« M. Aur. Med. 7.65 | M. Aur. Med. 7.66 | M. Aur. Med. 7.67 | About This Work »
66How do we know if Telauges was not superior in character to Socrates? for it is not enough that Socrates died a more noble death, and disputed more skilfully with the sophists, and passed the night in the cold with more endurance, and that when he was bid to arrest Leon of Salamis, he considered it more noble to refuse, and that he walked in a swaggering way in the streets—though as to this one may have great doubts if it was true. But we ought to inquire, what kind of a soul it was that Socrates possessed, and if he was able to be content with being just towards men and pious towards the gods, neither idly vexed on account of men’s villany, nor yet making himself a slave to any man’s ignorance, nor receiving as strange anything that fell to his share out of the universal nor enduring it as intolerable, nor allowing his understanding to sympathize with the affects of the miserable flesh.
« M. Aur. Med. 7.65 | M. Aur. Med. 7.66 | M. Aur. Med. 7.67 | About This Work »