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Moses Hadas

“The wise man â€� does not need to walk about timidly or cautiously: for he possesses such self-confidence that he does not hesitate to go to meet fortune nor will he ever yield his position to her: nor has he any reason to fear her, because he considers not only slaves, property, and positions of honor, but also his body, his eyes, his hands, â€� everything which can make life dearer, even his very self, as among uncertain things, and lives as if he had borrowed them for his own use and was prepared to return them without sadness whenever claimed. Nor does he appear worthless in his own eyes because he knows that he is not his own, but he will do everything as diligently and carefully as a conscientious and pious man is accustomed to guard that which is entrusted in his care. Yet whenever he is ordered to return them, he will not complain to fortune, but will say: “I thank you for this which I have had in my possession. I have indeed cared for your property, â€� even to my great disadvantage, â€� but, since you command it, I give it back to you and restore it thankfully and willingly…â€� If nature should demand of us that which she has previously entrusted to us, we will also say to her: “Take back a better mind than you gave: I seek no way of escape nor flee: I have voluntarily improved for you what you gave me without my knowledge; take it away.â€� What hardship is there in returning to the place whence one has come? That man lives badly who does not know how to die well.”

Moses Hadas, The Stoic Philosophy of Seneca: Essays and Letters
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The Stoic Philosophy of Seneca: Essays and Letters The Stoic Philosophy of Seneca: Essays and Letters by Seneca
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