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Moral Letters Vol II

Seneca

§ Section 7

Some arguments in favour of the simple life

87:7

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.

7.

I suppose you call a man rich just because his gold plate goes with him even on his travels, because he farms land in all the provinces, because he unrolls a large account-book, because he owns estates near the city so great that men would grudge his holding them in the waste lands of Apulia.

But after you have mentioned all these facts, he is poor.

And why?

He is in debt. “To what extent?” you ask.

For all that he has.

Or perchance you think it matters whether one has borrowed from another man or from Fortune.