Nate Shurilla

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9Suppose that you hold wealth to be a good: poverty will then distress you, and, – which is most pitiable, – it will be an imaginary poverty. For you may be rich, and nevertheless, because your neighbour is richer, you suppose yourself to be poor exactly by the same amount in which you fall short of your neighbour.
Letters from a Stoic: An essential, best-loved classic (Collins Classics)
by Seneca
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