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Sunday, February 11, 2018

Seneca, On the Happy Life 52: Giving to Good Men



. . . The wise man will not allow a single ill-won penny to cross his threshold, yet he will not refuse or close his door against great riches, if they are the gift of fortune and the product of virtue.

What reason has he for grudging them good quarters? Let them come and be his guests. He will neither brag of them nor hide them away: the one is the part of a silly, the other of a cowardly and paltry spirit, which, as it were, muffles up a good thing in its lap.

Neither will he, as I said before, turn them out of his house, for what will he say? Will he say, "You are useless," or "I do not know how to use riches?" As he is capable of performing a journey upon his own feet, but yet would prefer to mount a carriage, just so he will be capable of being poor, yet will wish to be rich; he will own wealth, but will view it as an uncertain possession which will someday fly away from him. He will not allow it to be a burden either to himself or to any one else.

He will give it—why do you prick up your ears? Why do you open your pockets?—he will give it either to good men or to those whom it may make into good men.

He will give it after having taken the utmost pains to choose those who are fittest to receive it, as becomes one who bears in mind that he ought to give an account of what he spends as well as of what he receives.

He will give for good and commendable reasons, for a gift ill bestowed counts as a shameful loss. He will have an easily opened pocket, but not one with a hole in it, so that much may be taken out of it, yet nothing may fall out of it.

—Seneca the Younger, On the happy life, Chapter 23 (tr Stewart)

I imagine the Rome of Seneca’s time was quite similar to our own day and age, with people rushing about trying to gain as much money, status, and influence for themselves as they possibly could. Friends readily became nothing but tools for advancement, and profit held sway over justice. It would be easy to assume at first that Seneca is condoning such a life, simply because he is saying we may prefer to be rich, but his argument has always pointed in a very different direction, and he is as disturbed by greed and an attachment to wealth as much as any other Stoic.

Seneca’s discussion of money can be readily broadened to include any of the circumstances of Fortune, and is not just about how much we possess, but also about our relation to all of our external conditions. Vanity will encourage us to define ourselves by Fortune, but it is also cowardly to neglect Fortune. The key lies in treating Fortune rightly, never as an end, but always as an indifferent means, always expecting it to come and go, and ordering all of our efforts toward our only true end, wisdom and virtue alone.

My thinking on priorities will profoundly alter the way I receive things, and the way I give them away. Notice the humorous way the greedy man immediately thinks he is worthy of being given something, because he can conceive of no other purpose in the world.

Many people also think that the appearance of their own character depends on how much they give, and that they are seen to be doing it. But the quantities involved, and the esteem gained by giving, are never the point. The captain of industry is not better for giving millions of dollars than the minimum wage worker who puts a single dollar in the collection box. The only thing that could make them different is to whom they are giving, and why they are giving.

What do I hope to see, so to speak, as the return for my investment? Am I giving to increase my own position, or because it makes me feel satisfied with myself, or in expectation of a favor in return? If my answer is expressed in terms of other pieces of Fortune, this is not giving, but shuffling around those pieces on the board of the marketplace. I am only bartering and trading one circumstance for another.

But if my answer is expressed in genuinely human terms, in terms of how my gifts of Fortune can assist people to know the truth more fully and love the good more deeply, then I am on the right track. I should try to give of myself so that others can in turn be more fully themselves. The balance sheet of life is a moral one, not a financial one, and I should give to people who are already good, or who can be helped to become good.

Aristotle argued that every virtue, guided by wisdom, is a mean between the extremes of excess and deficiency. Generosity is by definition never selfish, and is also never blind or thoughtless. It rests between stinginess and wastefulness, and requires, as Seneca says, having an open pocket, but not a pocket with a hole. The good man cannot help but give, because his acts of virtue are all that he truly has, and he looks not to how much he spends, but how his spending helps others to be better. 

Written in 5/2004

Image: Thomas Gainsborough, Charity Relieves Distress (1784) 




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