with the single
exception of wisdom, has been given by the gods to man.
It is quite true that our highest good depends on
virtue; but virtue inevitably begets and nourishes
friendship. What a part, for instance, friendship has
played in the lives of the good men we have known-the
Catos, the Galli, the Scipios and the like!
How manifold, again, are its benefits! What greater
delight is there than to have one with whom you may talk
as if with yourself? One who will joy in your good
fortune, and bear the heaviest end of your burdens!
Other things are good for particular purposes,
friendship for all; neither water nor fire has so many
uses. But in one respect friendship transcends
everything else; it throws a brilliant gleam of hope
over the future and banishes despondency. Whoever has a
true friend sees in him a reflection of himself; and
each is strong in the strength and rich in the wealth of
the other. If you consider that the principle of harmony
and benevolence is necessary to the very existence of
families and states, you will understand how high a
thing is friendship, in which that harmony and
benevolence reach their perfect flower.
There was a philosopher of Agrigentum who explained the
properties of matter and the movements of bodies in
terms of affection and repulsion: and however that may
be, everyone knows that these are the real forces in
human life. Who does not applaud the friendship that
shares in mortal dangers whether in real life or in the
play?
SCAEVOLA: You speak highly of friendship. What are its
principles and duties.
LAELIUS: Do we desire a friend because of our own
weakness and deficiency, in order that we may obtain
from him what we lack ourselves, repaying him by
reciprocal service? Or is all that only an incident of
friendship, and does the bond derive from a remoter and
more beautiful origin, in the heart of nature herself?
For my part, I take the latter view. Friendship is a
natural emotion, and not an arrangement of convenience.
Its character may be recognized even in the lower
animals, and much more plainly in the love of human
parents for their children, and, most of all, in our
affection for a congenial friend, whom we see in an
atmosphere of virtue and worth.
The other is not an ignoble theory, but it leaves us in
the difficulty that if it were true, the weakest,
meanest and poorest of humanity would be the most
inclined to friendship. But it is the strong, rich,
independent and self-reliant man, deeply founded in
wisdom and dignity, who makes great friendships. What
did Africanus need of me, or I of him? Advantages
followed, but they did not lead. But there are people
who will always be referring to the one principle of
self-advantage; they have no eyes for anything great and
god-like.
Let us leave such theorists alone; the plain fact is,
that whenever worth is seen, love for it is enkindled.
Associations founded upon interest presently dissolve,
because interest changes; but nature never changes, and
therefore true friendships are imperishable.
Scipio used to say that it was exceedingly difficult to
carry on a friendship to the end of life, because the
paths of interest so often diverge. There may be
competition for office, or a dishonourable request may
be refused, or some other accident may be fatal to the
bond. This refusal to join in a nefarious course of
action is often the end of a friendship, and it is worth
inquiring how far the claims of affection ought to
extend. Tiberius Gracchus, when he troubled the state,
was deserted by almost all his friends; one of them who
had assisted him told me that he had such high regard
for Gracchus that he could refuse him nothing. "But
what," said I, "if he had asked you to set fire to the
capitol?" "1 would have done it!" What an infamous
confession! No degree of friendship can Justify a crime;
and since virtue is the foundation of friendship, crime
must inevitably undermine it. Let this, then, be the
rule of friendship-never to make disgraceful requests,
and never to grant them when they are made.
Among the perverse, over-subtle ideas of certain Greek
philosophers is the maxim that we should be very cool in
the matter of friendship. They say that we have enough
to do with our own affairs, without taking on other
people's affairs too; and that our minds cannot be
serenely at leisure if we are liable to be tortured by
the sorrows of a friend. They advise also, that
friendships should be sought for the sake of protection,
and not for the sake of kindliness. Oh! noble
philosophy! They put out the sun in the heavens, and
offer us instead a freedom from care that is worse than
worthless. Virtue has not a heart of stone, but is
gentle and compassionate, rejoicing with the Joyful and
weeping with those who mourn. True virtue is never
unsocial, never haughty.
