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That One Should Disdain Hardships: The Teachings of a Roman Stoic That One Should Disdain Hardships: The Teachings of a Roman Stoic by Musonius Rufus
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“If one accomplishes some good though with toil, the toil passes, but the good remains; if one does something dishonourable with pleasure, the pleasure passes, but the dishonour remains.”
Musonius Rufus, That One Should Disdain Hardships: The Teachings of a Roman Stoic
“And yet would not anyone admit how much better it is, in place of exerting oneself to win someone else’s wife, to exert oneself to discipline one’s desires; in place of enduring hardships for the sake of money, to train oneself to want little; instead of giving oneself trouble about getting notoriety, to give oneself trouble how not to thirst for notoriety; instead of trying to find a way to injure an envied person, to inquire how not to envy anyone; and instead of slaving, as sycophants do, to win false friends, to undergo suffering in order to possess true friends?”
Musonius Rufus, That One Should Disdain Hardships: The Teachings of a Roman Stoic