On Good Company
Seneca
Letter LXII.
We are deceived by those who would have us believe that a multitude of
affairs blocks their pursuit of liberal studies; they make a pretense of
their engagements, and multiply them, when their engagements are merely
with themselves. As for me, Lucilius, my time is free; it is indeed free,
and wherever I am, I am master of myself. For I do not surrender myself to
my affairs, but loan myself to them, and I do not hunt out excuses for
wasting my time. And wherever I am situated. I carry on my own
meditations and ponder in my mind some wholesome thought. When I give
myself to my friends, I do not withdraw from my own company, nor do I
linger with those who are associated with me through some special occasion
or some case which arises from my official position. But I spend my time
in the company of all the best; no matter in what lands they may have
lived, or in what age, I let my thoughts fly to them. Demetrius, for
instance, the best of men, I take about with me, and, leaving the wearers
of purple and fine linen, I talk with him, half-naked as he is, and hold
him in high esteem. Why should I not hold him in high esteem? I have found
that he lacks nothing. It is in the power of any man to despise all
things, but of no man to possess all things. The shortest cut to riches is
to despise riches. Our friend Demetrius, however, lives not merely as if
he has learned to despise all things, but as if he has handed them over
for others to possess. Farewell.
|