Some thoughts on copying Meditations by Marcus Aurelius.

Marcus Aurelius was Roman Emperor, from 161 until his death in 180AD, aged 58. He kept a book of his personal reflections and ideas, intended for his own encouragement and guidance. It was not meant for publication, but was to become Meditations, one of the greatest of all works of philosophy. Written in Greek, it was comprised of 12 books, or chapters. I recently completed a writing project, to copy out the text from an English translation, in pen and ink. I thought I would share a few thoughts on this exercise.

I. The Inspiration

One of the good things to come out of 2020, for me, was finding a post on Instagram by Kimberly (@allthehobbies) who was copying out the entire text of Meditations using fountain pens, writing in a print style like a typewriter font. She changes pens and inks every two pages, recording the combination used at the end of each spread, at the foot of the right hand page and would occasionally post pictures of these spreads on Instagram. The page that I first noticed was on 15 June 2020, when she had used a purple Opus 88 Picnic, with Kobe 57 Himeajisai/Hydrangea ink. She was using a journal of Tomoe River, 52gsm paper.

I was impressed at how neat and uniform her lettering was, as though it had been printed. But as well as that, the text itself jumped out at me: I read a few lines and found the content so direct and engaging that I wanted to read more. The thought that she was to copy out an entire book, seemed too daunting to contemplate. And yet gradually, I resolved to copy her idea and do the very same thing. I liked the thought that I could read some philosophy whilst at the same time, improve my penmanship, create some colourful spreads of writing and get some added use from my accumulated fountain pens and inks in the process. I love to write with a fountain pen and thought that this sounded an enjoyable and worthwhile challenge.

II. The Preparation.

Naturally, I already had plenty of different pens and inks to use. I had to track down a copy of Meditations and found it in our local Waterstones, at the Brent Cross shopping centre. I bought the Penguin Classics paperback edition, translated with notes by Martin Hammond and first published in 2006. For a notebook to write it in, I wanted something which would not run out before I reached the end. I decided on an A4 format. I found a nice hard cover A4 Notebook, Ruled, with 192 pages, and what looked like a pleasant paper surface for fountain pens. It had stitched binding and so could be opened flat. It was from “5 Star Office” and I bought it in a delightful shop, the Eton Stationers, in High Street, Eton, Windsor. (This is also a great place for fountain pen ink, mechanical pencils and all manner of stationery goodies).

My notebook on the bookstand with my copy of Marcus Aurelius’ work, “Meditations”.

One issue for me with A4 notebooks, is that as a lefty overwriter, I would turn the book about 60 degrees anticlockwise to write in it (“uphill”) and almost always dog-ear the left hand side whilst writing on the right hand page. However, the plan for this project was to write in a print style, (like Kimberly’s) which would require me to use my left-handed underwriting style, with elbow tucked in and with the notebook straight like a normal person.

I paginated the notebook and tried out the paper with a number of different pens and inks from my pen cups. I was encouraged that the paper surface was smooth but not unpleasantly coated and that it resisted bleedthrough for all the pens that I tried, with one exception, a Pilot V pen, single use fountain pen whose black ink seems to be specially formulated not to dry out for years but makes it very runny so that it soaks through paper. It had 32 rows per page with a sensible 8mm row height which I like.

One other essential purchase was a book stand. I found a good selection online and ordered a wooden one, which could be adjusted easily for the viewing angle and which could also be folded flat for storage. It had a fold down wooden ledge for the book to rest on and two strong metal flexible arms to hold the pages open. I wrote out the alphabet at the back of my notebook in both upper and lower case, to practice the shapes. I was all set.

III. The Execution.

Having gathered together all the ingredients, I was eager to get started on page 1. Deciding that there would be plenty of time to improve, I waded straight in. It was a novelty to write in a print style rather than cursive and to use a type-writer style font, which I loosely called “Times New Roman” perhaps because of the word association with Marcus’s job. It soon became apparent that this is not as easy as it sounds. First, I had not really practised enough to decide upon a consistent relative height of my letters. There is something called the x height, which is the height of the letter x and other lower case letters which do not have bits sticking up or down. (See how I have learned the terminology?) I always struggled with the lower case h, for example and was not sure where I stood with the letter t. Then there are the serifs. I usually tried to include these, but would sometimes add them at the end of a word, or do them all together at the end of a line (when I could get my arm ready for a series of cross-strokes) or even do a few lines together. Occasionally with some of the pens I used, I skipped the serifs on the basis that if they were not horizontal, they just made the writing look messy. Sometimes I would put a serif on one leg of an m, or an h, but not the other.

Zooming in on the Diplomat Esteem with Diamine Tyrian Purple.

Another difficulty that I discovered is that lefty-underwriting is not natural for me and I have a difficulty even in making a perpendicular line, say for a letter L or K. Instead, it would lean a little bit backwards or forwards, turning my page into something more like a ransom note, than a work of philosophy.

I learned that pace is important: go too fast and the writing becomes scrappy. But go too slow and it can look too laboured and shaky. Rather like learning to touch-type, the best course is to find a steady rate at which you can keep going, accurately and carefully but not too fast or slow. Write at a speed at which you can think ahead, not in fast bursts.

It soon becomes apparent that copying out a text in this way, is very different from reading a book. I would look at the line of text and hold the next group of words in my head, or try to, in order to write the next three or four words. It is slow going, because there is often a little delay in finding your place again in the book when you look back up at it.

