But isn’t it more praiseworthy to help a lot of people than to live expensively? Isn’t spending money on people much more noble than spending it on wood and stones? Isn’t it much more worthwhile to have a lot of friends (as a result of doing good deeds cheerfully) than to have a big house? What benefits from having a big and beautiful house could match those that could be derived from using one’s possessions to help one’s city and its citizens?
Musonius Rufus

The Author of this Quote

Musonius Rufus

Musonius Rufus

Roman Stoic philosopher of the 1st century AD.

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