With regard to the limits of friendship, I have heard
three several maxims, but disapprove them all. First,
that we ought to feel towards our friend exactly as we
feel towards ourselves. That would never do; for we do
many things for our friends that we should never think
of doing for ourselves. We ask favours and reprehend
injuries for a friend, where we would not solicit for,
or defend, ourselves.
Secondly, that our kindness to a friend should be meted
out in precise equipoise to his kindness to us. This is
too miserable a theory; friendship is opulent and
generous.
The third is, that we should take our friend's own
estimate of himself, and act upon it. This is the worst
principle of the three; or if our friend is over-humble,
diffident or despondent, it is the very business of
friendship to cheer him and urge him on. But Scipio used
to condemn yet another principle that is worse still.
Someone- he thought it must have been a bad man- once
said that he ought to remember in friendship that some
day the friend might be an enemy. How, in that state of
mind, could one be a friend at all?
Sincerity, the Fundamental
A sound principle, I think, is this. In the friendship
of upright men, there ought to be an unrestricted
communication of every interest, every purpose, every
inclination. Then, in any matter of importance to the
life or reputation of your friend, you may deviate a
little from the strictest line of conduct so long as you
do not do anything that is actually infamous.
Then, with regard to the choice of friends, Scipio used
to say that men were more careful about their sheep and
goats than about their friends. Choose men of constancy,
solidity and firmness; and until their trustworthiness
has been tested, be moderate in your affection and
confidence. Seek first of all for sincerity. Your friend
should also have an open, genial and sociable temper,
and his sympathies should be the same as yours. He must
not be ready to believe accusations. Lastly, his talk
and manner should be debonair; we don't want austerities
and solemnities in friendship. I have heard it suggested
that we ought perhaps to prefer new friends to old, as
we prefer a young horse to an old one. Satiety should
have no place in friendship. Old wines are the best, and
so are the friends of many years. Do not despise the
acquaintance that promises to ripen into something
better; but do not sacrifice for it the deeply rooted
intimacy. Even inanimate things take hold of our hearts
by long custom; we love the mountains and forests of our
youth.
There is often a great disparity in respect of rank or
talent between intimate friends. Whenever that is so,
let the superior place himself on the level of the
inferior; let him share all his advantages with his
friend. The best way to reap the full harvest of genius,
or of merit, or of any other excellence, is to encourage
all one's kindred and associates to enjoy it too. But if
the superior ought to condescend to the inferior, so the
inferior ought to be free from envy. And let him not
fuss about such services as he has been able to render.
To pass from the noble friendship of the wise to more
commonplace intimacies, we cannot leave out of account
the necessity that sometimes arises of breaking off a
friendship. A man falls into scandalous courses, his
disgrace is reflected on his companions, and their
relation must come to an end. Well, the end had best
come gradually and gently, unless the offence is so
detestable that an abrupt and final cutting of the
acquaintance is absolutely inevitable.
Disengage, if possible, rather than cut. And let the
matter end with estrangement; let it not proceed to
active animosity and hostility. It is very unbecoming to
engage in public war with a man who has been known as
one's friend, On two separate occasions Scipio thought
it right to withdraw his confidence. In each case he
kept his dignity and self-command; he was grieved, but
never bitter.
Of course, the best way to guard against such
unfortunate occurrences is to take the greatest care in
forming friendships. All excellence is rare, and that
moral excellence which makes fit objects for friendship
is as rare as any. On the other hand, it would be
unreasonable and presumptuous in anyone to expect to
find a friend of a quality to which he himself can never
hope to attain, or to demand from his friend an
indulgence which he is not prepared himself to offer.
Friendship was given to us to be an incentive to virtue,
and not as an indulgence to vice or to mediocrity; in
order that. since a solitary virtue cannot scale the
peaks, it may do so with the loyal help of a comrade. A
comradeship of this kind includes within it all that men
most desire.
Think nobly of friendship, and conduct yourselves wisely
in it. For in one way or another it enters into the life
of every man. Even Timon of Athens, whose one impulse
was a brutal misanthropy, must needs seek a confidant
into whose mind he may instil his detestable venom.
