Page:Marcus Aurelius (Haines 1916).djvu/440

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INDEX OF MATTERS

  • Smyrna, earthquake, 373, 387
  • Social acts, see Fellowship
  • Soul, (ψυχή), one, xiii. 30; when given, xii. 24; a sphere, xi. 12; of animals, ix. 9, § 2 ; transference after death, v. 33; extinguished, vii. 32; viii. 5, 25; xi. 3; taken up into the primary fire, iv. 21; vi. 24; x. 7, § 2; scattered into the atoms, vii. 32; x. 7, § 2; xi. 3; its proper sphere, vi. 14; of God, v. 34 ; an exhalation from blood, v. 33; vi. 15; = ruling reason, her own master, v. 19, 20; existence of, after death, iv. 21; xi. 3; xii. 5; addressed, ii. 6; xi. 1; attributes of, xi. 1
  • Speaking, in public, v. 36; viii. 5, 30 ; truthful, iii. 12, 16, § 2 ; superfluous, in. 5; clear, viii. 51 ; freedom of speech, vi. 30
  • Spectacles, public, i. 16, § 7; in Sparta, xi. 24. See also p. 362
  • Sphere, viii. 41; xi. 12; xii. 3
  • Stars, vi. 43; xi. 27
  • Study, viii. 8
  • Substance, as a river, v. 23 (see also Heraclitus); one, xii. 30; the Universal, vi. 1; vii. 9, 19
  • Suicide (ἐξαγωγή— not used by Marcus), iii. 1; v. 29; viii. 47; ix. 2; x. 2, § 2, 8, § 2 (see note), 32. The Stoics permitted suicide on the grounds of patriotism or philanthropy, poverty, incurable illness, senile decay, or when the true life could not otherwise be maintained, but Marcus only admitted the last
  • Suidas (circa 900) quotes Marcus 29 times, and most probably refers to him without name on 30 other occasions. Half of the quotations are from the first two books, and three-quarters under the first five letters of the alphabet
  • Superstition, i. 6, 16, § 3; vi. 30
  • Suspense of judgment (ἀποχή), i. 16, § 9; xi. 11; cp. xi. 11
  • Tact, i. 10
  • Talkers, i. 7
  • Tension (τόνος), vi. 38
  • Things, indifferent, ii. 11; seed of other things, iv. 36; transitory, v. 10, § 1, etc.; repeat themselves, iv. 44, 45; vii. 6; truly regarded, vi. 33.

Thoughts, mould character, v. 16; vii. 3; open to all, xii. 4; of others, iii. 4, § 1; our own, iii 4, § 2

  • Time, lost for ever, ii. 4; abyss of, iv. 3, § 3; 50; ix. 32; xii. 7. See Present Time
  • Tombs (or urns) watched by mourners, viii. 37
  • Tradition, iv. 46
  • Tragedy (see Drama), i. 6, § 2; iii. 7, 8; v. 29; ix. 29; xi. 3, 6; xii. 36
  • Transformation (see Change), iv. 21; v. 13; vi. 15; ix. 19, 28
  • Trials good for man, x. 33, § 4
  • Truth, learn to hear the, i. 11 note; and error, vi. 21; "heroic" truth in every word, iii. 12; has "fled to Olympus," v. 33; is one, vii. 9; soul deprived of it involuntarily, vii. 63, etc.; identical with Nature, ix. 1, § 2; from the heart, xi. 19
  • Tutor (τροφεύς), i. 5, 17, § 4; v. 31
  • Tyrants, i. 11; iv. 31; vi. 34; xii 36, p. 357
  • Tzetzes (about 1150) quotes Marcus, Chil. vii. 804 = iv. 21; Chil., vii 803, viii. 223 = v. 33, vi. 15; Chil. vii. 803, viii. 224 = vi. 13, ix. 3
  • Unity, vi. 10; ix. 9, § 2
  • Universe, a state or city, ii. 16; iii. 11; iv. 3, § 2, 4, 29; xii. 36; all things from it and to it, iv. 14; = Nature. iv. 23, 29; a living being iv. 40; the Universal Nature, ii. 16; what benefits it, benefits all, x. 6, 33; harmony of, v. 8; vi. 11 ; bound up with every part, v. 8, § 3; mystery of, v. 10; one, vii. 9; what it is, viii. 52
  • Unkindness to others; ii. 16, viii. 34; thwarting one another, ii. 1
  • Utopia (Plato's), ix. 29; impossible, v. 17; ix. 42
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