The Project Gutenberg eBook of Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of Lucius Annaeus Seneca
Title: Index of the Project Gutenberg Works of Lucius Annaeus Seneca
Author: Lucius Annaeus Seneca
Editor: David Widger
Release date: March 6, 2019 [eBook #59025]
Most recently updated: July 7, 2019
Language: English
Credits: Produced by David Widger
INDEX OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG
WORKS OF
LUCIUS ANNAEUS
SENECA
Compiled by David Widger
CONTENTS
Click on the ## before many of the titles to view a
linked
table of contents for that volume.
Click on the title itself to open the original online file.
TABLES OF CONTENTS OF VOLUMES
L. ANNAEUS SENECA,
ON BENEFITS
By Seneca
Edited by Aubrey Stewart
CONTENTS
| PREFACE |
| DETAILED CONTENTS |
| L. A. SENECA, ON BENEFITS |
| BOOK I. |
| BOOK II. |
| BOOK III. |
| BOOK IV. |
| BOOK V. |
| BOOK VI. |
| BOOK VII. |
TWO TRAGEDIES OF SENECA
MEDEA AND THE DAUGHTERS OF TROY
By Seneca
Rendered Into English Verse By Ella Isabel Harris
CONTENTS
SENECA'S MORALS
OF A HAPPY LIFE, BENEFITS, ANGER AND CLEMENCY
Translated By Sir Roger L'estrange
TABLE OF CONTENTS
| TO THE READER. |
| OF SENECA'S WRITINGS. |
| SENECA'S LIFE AND DEATH. |
SENECA OF BENEFITS.
| CHAPTER I. | OF BENEFITS IN GENERAL. |
| CHAPTER II. | SEVERAL SORTS OF BENEFITS. |
| CHAPTER III. | A SON MAY OBLIGE HIS FATHER, AND A SERVANT HIS MASTER. |
| CHAPTER IV. | IT IS THE INTENTION, NOT THE MATTER, THAT MAKES THE BENEFIT. |
| CHAPTER V. | THERE MUST BE JUDGMENT IN A BENEFIT, AS WELL AS MATTER AND INTENTION; AND ESPECIALLY IN THE CHOICE OF THE PERSON. |
| CHAPTER VI. | THE MATTER OF OBLIGATIONS, WITH ITS CIRCUMSTANCES. |
| CHAPTER VII. | THE MANNER OF OBLIGING. |
| CHAPTER VIII. | THE DIFFERENCE AND VALUE OF BENEFITS. |
| CHAPTER IX. | AN HONEST MAN CANNOT BE OUTDONE IN COURTESY. |
| CHAPTER X. | THE QUESTION DISCUSSED, WHETHER OR NOT A MAN MAY GIVE OR RETURN A BENEFIT TO HIMSELF? |
| CHAPTER XI. | HOW FAR ONE MAN MAY BE OBLIGED FOR A BENEFIT DONE TO ANOTHER. |
| CHAPTER XII. | THE BENEFACTOR MUST HAVE NO BY-ENDS. |
| CHAPTER XIII. | THERE ARE MANY CASES WHEREIN A MAN MAY BE MINDED OF A BENEFIT, BUT IT IS VERY RARELY TO BE CHALLENGED, AND NEVER TO BE UPBRAIDED. |
| CHAPTER XIV. | HOW FAR TO OBLIGE OR REQUITE A WICKED MAN. |
| CHAPTER XV. | A GENERAL VIEW OF THE PARTS AND DUTIES OF THE BENEFACTOR. |
| CHAPTER_XVI. | HOW THE RECEIVER OUGHT TO BEHAVE HIMSELF. |
| CHAPTER_XVII. | OF GRATITUDE. |
| CHAPTER_XVIII. | GRATITUDE MISTAKEN. |
| CHAPTER XIX. | OF INGRATITUDE. |
| CHAPTER XX. | THERE CAN BE NO LAW AGAINST INGRATITUDE. |
SENECA OF A HAPPY LIFE.
