On Scipio's villa
86:3
Book Subtitle: Seneca's timeless letters of advice and wisdom.
Book Description: The second volume of Seneca's moral letters to Lucilius. Each letter contains Seneca's advice and wisdom won from a life of Roman politics.
3.
What can I do but admire this magnanimity, which led him to withdraw into voluntary exile and to relieve the state of its burden?
Matters had gone so far that either liberty must work harm to Scipio, or Scipio to liberty.
Either of these things was wrong in the sight of heaven.
So he gave way to the laws and withdrew to Liternum, thinking to make the state a debtor for his own exile no less than for the exile of Hannibal.
Book: Moral Letters Vol II
Subtitle: Seneca's timeless letters of advice and wisdom.
Author: Seneca
Chapter: On Scipio's villa
Location: Chapter 86, Section 3
Content:
3.
What can I do but admire this magnanimity, which led him to withdraw into voluntary exile and to relieve the state of its burden?
Matters had gone so far that either liberty must work harm to Scipio, or Scipio to liberty.
Either of these things was wrong in the sight of heaven.
So he gave way to the laws and withdrew to Liternum, thinking to make the state a debtor for his own exile no less than for the exile of Hannibal.