Meditations, 11.8

Marcus Aurelius  translated by George Long

« M. Aur. Med. 11.7 | M. Aur. Med. 11.8 | M. Aur. Med. 11.9 | About This Work »

8A branch cut off from the adjacent branch must of necessity be cut off from the whole tree also. So too a man when he is separated from another man has fallen off from the whole social community. Now as to a branch, another cuts it off, but a man by his own act separates himself from his neighbor when he hates him and turns away from him, and he does not know that he has at the same time cut himself off from the whole social system. Yet he has this privilege certainly from Zeus who framed society, for it is in our power to grow again to that which is near to us, and again to become a part which helps to make up the whole. However, if it often happens, this kind of separation, it makes it difficult for that which detaches itself to be brought to unity and to be restored to its former condition. Finally, the branch, which from the first grew together with the tree, and has continued to have one life with it, is not like that which after being cut off is then ingrafted, but it is something like what the gardeners mean when they say that it grows with the rest of the tree, but that it has not the same mind with it.

« M. Aur. Med. 11.7 | M. Aur. Med. 11.8 | M. Aur. Med. 11.9 | About This Work »