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meditations

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agricultural rhythms of the Mediterranean world, with its

flocks, herds, and vines, its seasons of sowing and

harvesting, its grapes drying slowly into raisins. Some of

these may be stock examples, but even a stock example can

be revealing. One can hardly read a page of Plato without

tripping over the helmsmen, doctors, shoemakers, and other

craftsmen who populated ancient Athens; such figures are

much rarer in Marcus. The image of society as a tree whose

branches are individual human beings expresses an important

Stoic principle, but the image is developed further than one

might expect and informed by what might be personal

observation: “You can see the difference between the branch

that’s been there since the beginning, remaining on the tree

and growing with it, and the one that’s been cut off and

grafted back.”

Affection for the natural world contrasts with a persistent

sense of disgust and contempt for human life and other human

beings—a sense that it is difficult to derive from (or even

reconcile with) Stoicism. As P. A. Brunt puts it, “Reason

told Marcus that the world was good beyond improvement,

and yet it constantly appeared to him evil beyond remedy.”

The courtiers who surround him are vain and obsequious,

while the people he deals with on a daily basis are

“meddling, ungrateful, arrogant, dishonest, jealous, and

surly” (2.1). One of the most frequently recurring points in

the Meditations is the reminder that human beings are social

animals, as if this was a point Marcus had a particularly hard

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