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Cita·Roma Antigua·Imperial Rome

Musonius Rufus on Poverty

“To be poor is not a hardship, but to be without endurance is.” Musonius Rufus, the Stoic bulldozer, lowers the bar for luxury living.

Musonius Rufus on Poverty

Unknown — "Cameo: Julio-Claudian Imperial Portrait" (30 BCE–54 CE), CC0

Musonius on riches — or lack thereof

In the fragments collected by Stobaeus (Florilegium 3.17.24), Musonius Rufus says: «Πενία οὐ χαλεπὸν, ἀλλὰ ἀκαρτερία» — “To be poor is not a hardship, but to be without endurance is.” Rome was obsessed with gold and status. Musonius tossed that out the window.

Poverty as spiritual training

Musonius thought that all the comfort in the world couldn’t save you if you had no guts. Endurance—steadfastness—was wealth. The man who could sleep on bare earth or eat barley bread was richer than any senator trembling over a lost coin.

He lived what he preached

Banished more than once for refusing to flatter tyrants, Musonius was famous for his discipline and blunt tongue. His students called him 'the Roman Socrates.' He thought every hardship was a free lesson in self-mastery — if you dared to take it.

Musonius didn’t care about poverty — he thought real wealth was measured by how much hardship you could face without flinching. His philosophy was an earthquake under the Roman obsession with money.

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