Marius the Epicurean — Volume 2

audiobook

Marius the Epicurean — Volume 2

by Walter Pater

EN·~5 hours·15 chapters

Chapters

15 total
1

NOTES BY THE E-TEXT EDITOR:

0:41
2

CHAPTER XV. STOICISM AT COURT

15:18
3

CHAPTER XVI. SECOND THOUGHTS

21:14
4

CHAPTER XVII. BEATA URBS

17:16
5

CHAPTER XVIII. “THE CEREMONY OF THE DART”

23:51
6

CHAPTER XIX. THE WILL AS VISION

22:08
7

CHAPTER XX. TWO CURIOUS HOUSES - I. GUESTS

23:24
8

CHAPTER XXI. TWO CURIOUS HOUSES - II. THE CHURCH IN CECILIA’S HOUSE

23:43
9

CHAPTER XXII. “THE MINOR PEACE OF THE CHURCH”

27:01
10

CHAPTER XXIII. DIVINE SERVICE.

18:06

Description

In the glittering halls of the Temple of Peace, the empire’s cultural heart beats with the rhythm of rhetoric and philosophy. Emperor Aurelius presides over a court where Stoic doctrine has been polished into a genteel art, and the celebrated orator Cornelius Fronto is summoned to speak on the nature of morals before an audience of blue‑stockings, empresses, and eager scholars. The scene is a vivid tableau of Roman elegance, where lofty ideas are treated as the newest fashion, and every word is recorded with the reverence of a treasured relic.

Amid the polished discourse, a young man named Marius watches, his conscience rattled by a recent, unsettling spectacle in the amphitheatre. The powerful blend of philosophy and performance forces him to confront the clash between public virtue and private doubt. As he wrestles with the lingering echo of Fronto’s eloquence, Marius begins a subtle, inner journey that will test the very morals he has been taught to admire.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (297K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2003-05-01

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Walter Pater

Walter Pater

1839–1894

Best known for shaping the ideals of aestheticism, this English essayist and critic wrote with unusual care about art, literature, and the pleasures of style. His work helped define the late Victorian idea of “art for art’s sake” and went on to influence writers including Oscar Wilde.

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