Consolatio ad Apollonium

Plutarch

Plutarch. Plutarch's Morals, Vol. I. Goodwin, William W., editor; Morgan, Matthew, translator. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company; Cambridge: Press of John Wilson and Son, 1874.

He therefore that hath these impressed upon his mind as the precepts of the Pythian oracle, can easily conform himself to all the affairs of life, and bear them handsomely; considering his nature, so that he is neither lifted up to arrogance upon a prosperous event, nor when

an adverse happens, is dejected into complaint through pusillanimity and that fear of death which is so congenial to us; both which proceed from the ignorance of those things which fall out in human life by necessity and fatal decree. The Pythagoreans speak handsomely to this purpose—
  1. Against those evils thou shouldest not repine,
  2. Which are inflicted by the powers divine.
Thus the tragedian Aeschylus:—
  1. He store of wisdom and of virtue hath,
  2. Whom nothing from the Gods provokes to wrath.
Euripides thus:—
  1. He that is passive when the Fates command
  2. Is wise, and all the Gods doth understand.
In another place so:—
  1. He that can bear those things which men befall,
  2. Him wise and modest we may justly call.