Page:Marcus Aurelius (Haines 1916).djvu/229

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BOOK VII

and gone, must thou count the rest of thy days as so much to the good,[1] and live according to Nature.

57. Love only what befalls thee and is spun for thee by fate. For what can be more befitting for thee?

58. In every contingency keep before thine eyes those who, when these same things befell them, were straightway aggrieved, estranged,[2] rebellious. Where are they now? Nowhere! What then? Wouldst thou be like them? Why not leave those alien deflections to what deflects and is deflected by them, and devote thyself wholly to the question how to turn these contingencies to the best advantage? For then wilt thou make a noble use of them, and they shall be thy raw material. Only in thought and will take heed to be beautiful to thyself in all that thou doest. And remember, in rejecting the one and using the other, that the thing which matters is the aim of the action.

59. Look within. Within is the fountain of Good,[3] ready always to well forth if thou wilt alway delve.

60. The body too should be firmly set and suffer no distortion in movement or bearing. For what the mind effects in the face,[4] by keeping it composed and well-favoured, should be looked for similarly in the whole body. But all this must be secured without conscious effort.

61. The business of life is more akin to wrestling[5] than dancing, for it requires of us to stand ready and unshakable against every assault however unforeseen.

  1. cp. Sen. Ep. 12 ad fin. Quisquis dixit "Vixi," quotidie ad lucrum surgit.
  2. Or, taken by surprise. cp. viii. 15.
  3. St. John iv. 14.
  4. vii. 37. cp. vii. 24.
  5. St. Paul, Eph. vi. 12.
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