4.
What then is the advantage of retirement?
As if the real causes of our anxieties did not follow us across the seas!
What hiding-place is there, where the fear of death does not enter?
What peaceful haunts are there, so fortified and so far withdrawn that pain does not fill them with fear?
Wherever you hide yourself, human ills will make an uproar all around.
There are many external things which compass us about, to deceive us or to weigh upon us; there are many things within which, even amid solitude, fret and ferment.
Book: Moral Letters Vol II
Subtitle: Seneca's timeless letters of advice and wisdom.
Author: Seneca
Chapter: On the natural fear of death
Location: Chapter 82, Section 4
Content:
4.
What then is the advantage of retirement?
As if the real causes of our anxieties did not follow us across the seas!
What hiding-place is there, where the fear of death does not enter?
What peaceful haunts are there, so fortified and so far withdrawn that pain does not fill them with fear?
Wherever you hide yourself, human ills will make an uproar all around.
There are many external things which compass us about, to deceive us or to weigh upon us; there are many things within which, even amid solitude, fret and ferment.