< Page:Discourses of Epictetus volume 2 Oldfather 1928.djvu
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ARRIAN'S DISCOURSES

OF EPICTETUS

IN FOUR BOOKS


BOOK III

Chapters of the Third Book

I.Of personal adornment.
II.The fields of study in which the man who expects to make progress will have to go into training; and that we neglect what is most important.
III.What is the subject-matter with which the good man has to deal; and what should be the chief object of our training?
IV,To the man who took sides, in an undignified manner, while in a theatre.
V.To those who leave school because of illness.
VI.Some scattered sayings.
VII.A conversation with the Imperial Bailiff of the Free Cities, who was an Epicurean.
VIII.How ought we to exercise ourselves to deal with the impressions of our senses?
IX.To a certain rhetorician who was going to Rome for a law-suit.
X.How ought we to bear our illnesses?
XI.Some scattered sayings.
XII.Of training.
XIII.The meaning of a forlorn state, and the kind of person a forlorn man is.
XIV.Some scattered sayings.
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