22.
Again, there are two kinds of pleasures.
Disease checks the pleasures of the body, but does not do away with them.
Nay, if the truth is to be considered, it serves to excite them; for the thirstier a man is, the more he enjoys a drink; the hungrier he is, the more pleasure he takes in food.
Whatever falls to one’s lot after a period of abstinence is welcomed with greater zest.
The other kind, however, the pleasures of the mind, which are higher and less uncertain, no physician can refuse to the sick man.
Whoever seeks these and knows well what they are, scorns all the blandishments of the senses.
Book: Moral Letters Vol II
Subtitle: Seneca's timeless letters of advice and wisdom.
Author: Seneca
Chapter: On the healing power of the mind
Location: Chapter 78, Section 22
Content:
22.
Again, there are two kinds of pleasures.
Disease checks the pleasures of the body, but does not do away with them.
Nay, if the truth is to be considered, it serves to excite them; for the thirstier a man is, the more he enjoys a drink; the hungrier he is, the more pleasure he takes in food.
Whatever falls to one’s lot after a period of abstinence is welcomed with greater zest.
The other kind, however, the pleasures of the mind, which are higher and less uncertain, no physician can refuse to the sick man.
Whoever seeks these and knows well what they are, scorns all the blandishments of the senses.