I have heard, and I agree with it, that though a man
should contemplate from the heavens the universal beauty
of a creation, he would soon weary of it without a
companion for his admiration. Of course, there are rubs
in friendship- which a sensible man will learn to avoid,
or to ignore, or to bear them cheerfully. Admonitions
and reproofs must have their part in true amity, and it
is as difficult to utter them tactfully as it is to
receive them in good part.
Complaisance seems more propitious to friendship than
are those naked truths. But though truth may be painful,
complaisance is more likely in the long run to prove
disastrous. It is no kindness to allow a friend to rush
headlong to ruin. Let your remonstrances be free from
bitterness and from insult; let your compliance be
affable, but never servile.
As for adulation, there are no words bad enough for it.
Even the populace have only contempt for the politician
who flatters them. Despise the insinuations of the
sycophant, for what is more shameful than to be made a
fool of? I tell you, sirs, that it is virtue that lasts;
that begets real friendships and maintains them. Lay,
then, while you are young, the foundations of a virtuous
life.
Concerning
Old Age
SCIPIO: I have often admired your consummate wisdom, O
Cato. It is shown in many ways, but in none more
perfectly than in the singular ease and cheerfulness
with which you bear
the weight of years.
CATO: There is really nothing to wonder at in that.
Those who have no interior source of happiness are
afflicted by miseries at every stage of their life; but
nothing that is in the course of nature is troublesome
to the man who seeks his felicity within himself. It is
usual for men to complain, at this season of life, that
old age has stolen upon them before they had expected
it; but they would feel its burden as heavily if they
had hundreds of years in which to prepare it. As for the
wisdom of which you speak, if I have any, it is no more
than this- that I follow nature as the surest guide, and
resign myself, with implicit obedience to all her sacred
ordinances.
LAELIUS: Will you not then tell us how we ought to
prepare for our declining years? For Scipio and I must
grow old, too.
CATO: Willingly. It is certain that the true grievance,
when there is one, lies in the man, and not in the age.
Those whose desires are properly regulated, and who have
nothing morose or petulant in their temper and manners,
will find old age a very tolerable state indeed; but
unsubdued passions and a forward disposition will
embitter this, as they embitter every other stage of
life. Therefore cultivate, throughout your life, the
virtues; and they will yield an astonishing harvest for
your latest years, besides the pleasures of memory.
When I was a lad I conceived a strong affection for
Quintus Maximus, the veteran who recovered Tarentum. He
had a noble, courteous dignity which age never impaired.
You know what splendid service he did in politics and in
the field, but I can assure you he appeared even greater
in his private life. How rich was his conversation! How
profound his knowledge of history! How skilled he was in
the laws of augury! Well, it would be simply monstrous
to suppose that the old man was not happy. A quiet,
upright, cultivated life may also have a serene old age,
as was the case of Plato, and again of Isocrates, and of
Gorgias, who lived a hundred and seven years, and said,
"I have no complaint to bring against old age."
When I consider the various disadvantages which old age
is generally supposed to bring with it, I find that they
may all be reduced to four general charges. The first is
that it incapacitates a man for taking part in the
affairs of the world. The second, that it produces
bodily infirmities. Thirdly, it disqualifies him for the
enjoyment of sensual pleasures. And, lastly, it brings
him to the threshold of death. Let us examine these in
order.
Old age disqualifies us from taking an active part in
affairs. Certainly, in so far as the strength and
vivacity of youth are required; but yet there are public
services which can be rendered only in advanced life.
Was Quintus Maximus idle in old age? Is the pilot
useless in the ship because, while the crew are running
about and sweating at their tasks, the old man sits
quietly at the helm? Why is our supreme council called
the senate, or why is the highest magistracy of the
Lacedaemonians called the Elders, but because age
qualifies a man for public affairs, and not disqualifies
him? You will find many an instance in history of a
flourishing community well-nigh ruined by young and
impetuous politicians, and then restored by the more
sober administration of the aged.
It is often said that old age impairs the memory; and so
doubtless it does in those who have not exercised their
faculty. I have not found it so, and I never heard of
any aged person who forgot where he had concealed his
treasure. Mental powers become blunted chiefly when they
are disused. Sophocles wrote tragedies in extreme old
age, and I could give many similar instances. Among my
friends in the country there are several of great age
who are so keenly interested in farming that they never
let any important operation be carried out without being
themselves present to superintend it.
