
On the Shortness of Life
Seneca
This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice.
Seneca wrote On the Shortness of Life around 49 AD. He was at the time one of the richest men in Rome, personal tutor to the teenage Emperor Nero, and a practicing Stoic philosopher who preached...
Location:
United States
Description:
This audiobook is narrated by a digital voice. Seneca wrote On the Shortness of Life around 49 AD. He was at the time one of the richest men in Rome, personal tutor to the teenage Emperor Nero, and a practicing Stoic philosopher who preached simplicity while owning estates across the empire. The contradictions were not lost on his contemporaries. The essay is addressed to his friend Paulinus, who held the important post of overseeing Rome's grain supply, and its argument is deceptively simple: life is not short — we waste it. We hand our hours to pointless business, to other people's emergencies, to anxiety about things we cannot control. Seneca points out that Augustus, who ruled the known world, spent his reign longing for retirement; that Cicero, pinned between Pompey and Caesar, called his own life a kind of exile; that even the most powerful men in history died feeling they had not yet begun to live. The essay is twenty short chapters. The prose is two thousand years old and sounds like it. The condition it diagnoses could have been written last Tuesday. Duration - 1h 16m. Author - Seneca. Narrator - Digital Voice Arthur E. Published Date - Friday, 16 January 2026. Copyright - © 1889 Seneca ©.
Language:
English
Opening Credits
Duration:00:00:09
One
Duration:00:02:19
Two
Duration:00:04:28
Three
Duration:00:04:09
Four
Duration:00:03:42
Five
Duration:00:01:32
Six
Duration:00:02:52
Seven
Duration:00:06:40
Eight
Duration:00:03:24
Nine
Duration:00:03:10
Ten
Duration:00:04:19
Eleven
Duration:00:01:46
Twelve
Duration:00:06:51
Thirteen
Duration:00:06:26
Fourteen
Duration:00:03:48
Fifteen
Duration:00:03:02
Sixteen
Duration:00:02:44
Seventeen
Duration:00:04:37
Eighteen
Duration:00:04:06
Nineteen
Duration:00:02:09
Twenty
Duration:00:03:36
Ending Credits
Duration:00:00:14