Skip to content

Seneca · Moral Letters to Lucilius

Letter 95 — On the Usefulness of Basic Principles (§15)

A quote
Medicine once consisted of the knowledge of a few simples, to stop the flow of blood, or to heal wounds; then by degrees it reached its present stage of complicated variety. No wonder that in early days medicine had less to do! Men’s bodies were still sound and strong; their food was light and not spoiled by art and luxury, whereas when they began to seek dishes not for the sake of removing, but of rousing, the appetite, and devised countless sauces to whet their gluttony,—then what before was nourishment to a hungry man became a burden to the full stomach.
Seneca·Letter 95 — On the Usefulness of Basic Principles (§15)·trans. Gummere
Another quote →