Examples might be given of men who have applied
themselves at an advanced period of life to an art or
science of which they had no previous knowledge. Solon
used to say that he learnt something new every day. Old
as I am, it is only lately that I took up the study of
Greek, and you will remember that Socrates learned to
play the lyre when he was past middle life.
The second complaint is that old age impairs our
strength, and this, it must be acknowledged, is true
enough. But for my part, I no more regret the vigour of
my youth than I regretted then that I had not the
strength of a bull or of an elephant. It is enough if we
exert with spirit, on every proper occasion, the degree
of strength which still remains to us.
It is said that Milo of Croton, watching athletes in the
public arena, burst into tears because his muscles were
wasted and impotent. The frivolous old man should have
deplored the weakness rather of his mind than of his
body, and that he had made his reputation by merely
animal feats and not by the nobler excellences of man.
It is true that oratorical power is enfeebled by age:
yet there is a certain melody of utterance which is not
impaired by years. There is a calm and composed delivery
that is exceedingly gracious, and I have often seen an
eloquent old man captivating an audience. But even when
he can no longer speak in public, the aged orator may
form young men of genius to a manly eloquence.
After all, however, weakness of body is more often the
result of dissipations than of long life. If a man be
temperate, the decay of his strength will be gentle and
not intolerable. Mine has remained sufficient for my
duties in the senate and in public assemblies, and for
the service of my friends. I am not as strong as you
young men; but neither are you as strong as Pontius the
athlete, yet you do not think him a more valuable man on
that account. Nature leads us almost insensibly through
the different seasons of human life.
Then, too, we must combat the infirmities of old age as
we resist the onset of a disease. We have to attend
somewhat to our health, take moderate exercise, and be
somewhat abstemious; we have to take care not to let our
minds fall into sloth, dullness and dotage. Believe me,
dotage is not a weakness incidental to old age, but is
the nemesis of frivolous days spent in idleness and
folly. Age is truly worthy of respect in the man who
guards himself from becoming the property of others,
vindicates his just rights and maintains his authority
to his dying day.
Just as I like to see a young man touched a little with
the gravity of age, I am pleased with any youthful
quality that I find in the old. That is why I am working
at the seventh book of my Origins, revising all
my old speeches, and writing a treatise on the augural,
pontifical and civil law. To practise my memory, I run
over, every evening, all that I have done, said, and
heard during the day. I still plead for my friends in
the courts, and make mature speeches in the senate. And
even if I could not do these things I would lie on my
couch at home and meditate on them. Thus the candle
burns down to the last flicker and is not prematurely
extinguished.
We come to the third disadvantage. Old age is without
pleasures. Oh! what an admirable advantage, that we
should at length be free from these temptations! I have
never forgotten the sayings of the wise Archytas of
Tarentum on this point. He said that no more deadly
pestilence had been inflicted on man than these physical
pleasures; that their insatiable appetite was the source
of political treachery and of civil catastrophes; and
that there was no crime to which sensual passions do not
lead. He said that while reason was the noblest property
of man, sensuality was reason's most fatal enemy. He
said that there was nothing so detestable as sensuality,
because in proportion as it increased it extinguished
the light of the soul. If is from these dangers that old
age delivers us, and very grateful we ought to be to old
age.
But an old man need not be without his convivial
pleasures. I have always been a member of clubs, and
have enjoyed their festivities rather because of the
conversation of my friends than for the pleasure of
banqueting. I like to have a few of my neighbours every
evening, when I am in the country, and we generally keep
up the conversation to a very late hour.
But old men are not, like the young, nervously sensitive
to pleasure. Although the spectator in the front row of
the stalls enters more keenly into the acting, yet
another, sitting away at the back, enjoys it too in his
way; and though youth has a closer view of pleasure, old
age, more detached from it, gets quite as much pleasure
as it desires.
