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Cita·Roma Antigua·Late Republic

Cato the Elder on Old Age and Virtue

"Old age has its own authority." — So said Cato the Elder, facing a Senate full of younger men (from Cicero, De Senectute, section 17).

Cato the Elder on Old Age and Virtue

Joachim Patinir — "The Penitence of Saint Jerome" (ca. 1515), public domain

Cato claims dignity for the aged

In Cicero's dialogue De Senectute (On Old Age), Cato the Elder asserts: "Old age has its own authority." He urged his audience to see the elderly not as useless, but as bearers of knowledge, worthy of a hearing even in Rome’s most competitive arena—the Senate.

Wisdom beats youth—sometimes

For Cato, age wasn’t a handicap but a qualification. He argued that the years gave perspective and moral force that raw ambition lacks. Cicero, writing as civil war loomed, used Cato's words to remind his readers: Rome’s future might depend on whether it remembers to listen to its elders.

Cato argued that, despite the aches and indignities, old age offered unique advantages: experience, respect, and the authority to speak truth to power.

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