| CHAPTER I. | OF A HAPPY LIFE, AND WHEREIN IT CONSISTS. |
| CHAPTER II. | HUMAN HAPPINESS IS FOUNDED UPON WISDOM AND VIRTUE; AND FIRST, OF WISDOM. |
| CHAPTER III. | THERE CAN BE NO HAPPINESS WITHOUT VIRTUE. |
| CHAPTER IV. | PHILOSOPHY IS THE GUIDE OF LIFE. |
| CHAPTER V. | THE FORCE OF PRECEPTS. |
| CHAPTER VI. | NO FELICITY LIKE PEACE OF CONSCIENCE. |
| CHAPTER VII. | A GOOD MAN CAN NEVER BE MISERABLE, NOR A WICKED MAN HAPPY. |
| CHAPTER VIII. | THE DUE CONTEMPLATION OF DIVINE PROVIDENCE IS THE CERTAIN CURE OF ALL MISFORTUNES. |
| CHAPTER IX. | OF LEVITY OF MIND, AND OTHER IMPEDIMENTS OF A HAPPY LIFE. |
| CHAPTER X. | HE THAT SETS UP HIS REST UPON CONTINGENCIES SHALL NEVER BE QUIET. |
| CHAPTER XI. | A SENSUAL LIFE IS A MISERABLE LIFE. |
| CHAPTER XII. | AVARICE AND AMBITION ARE INSATIABLE AND RESTLESS. |
| CHAPTER XIII. | HOPE AND FEAR ARE THE BANE OF HUMAN LIFE. |
| CHAPTER XIV. | IT IS ACCORDING TO THE TRUE OR FALSE ESTIMATE OF THINGS THAT WE ARE HAPPY OR MISERABLE. |
| CHAPTER XV. | THE BLESSINGS OF TEMPERANCE AND MODERATION. |
| CHAPTER XVI. | CONSTANCY OF MIND GIVES A MAN REPUTATION, AND MAKES HIM HAPPY IN DESPITE OF ALL MISFORTUNE. |
| CHAPTER XVII. | OUR HAPPINESS DEPENDS IN A GREAT MEASURE UPON THE CHOICE OF OUR COMPANY. |
| CHAPTER XVIII. | THE BLESSINGS OF FRIENDSHIP. |
| CHAPTER XIX. | HE THAT WOULD BE HAPPY MUST TAKE AN ACCOUNT OF HIS TIME. |
| CHAPTER XX. | HAPPY IS THE MAN THAT MAY CHOOSE HIS OWN BUSINESS. |
| CHAPTER XXI. | THE CONTEMPT OF DEATH MAKES ALL THE MISERIES OF LIFE EASY TO US. |
| CHAPTER XXII. | CONSOLATIONS AGAINST DEATH, FROM THE PROVIDENCE AND THE NECESSITY OF IT. |
| CHAPTER XXIII. | AGAINST IMMODERATE SORROW FOR THE DEATH OF FRIENDS. |
| CHAPTER XXIV. | CONSOLATION AGAINST BANISHMENT AND BODILY PAIN. |
| CHAPTER XXV. | POVERTY TO A WISE MAN IS RATHER A BLESSING THAN A MISFORTUNE. |
SENECA OF ANGER.
| CHAPTER I. | ANGER DESCRIBED, IT IS AGAINST NATURE, AND ONLY TO BE FOUND IN MAN. |
| CHAPTER II. | THE RISE OF ANGER. |
| CHAPTER III. | ANGER MAY BE SUPPRESSED. |
| CHAPTER IV. | IT IS A SHORT MADNESS, AND A DEFORMED VICE. |
| CHAPTER V. | ANGER IS NEITHER WARRANTABLE NOR USEFUL. |
| CHAPTER VI. | ANGER IN GENERAL, WITH THE DANGER AND EFFECTS OF IT. |
| CHAPTER_VII. | THE ORDINARY GROUNDS AND OCCASIONS OF ANGER. |
| CHAPTER_VIII. | ADVICE IN THE CASES OF CONTUMELY AND REVENGE. |
| CHAPTER IX. | CAUTIONS AGAINST ANGER IN THE MATTER OF EDUCATION, CONVERSE, AND OTHER GENERAL RULES OF PREVENTING IT, BOTH IN OURSELVES AND OTHERS. |
| CHAPTER X. | AGAINST RASH JUDGMENT. |
| CHAPTER XI. | TAKE NOTHING ILL FROM ANOTHER MAN, UNTIL YOU HAVE MADE IT YOUR OWN CASE. |
| CHAPTER_XII. | OF CRUELTY. |
SENECA OF CLEMENCY.
THE TRAGEDIES OF SENECA
DOUBLE HERMES OF SENECA AND SOCRATES
Translated Into English Verse By Frank Justus Miller
Introduced By An Essay On The Influence Of The Tragedies Of Seneca Upon Early English Drama By John Matthews Manly
TABLE OF CONTENTS
| PAGE | ||
| I. | The Influence of the Tragedies of Seneca upon Early English Drama | 1 |
| II. | The Tragedies of Seneca Translated | |
| Oedipus | 11 | |
| Phoenissae | 51 | |
| Medea | 79 | |
| Hercules Furens | 115 | |
| Phaedra or Hippolytus | 165 | |
| Hercules Oetaeus | 213 | |
| Thyestes | 287 | |
| Troades | 333 | |
| Agamemnon | 379 | |
| Octavia, with a Review of the Roman Historical Drama | 415 | |
| III. | Comparative Analyses of Seneca's Tragedies and the Corresponding Greek Dramas | 453 |
| IV. | Mythological Index | 497 |