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Moral Letters Vol II

Seneca

§ Section 19

On liberal and vocational studies

88:19

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.

19.

For what “liberal” element is there in these ravenous takers of emetics, whose bodies are fed to fatness while their minds are thin and dull?

Or do we really believe that the training which they give is “liberal” for the young men of Rome, who used to be taught by our ancestors to stand straight and hurl a spear, to wield a pike, to guide a horse, and to handle weapons?

Our ancestors used to teach their children nothing that could be learned while lying down.

But neither the new system nor the old teaches or nourishes virtue.

For what good does it do us to guide a horse and control his speed with the curb, and then find that our own passions, utterly uncurbed, bolt with us?

Or to beat many opponents in wrestling or boxing, and then to find that we ourselves are beaten by anger?