Letter 85, “On Some Vain Syllogisms,” is one of Seneca’s longest and most demanding letters — but it’s worth the effort. Lucilius has pushed him to defend the core Stoic claim that virtue alone is sufficient for the happy life, including a thorough engagement with rival schools (especially the Peripatetics, who argued for “moderate” emotions). […]
Letter 84: On Gathering Idea
Letter 84, “On Gathering Ideas,” contains one of Seneca’s most beloved metaphors: we should read like bees. Bees fly from flower to flower, gathering nectar, then bring it back to the hive and transform it into honey — something distinctly their own. So too, Seneca says, with reading: we should gather widely from many authors, […]
Letter 83: On Drunkenness
Letter 83, “On Drunkenness,” opens with one of Seneca’s most enduring pieces of advice: live as if always observed, think as if someone could read your inmost thoughts. From there he describes his own daily routine — the cold plunges, the modest meals, the morning sun — before turning to the letter’s main subject. Some […]
Letter 82: On the Natural Fear of Death
Letter 82, “On the Natural Fear of Death,” is Seneca at his most urgent and most quotable. Written near the end of his life — when his own death at Nero’s hand was a looming possibility — this letter confronts the deepest human fear head on. Along the way Seneca gives us the famous line […]
Letter 81: On Benefits
Letter 81, “On Benefits,” opens with a frustration we’ve all felt: you helped someone, and they failed to appreciate it. Seneca takes this small wound and uses it as a doorway into one of his most generous teachings — that giving is worth doing for its own sake, and that gratitude blesses the grateful person […]