1.
To-day I have some free time, thanks not so much to myself as to the games, which have attracted all the bores to the boxing-match.
No one will interrupt me or disturb the train of my thoughts, which go ahead more boldly as the result of my very confidence.
My door has not been continually creaking on its hinges nor will my curtain be pulled aside; my thoughts may march safely on,—and that is all the more necessary for one who goes independently and follows out his own path.
Do I then follow no predecessors?
Yes, but I allow myself to discover something new, to alter, to reject.
I am not a slave to them, although I give them my approval.
Book: Moral Letters Vol II
Subtitle: Seneca's timeless letters of advice and wisdom.
Author: Seneca
Chapter: On worldly deceptions
Location: Chapter 80, Section 1
Content:
1.
To-day I have some free time, thanks not so much to myself as to the games, which have attracted all the bores to the boxing-match.
No one will interrupt me or disturb the train of my thoughts, which go ahead more boldly as the result of my very confidence.
My door has not been continually creaking on its hinges nor will my curtain be pulled aside; my thoughts may march safely on,—and that is all the more necessary for one who goes independently and follows out his own path.
Do I then follow no predecessors?
Yes, but I allow myself to discover something new, to alter, to reject.
I am not a slave to them, although I give them my approval.