Seneca’s Last Letters to Lucilius

Found and translated by Rabbi Ben Scolnic

Edited by Altay Coskun

 

Lucius Annaeus Seneca (ca. 1–65 CE) was the most famous of the Roman Stoic philosophers. After his retirement from the court of the emperor Nero, whom he had first served as a tutor and then as his main political advisor, Seneca wrote, among other things, a long series of letters to his much younger friend Lucilius. In these, he adressed the most diverse matters in life – before gradually relating them to the purpose of a good, fulfilled life. 124 of these letters have hitherto been known (they have been published in the Loeb Classical Library vol. 75 and can be download for free), but Rabbi Ben’s recent travel to Rome brought to light a new batch of letters that seem to have been written in Seneca’s last year of life.

 

Medea stabbing one of her sons depicted on a red-figure vase.