Skip to content

Seneca · Moral Letters to Lucilius

Letter 115 — On the Superficial Blessings (§8)

A quote
Then it will be in our power to understand how contemptible are the things we admire—like children who regard every toy as a thing of value, who cherish necklaces bought at the price of a mere penny as more dear than their parents or than their brothers. And what, then, as Aristo says, is the difference between ourselves and these children, except that we elders go crazy over paintings and sculpture, and that our folly costs us dearer?
Seneca·Letter 115 — On the Superficial Blessings (§8)·trans. Gummere
Another quote →