When
you are calling out on the Rostra, have you forgotten, man, what these things
are?
“Yes,
but they are objects of great concern to these people!”
Will
you too then be made a fool for these things?
“I
was once a fortunate man, but I lost it, I know not how.”
But
being fortunate means that a man has assigned to himself a good
fortune, and a good fortune is good disposition of the soul, good emotions,
good actions.
—Marcus
Aurelius, Meditations, Book 5 (tr
Long)
I used to be quite impressed, and
often intimidated, by the confident rhetoric of important folks. They sounded
so wise, and seemed so much better than me. I was certain I could never reach
such a height of excellence.
Hard experience slowly taught me two
things about such people, and why I was so easily misled. First, they don’t
know as much as they’d like you to think. Second, their concern is with the
appearance of character, not with the content of character.
This was a burden for me at school,
and it remained a burden at work. It was something present in all aspects of
social life as well. I began to realize, however, that I would run into two
very different types of people in this world, those who were committed to the
task of living well, and those who were committed to giving others the impression
that they were living well.
The first sort of person doesn’t
much care about his image, and that makes him worthy of actual respect. The
second sort of person only wishes to be seen in a certain way, whether he is
actually worthy of it or not.
One is a characterized by humility
and integrity, the other by pride and deception. One will help you because it
is right, the other will manipulate you because it is convenient.
When I first read Plato, I saw that the
sophists have always been with us. They may be able to speak with great
eloquence, and put on fine airs, but it’s all style with no substance. Even as their
reasoning is fallacious, their words will tickle the passions. In many cases,
the sophists use their skill as a means to acquire great power and influence.
There are demagogues, both big and little, who are like pied pipers in the
political, religious, and professional realms.
The lure of fame is quite tempting,
and its acquisition is rather intoxicating. The remedy lies, as Marcus Aurelius
says, in rethinking what truly makes our lives worthy and fortunate.
If I employ sweet words and empty
promises to lead people by the nose, I am defining my worth by the approval and
praise I hope to receive. It is all an illusion, of course, and in one sense
the master has become a slave to his mob.
If, however, I am defining my worth
by how I build my own wisdom and virtue, I have made myself fortunate from
within, with no need to be approved and praised from without. I won’t need to
pander, to play games, or to appear like something I am not.
Written in 9/2006
IMAGE: Magnus Zeller, The Orator (1920)
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