Markou Antōninou tou autokratoros, tōn heis heauton, biblia 12. Marci Antonini imperatoris, de rebus suis, sive de eis quæ ad se pertinere censebat, libri XII. ... ac commentario perputuo explicati atque illustrati. Studio operâque Thomæ Gatakeri, ... Huic tertiæ editioni accessere annotationes selectiores A. Dacerii ...

(Eighteenth century -- reel 1012, no. 21.)

No cover

Markou Antōninou tou autokratoros, tōn heis heauton, biblia 12. Marci Antonini imperatoris, de rebus suis, sive de eis quæ ad se pertinere censebat, libri XII. ... ac commentario perputuo explicati atque illustrati. Studio operâque Thomæ Gatakeri, ... Huic tertiæ editioni accessere annotationes selectiores A. Dacerii ... (Ancient Greek language, 1707, apud Davidem Mortier)

Microform, 439 pages

Ancient Greek language

Published July 25, 1707 by apud Davidem Mortier.

View on OpenLibrary

2 stars (1 review)

was born on April 26, A.D. 121. His real name was M. Annius Verus, and he was sprung of a noble family which claimed descent from Numa, second King of Rome. Thus the most religious of emperors came of the blood of the most pious of early kings. His father, Annius Verus, had held high office in Rome, and his grandfather, of the same name, had been thrice Consul. Both his parents died young, but Marcus held them in loving remembrance.

47 editions

A Little Dense

2 stars

I'm well aware that books this old are going to be a little dense but I think the combination of this translation specifically and the medium of audiobooks doesn't combine well. It leaves you with a book that is too dense and continues at a pace that does not linger on words nor allow for any reflection of their meaning. I will make sure to return to Meditations again in the future but I may have to try another translation/version... I've heard the Penguin Classics one is rather good. That being said, for a free audiobook from Audible, this wasn't too bad at all and I'm always happy to receive a free read/listen.