Join us on a literary world trip!
Add this book to bookshelf
Grey
Write a new comment Default profile 50px
Grey
Subscribe to read the full book or read the first pages for free!
All characters reduced
Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius - cover

Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius

Emperor of Rome Marcus Aurelius

Translator George Long

Publisher: Good Press

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Summary

The Thoughts of Marcus Aurelius is an excellent example of ancient Rome's stoicism. The book pays tribute to all the people who influenced the personality of the Roman emperor and describes how he managed to take the best of their qualities to shape his temper and deduce life lessons.
Available since: 11/21/2019.
Print length: 209 pages.

Other books that might interest you

  • The Diary Of A Dead Officer - cover

    The Diary Of A Dead Officer

    Arthur Graeme West

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Published posthumously in 1919, this collection of diary entries presents a scathing picture of army life and is said to be one of the most vivid accounts of daily life in the trenches. It chronicles West's increasing disillusion with war and his move toward pacifist and atheist beliefs. The final part consists of his powerful war poems, including God, How I Hate You, You Young Cheerful Men, and Night Patrol. West was killed by a sniper in 1917. In view of some of his poems, one wonders if death was not unwelcome. Arthur Graeme West was a British writer and war poet. West was born in Eaton, Norfolk, educated at Highgate School, then Blundell's School and Balliol College, Oxford, and killed by a sniper in 1917.
    Show book
  • The Woman in White - cover

    The Woman in White

    Wilkie Collins

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A dark and humid night on a London highway… a ghostly woman asking directions… and the reader is away on a tale of deceit, murder, madness, stolen identities and scheming cads, elaborate plots and outrageous coincidences, in the company of some of the most extraordinary characters in fiction. Hailed as a classic the moment it was written in 1859, The Woman in White uses a dozen different narrators to tell the tale of a man’s determination to save the woman he loves, in the face of the worst intentions of the sly Sir Percival Glyde and the magnificent Count Fosco.
    Show book
  • The Man in the Iron Cage - From Lord Halifax's Ghost Book - cover

    The Man in the Iron Cage - From...

    Lord Halifax

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Charles Lindley Wood, 2nd Viscount Halifax, was a collector of ghost stories. He assembled an extensive compilation of firsthand accounts of encounters with ghosts from all around the British Isles and abroad. The Man in the Iron Cage was one of Lord Halifax's favorites. It tells the story, from several sources, of a haunted house in Lille, France, with a gruesome secret in the attic.
    Show book
  • The Prophet & The Wanderer - cover

    The Prophet & The Wanderer

    Kahlil Gibran

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Khalil Gibran (1883–1931) was Lebanese by birth but spent a major part of his life in America in the early part of the twentieth century. He wrote many collections of stories with a wise or whimsical tone, but none more popular than The Prophet, his first collection, or The Wanderer, his final anthology. They are read here with great sympathy and understanding by Robert Glenister.
    Show book
  • Five Short Stories by Sabine Baring-Gould - cover

    Five Short Stories by Sabine...

    Sabine Baring-Gould

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    Sabine Baring-Gould (1834-1924) was a British writer, clergyman and member of the landed gentry, having inherited an estate of 3,000 acres. While a young curate, he met and fell in love with a beautiful 16-year-old mill worker. He paid for her education and married her, and they subsequently had 15 children. Their relationship formed the inspiration for George Bernard Shaw's play Pygmalion, which was turned into the musical My Fair Lady. Baring-Gould's strangest and most enduring works are those which are based on fantastical medieval myths and folklore.  
    "A Dead Finger" is a strange vampire story about a parasitic dead human finger which feeds off living humans in an attempt to draw the life force out of them and thus regrow its body.  
    "The Red-Haired Girl" is a ghost story about an eerie and ominous servant girl who stalks the house, watching its inhabitants malevolently.  
    "The 9.30 Up Train" is a peculiar ghost story about a strange ghost which haunts both the road near the railway station and also a particular carriage of the train itself.  
    "The Leaden Finger" is the tale of a young woman persistently and cruelly haunted by the sinister ghost of a previous admirer who committed suicide when she refused his marriage proposal.  
    "Mustapha" is the strange story of a young Egyptian who takes a solemn vow to avoid alcohol, in order to win his beloved's hand in marriage. A British tourist finds it amusing to try to trick the locals into breaking their religious vows. When he fools Mustapha and gets him unwittingly to take a sip of brandy, Mustapha commits suicide. His ghost returns to exact a terrible revenge.
    Show book
  • Christmas Carols Collection - cover

    Christmas Carols Collection

    Anonymous

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A collection of traditional Christmas carols.
    O Holy NightThe Boar's Head CarolGod Rest Ye Merry GentlemenGood King WenceslasHere We Come A-WassailingJoy to the WorldI Heard the Bells on Christmas Day	HDona Nobis PacemThe First NoelThe Coventry CarolIt Came Upon the Midnight ClearAway in a Manger
    An Author's Republic audio production.
    Show book