Saturday, May 16, 2009

Marcus Aurelius

Was He Quite Ordinary? by Mary Beard, London Review of Books, July 23, 2009, review of 'Marcus Aurelius: Warrior, Philosopher, Emperor', by Frank McLynn

Notice how Marcus Aurelius insists, as such introspective moralists always do, upon small things done or undone; it is because he has not hate or love enough to make a moral revolution. He gets up early in the morning, just as our own aristocrats living the Simple Life get up early in the morning; because such altruism is much easier than stopping the games in the amphitheatre or giving the English people back their land. --G. K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy (1908), Ch. V

Besides him, history presents one or two sovereigns eminent for their goodness, such as Saint Louis or Alfred. But Marcus Aurelius has, for us moderns, this great superiority in interest over Saint Louis or Alfred, that he lived and acted in a state of society modern by its essential characteristics, in an epoch akin to our own, in a brilliant centre of civilisation. --Matthew Arnold, Marcus Aurelius, Essays: Literary and Critical (1906), p. 193, Internet Archive

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