Meditations: Complete and Unabridged (Clydesdale Classics)

Meditations: Complete and Unabridged (Clydesdale Classics)

by Marcus Aurelius (Author), George Long (Translator), Marcus Aurelius (Author), George Long (Translator), Carolyn Gregoire (Foreword)

Synopsis

All twelve books by Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius - his personal guidelines to live and rule well.

  • Do every deed, speak every word, think every thought in the knowledge that you may end your days any moment.

  • We have body, soul, and intelligence. To the body belong the senses, to the soul the passions, to the intelligence principles.

  • Think not as your insulter judges or wishes you to judge: but see things as they truly are.

  • To pursue impossibilities is madness; and it is impossible that the wicked should not act in some such way as this.

  • Order not your life as though you had ten thousand years to live. Fate hangs over you. While you live, while yet you may, be good.

    Meditations is a collection of twelve books written by Roman Emperor Marcus Aurelius. This set of book was originally compiled in the form of private journals. Marcus Aurelius used these notes as personal guides to live by and to better himself as a ruler. He compiled these journals during his time as emperor, and while they were not intended for public consumption, there are valuable lessons to be gleaned from his wisdom. The entries include his views of stoicism--the Hellenistic philosophy devoid of destructive emotions that could tamper with logic--and its practical use in ruling and military tactics.

    Completely unabridged, with a new foreword written by Huffington Post writer Carolyn Gregoire, this publication of Meditations is an all-encompassing collection of Marcus Aurelius's works.

  • $10.88

    Quantity

    20+ in stock

    More Information

    Format: Paperback
    Pages: 304
    Publisher: Clydesdale Press
    Published: 18 Jan 2018

    ISBN 10: 1945186240
    ISBN 13: 9781945186240

    Media Reviews
    Their icy blasts are refreshing and restorative. They tell you the worst. And having heard the worst, you feel less bad.
    -Guardian
    Author Bio
    Marcus Aurelius was born in 121 AD. He was the Roman emperor between 161 AD and 180 AD. His Meditations are our closest link to Ancient Stoicism and its practices.

    Carolyn Gregoire is a senior writer at the Huffington Post. Her focus areas include human behavior, psychology, and neuroscience. Her work has been featured in the New Republic, Time magazine, Scientific American, among other publications. Additionally, she is the coauthor of the book Wired to Create. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.