. . . And let every man among you who
has seriously resolved either to be a friend himself or to have another for his
friend, cut out these opinions, hate them, drive them from his soul.
And thus, first of all, he will not
reproach himself, he will not be at variance with himself, will not change his
mind, he will not torture himself.
In the next place, to another also, who
is like himself, he will be altogether and completely a friend.
But he will bear with the man who is
unlike himself, he will be kind to him, gentle, ready to pardon on account of
his ignorance, on account of his being mistaken in things of the greatest
importance; but he will be harsh to no man, being well convinced of Plato's
doctrine that every mind is deprived of truth unwillingly.
If you cannot do this, yet you can do in all
other respects as friends do, drink together, and lodge together, and sail
together, and you may be born of the same parents, for snakes also are: but
neither will they be friends nor you, so long as you retain these bestial and
cursed opinions.
—Epictetus,
Discourses 2.22, tr Long
Those
bestial and cursed opinions are nothing else than the assumption that we
measure ourselves, and others, by the externals. As soon as I add my own
conditions and requirements to friendship, then I am no longer a friend.
I will love you, but only if you are kind to me. I will love you, but only if you make me laugh or are still attractive. I will love you, but only if it does not conflict with my career, or with what I want, or with what is useful to me.
I will love you, but only if you are kind to me. I will love you, but only if you make me laugh or are still attractive. I will love you, but only if it does not conflict with my career, or with what I want, or with what is useful to me.
The only
thing ’useful’ to any of us, of course, is really just the excellence of our
own character. No other person needs to be merely employed or discarded in
order to achieve this.
Perhaps
some of us may nod in agreement, but I find that few of us will follow through
in practice. It might now be quite easy for me to reject and cast aside all of
those who live and act differently. After all, their very values, which depend
upon circumstances and not upon the content, make it impossible for them to
know or practice true friendship.
And if I
were to do such a thing, I would be absolutely no better. Only an honest,
loving, and virtuous man can be a friend. But I must still show justice,
charity and understanding even to the man that cannot be a friend. If I were to
do otherwise, I am hardly practicing virtue myself.
One of
the most difficult things in life, I have found, is to show love to those who
will not love us in return. This is one of the greatest tests of character,
because as soon as I meet hate with hate, I have become the very opposite of
what I intend to be. I will have become the very thing that I condemn.
You have heard that it was said, “You
shall love your neighbor and hate your enemy.”
But I say to you, Love your enemies and
pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be sons of your Father who is
in heaven; for he makes his sun rise on the evil and on the good, and sends
rain on the just and on the unjust.
For if you love those who love you,
what reward have you? Do not even the tax collectors do the same?
And if you salute only your brethren,
what more are you doing than others? Do not even the Gentiles do the same? You,
therefore, must be perfect, as your heavenly Father is perfect.
Love and
friendship are never in the receiving, but in the giving. This conforms with
the Stoic ideal that a man is measured by what he does, and never by what is
done to him.
Image: Hermann Kern, "Good Friends" (1904)
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