I
April 13th
LESS IS MORE
“Don’t act grudgingly, selfishly, without due diligence, or to be a
contrarian. Don’t overdress your thought in fine language. Don’t
be a person of too many words and too many deeds.... Be
cheerful, not wanting outside help or the relief others might bring.
A person needs to stand on their own, not be propped up.”
—MARCUS AURELIUS, MEDITATIONS, 3.5
n most areas of life, the saying “Less is more” stands true. For instance,
the writers we admire tend to be masters of economy and brevity. What
they leave out is just as important—sometimes more important—than what
they leave in. There is a poem by Philip Levine titled “He Would Never Use
One Word Where None Would Do.” And from Hamlet, the best of all—the
retort from Queen Gertrude after a long, rhetorical speech from Polonius:
“More matter with less art,” she tells him. Get to the point!
Imagine the emperor of Rome, with his captive audience and unlimited
power, telling himself not to be a person of “too many words and too many
deeds.” Let that be a reminder the next time you feel self-indulgent or a
little full of yourself, the next time you feel like impressing people.