“ For just as old men, if they are wise, take pleasure in the society of young men of good parts, and as old age is rendered less dreary for those who are courted and liked by the youth, so also do young men find pleasure in the maxims of the old, by which they are drawn to the pursuit of excellence. ”
Marcus Tullius Cicero, On Friendship (44 BC). copy citation
Author | Marcus Tullius Cicero |
---|---|
Source | On Friendship |
Topic | youth society |
Date | 44 BC |
Language | English |
Reference | |
Note | Translated by E. S. Shuckburgh |
Weblink | http://www.gutenberg.org/files/2808/2808-h/2808-h.htm |
Context
“A still more questionable sentiment in the same Caecilius is:
No greater misery can of age be told Than this: be sure, the young dislike the old.
Delight in them is nearer the mark than dislike. For just as old men, if they are wise, take pleasure in the society of young men of good parts, and as old age is rendered less dreary for those who are courted and liked by the youth, so also do young men find pleasure in the maxims of the old, by which they are drawn to the pursuit of excellence. Nor do I perceive that you find my society less pleasant than I do yours. But this is enough to show you how, so far from being listless and sluggish, old age is even a busy time, always doing and attempting something, of course of the same nature as each man's taste had been in the previous part of his life.”
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