I do not know any part of life that is passed more
agreeably than the learned leisure of a virtuous old
age. When I think of many learned and studious old men
who have carried on their literary and scientific
labours through calm and happy years to the very end of
life, I wonder that the gaiety of the theatre, the
luxury of feasts, or the caresses of a mistress, can be
compared for pleasure with these serene delights!
The occupations, of the country, too, are open even to
the oldest; they seem to me to be particularly suited to
the wise man, and delight me more than I can say. The
work of the vineyard, the woodlands, arable ground and
pastures, orchards, kitchen garden and flower garden,
the feeding of cattle and tending of bees, the
operations of grafting, are pleasure enough, for me.
There is not a more delightful scene than that of a
well-cultivated farm.
But remember, I am praising only that old age which has
been built on the foundations of a well-spent life. That
is no true old age which deserves not reverence; but
where that reverence exists, what bodily advantages can
be compared with the rewards which it brings? Those who
deserve and attain it seem to me to have consummated the
drama of life.
But there remains a fourth reason why men are often
filled with anxiety at the approach of old age. Death is
coming nearer and nearer.
Quite true; but the man is unhappy indeed who has not
learnt in all his many years that there is nothing to be
afraid of in death. If it means extinction, it is not
worth troubling about; if, on the other hand, it means a
transition to immortality, then it is only to be
desired.
Again, death is as common to other periods of life as it
is to old age, and there is no young man who can promise
himself that he shall live until sunset. Again, though
the young may only hope for long life, the old have
already possessed it, and if long life be an advantage,
the advantage is with the old.
But who are we, to speak of long life? A wise and good
man will be content with the allotted measure,
remembering that an actor may be equally approved though
his part runs not to the end of the play; it is enough
that he support the character assigned him with dignity.
A very short time is quite enough for the purposes of
honour and virtue. But as youth is the time of flower,
so old age is the harvest of the fruit, the autumnal
season which the wise will welcome and not lament.
Every event that is agreeable to nature is a real good,
and nothing is more natural than for an old man to die.
The fire goes out because the fuel is all burnt away.
The aged should reasonably be indifferent to the
continuance of their existence, and so attain a
fortitude unknown to earlier years. Death is a change
which we must undergo, perhaps at this very moment; and
we can only secure an undisturbed repose and serenity of
mind by heartily accepting it. Youth does not regret the
toys of infancy nor manhood the amusements of childhood.
It has its own appropriate interests, and these, too,
become in their turn languid and insipid. And when
relish of it has wholly gone, then this present life
goes, too.
The nearer death comes to me, the more clearly I seem to
discern its real nature. I believe that your great
fathers have not ceased to live, but that the state
which they now enjoy is the only one that can truly be
called life. The native seat of the soul is in heaven;
confined within this prison of a body she is doomed to a
severe penance. But I am persuaded that the gods have
thus widely disseminated immortal spirits, and clothed
them with human bodies, in order that there may be a
race of intelligent creatures to contemplate the host of
heaven, and to imitate in their conduct the same
beautiful order and harmony.
I cannot believe that our ancestors would have so
ardently endeavoured to deserve honourable remembrance
if they had not been persuaded that they had a real
interest in the verdict of future generations. For my
own part, I am transported with impatience to join the
society of my departed friends, and to be with other
mighty men of the past of whom I have read. To this
glorious assembly I am quickly advancing; and if some
divinity should offer me my life over again. I would
utterly reject the offer. This world is a place which
nature never designed for my permanent abode; and I look
upon my departure, not as being driven from my home, but
as leaving my inn.
The Six
Mistakes of Man
(Although
these often-repeated aphorisms do seem to sum-up
Cicero's opinions, we know no source for them.)
1 The delusion that personal gain is made by crushing
others.
2 The tendency to worry about things that cannot be
changed or corrected.
3 Insisting that a thing is impossible because we cannot
accomplish it.
4 Refusing to set aside trivial preferences.
5 Neglecting development and refinement of the mind, and
not acquiring the habit of reading and studying.
6 Attempting to compel others to believe and live as we
do.

Marcus Tullius Cicero
106 BC - 43 BC
Cicero was murdered by political rivals and his body
burned in the Senate House..

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