Skip to content

Seneca · Moral Letters to Lucilius

Letter 67 — On Ill-health and Endurance of Suffering (§5)

A quote
Certain of our school, think that, of all such qualities, a stout endurance is not desirable,—though not to be deprecated either—because we ought to seek by prayer only the good which is unalloyed, peaceful, and beyond the reach of trouble. Personally, I do not agree with them. And why? First, because it is impossible for anything to be good without being also desirable. Because, again, if virtue is desirable, and if nothing that is good lacks virtue, then everything good is desirable. And, lastly, because a brave endurance even under torture is desirable.
Seneca·Letter 67 — On Ill-health and Endurance of Suffering (§5)·trans. Gummere
Another quote →