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Seneca · Moral Letters to Lucilius

Letter 114 — On Style as a Mirror of Character (§24)

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To persist in my use of this simile—our soul is at one time a king, at another a tyrant. The king, in that he respects things honourable, watches over the welfare of the body which is entrusted to his charge, and gives that body no base, no ignoble commands. But an uncontrolled, passionate, and effeminate soul changes kingship into that most dread and detestable quality—tyranny; then it becomes a prey to the uncontrolled emotions, which dog its steps, elated at first, to be sure, like a populace idly sated with a largess which will ultimately be its undoing, and spoiling what it cannot consume.
Seneca·Letter 114 — On Style as a Mirror of Character (§24)·trans. Gummere
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