Meditations
The Private Notebook of a Roman Emperor
-
- USD 9.99
-
- USD 9.99
Descripción editorial
The Meditations of Marcus Aurelius are the private writings of the Roman emperor (121–180 CE), composed in Greek by lamplight in army tents on the northern frontier of his empire and never intended for publication. The twelve books gather his daily exercises in Stoic discipline — reminders on patience, mortality, the limits of fame, and the work of a human being.
Their hold on later readers comes from their unguarded directness. Marcus addresses no audience but himself; he is pitiless about his own faults and quick to forgive everyone else's. Few books of philosophy preserve so completely the feel of a working spiritual practice — and few have been so continuously useful, generation after generation, to readers under stress.
This edition reproduces George Long's classic 1862 English translation — the version that established Stoicism in the modern English-speaking imagination and remains the most quoted rendering of the text.