Status Updates From Seneca: De Clementia
Seneca: De Clementia by
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Alan A
is 35% done
''What is the difference between the tyrant and the king—for their outward symbols of authority and their powers are the same—except it be that tyrants take delight in cruelty, whereas kings are only cruel for good reasons and because they cannot help it''
— Jan 28, 2026 11:04PM
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Alan A
is 5% done
"[...] for to pardon every one is as great cruelty as to pardon none; we must take a middle course; but as it is difficult to find the true mean, let us be careful, if we depart from it, to do so upon the side of humanity."
— Jan 27, 2026 05:17AM
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Scarlett Barnes
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No ahaha don’t become a dictator Nero ahaha…isn’t stoicism superrrr cool ahaha
— Jan 02, 2026 05:49AM
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Truls Ljungström
is on page 40 of 57
We are not angry with diseases, but apply remedies to them: but this also is a disease of the mind, and requires soothing medicine and a physician who is anything but angry with his patient.
— Oct 23, 2024 05:56AM
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Truls Ljungström
is on page 40 of 57
No creature is more self-willed, requires more careful management, or ought to be treated with greater indulgence than man. What, indeed, can be more foolish than that we should blush to show anger against dogs or beasts of burden, and yet wish one man to be most abominably ill-treated by another?
— Oct 23, 2024 05:56AM
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Truls Ljungström
is on page 20 of 57
and whose vices are shrouded in obscurity; rumour catches up your acts and sayings, and therefore no persons ought to be more careful of their reputation than those who are certain to have a great one, whatsoever one they may have deserved.
— Oct 23, 2024 05:52AM
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Truls Ljungström
is on page 20 of 57
You think it a serious matter to take away from kings the right of free speech which the humblest enjoy. "This," you say, "is to be a subject, not a king." What, do you not find that we have the command, you the subjection? Your position is quite different to that of those who lie hid in the crowd which they never leave, whose very virtues cannot be manifested without a long struggle,
— Oct 23, 2024 05:52AM
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Truls Ljungström
is on page 16 of 57
it is the part of wild beasts, and that, too, not of the most noble ones, to bite and worry the fallen. Elephants and lions pass by those whom they have struck down; inveteracy is the quality of ignoble animals. Fierce and implacable rage does not befit a king, because he does not preserve his superiority over the man to whose level he descends by indulging in rage.
— Oct 23, 2024 05:51AM
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Truls Ljungström
is on page 16 of 57
A great position requires a great mind, for unless the mind raises itself to and even above the level of its station, it will degrade its station and draw it down to the earth; now it is the property of a great mind to be calm and tranquil and to look down upon outrages and insults with contempt. It is a womanish thing to rage with passion;
— Oct 23, 2024 05:51AM
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Truls Ljungström
is on page 13 of 57
and a source of plunder if that directing mind were withdrawn
— Oct 23, 2024 05:40AM
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Truls Ljungström
is on page 13 of 57
Men therefore love their own safety, when they draw up vast legions in battle on behalf of one man, when they rush to the front, and expose their breasts to wounds, for fear that their leader's standards should be driven back. He is the bond which fastens the commonwealth together, he is the breath of life to all those thousands, who by themselves would become merely an encumbrance
— Oct 23, 2024 05:40AM
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![On Clemency [Annotated]](https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1602785183l/55681926._SX50_.jpg)








