You already know what the right thing to do is. The hard part is doing it when it costs something.
Cicero spent his final years in forced retirement, grieving his daughter, watching the Republic he had served collapse around him. What he wrote during that time — on duty, friendship, integrity, and how to face the end of things — remains among the most direct and useful philosophy ever produced.
The Ancient Wisdom of Cicero brings that thought within reach.
What you'll find inside:
✔ Carefully selected passages from De Officiis, De Amicitia, De Senectute, and the Tusculanae Disputationes — where Cicero was at his most direct and most useful
✔ Each passage in three parts: what Cicero said, what he actually meant, and how it applies to the decisions you face today
✔ The original Latin alongside a clear, interpretive English rendering — precise and free of archaic language
✔ 11 chapters on the questions that matter: duty, integrity, friendship, courage, reputation, uncertainty, and how to age without losing what counts
Cicero was a complicated man — vain, politically ambitious, often inconsistent. What he left behind is the record of someone genuinely trying to work out how to act well in difficult circumstances. That turns out to be more useful than the record of a saint.
For anyone who wants clarity over comfort — and wisdom they can actually use.
Most people know what the right thing to do is. The problem is doing it when it's inconvenient, costly, or when no one will notice either way.
Cicero spent decades at the center of Roman power — and his final years stripped of everything he had built. What he wrote during that time wasn't consolation. It was clarity. On friendship that holds under pressure. On duty that doesn't bend to convenience. On how to face the end of things without pretending it isn't coming.
This book brings that clarity within reach — without archaic language, without academic distance, and without softening what he actually said.
Cicero didn't write for posterity. He wrote because he needed to think straight. That's still a good enough reason to read him.