Perhaps the worst danger was of tackling this when I was too sleepy. I do like to relax after work by sitting down with a notebook and a few fountain pens, but there is a risk of nodding off to sleep and slipping out of consciousness whilst still writing. This is not good if Marcus is expounding on a theme with long sentences, or lots of Greek or Roman names which are unfamiliar to me and sometimes sentences which go on for line after line.

A page of my A4 notebook could take me about an hour. I did not write against the clock but would like to finish a page or a two page spread in one sitting, as I looked forward to finishing it off with the name of the ink and the pen. I did not map out in advance, which pens and ink I would use but just flicked back a few pages to see which I had not used lately and would then choose something out of my pen cup.

I put up a few photos of my efforts on Instagram . I was encouraged by Kimberly who commented “It doesn’t take too long to see improvements, just don’t beat yourself up over every letter that doesn’t look like what you want it to. Celebrate the ones that do.” She remains modest over her excellent calligraphy (which is far neater than mine) and cites @itsrainingpens as one of her inspirations.

Like Kimberly, I really loved having this project to pick up from time to time. I did not come to it every day and would sometimes leave it a week or more, or at other times I would have several long sessions on consecutive days. You can make your own rules.

An example page from the Moonman S5 with Waterman Serenity Blue.

At times, I was pleasantly surprised at how a paragraph of text looked on my page. At other times, when the letter sizes were too erratic and sloping back and forth, I wondered at the point of it all. But there is always the thought that each new page, even each new word, is a chance to do better, literally to turn over a new leaf.

Gradually, I found myself advancing through the book. I did some calculations occasionally, cross-multiplying, to estimate on what page of my notebook I would reach the end (e.g. if page 86 of the book is page 103 of my notebook, then the end (page 122) of the book will be 146. Sure enough I was to finish half way down my page 145.

IV. The completion.

It was nice and strangely momentous to get to the last page. I had started in August 2020 and finished in February 2021, after 7 months. It is pleasing to sit back and leaf back through my notebook to see all the different pens and inks that I employed. I added up a total of 44 different inks and 46 different pens used overall.

It is nice to finish something that you have started. The project saw me through the autumn and winter months. Was it the best use of my time? I think it was a worthwhile exercise, in time that I would otherwise have spent resting, watching television, listening to music or writing and tinkering with my pens and inks for the simple joy of writing.

This is not to pay a dis-service to Marcus for taking me on an incredible journey through his thoughts and reasoning in such a special and unique book. It is amazing to think that this was written almost 2,000 years ago. How often do we get to hear the innermost thoughts of a man grappling with the big universal questions that have taxed philosophers for centuries? How often can we sit and listen to a Roman Emperor? To say he was a thinker is an understatement. It is an inspiring book to read and makes me want to explore and write down my own thoughts. Now that really would be a challenge.

Reaching the end, with the Pineider Avatar and a cartridge of unknown purple ink. “Go then in peace: the god who lets you go is at peace with you.”

17 thoughts on “Some thoughts on copying Meditations by Marcus Aurelius.

  1. That’s an amazing achievement, so much like the books prepared by monks in the dim and distant past. I was interested in your point that you would hold some words in your head, as this is exactly how we were trained to take dictation when I was learning shorthand. You were always listening to words a little way ahead of what you were actually writing and it’s a trick that becomes effortless unless you actually think of how bizarre it is.
    I hope you refer often to your handwritten copy of the Meditations, both for the pleasure of seeing the lovely pages and to read the marvellous thoughts of the great man himself.

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      1. An excellent exercise Rupert — and very much the sort of thing that aids cognitive function. I find that kind of quantity a bit daunting myself. I admire your focus and patience! I aim for one-page or two-page-long quotations or poetry. Much more achievable for my inferior attention span 🙂

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  2. What an entertaining and fascinating email. It reminds me of the historian of late antiquity, Peter Brown, who advised his Oxford history students to try to live a week like medieval monks, including getting up for Lauds at 5 am, then Prime at 6 am etc throughout the day until Vespers, and (I assume) writing in manuscript style copying out Biblical texts. Unfortunately I was not able to follow his courses as I was doing different parts of the syllabus. But from what I have read of the medieval scriptoria, your experience copying out the Meditations was not dissimilar- except that they would have to line the parchment, use quills and probably had a monk reading out the text being copied.
    I am quite tempted to follow your example, but probably trying to write in Carolingian uncials rather than more modern shape letters. I would probably not venture in trying out adding illustrations and elaborate first letters though…!

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    1. Thanks for reading Philip and for your kind comments. I can recommend such a project. It certainly beats writing the quick brown fox etc. I am not up to illuminated manuscripts but have had some fun with dropped capitals.

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  3. My goodness what a project, well done!
    Don’t know whether I would would have the staying power.
    You seem to have picked up or refreshed several skills on the way that will no doubt serve you well and of course there is the enjoyment of actually writing as you go and the enormous satisfaction of the achievement of the project and being able to look back and read what you have written!

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    1. Thanks Charles. Yes this was quite an undertaking, in hindsight! It was quite calming in a way,but it is hard to take in the content whilst you are copying and so I need to re-read the book now. I can see, looking back to the early pages of my notebook, that my underwriting did improve with practice but it is not the most comfortable.

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  4. I have copied the Psalms and I am now working on the New Testament. I must say I am not using the amazing printing that you and Kimberly have done, but I am improving my cursive (I hope). Writing out the scripture has become a calming, contemplative discipline and it causes me to slow down and think about the section I am copying. I’m sure you found this to be true also. I really enjoyed your post and pictures.

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  5. This project resonates with me on many levels, taking me back to my occasionally studious youth. I used to own the Modern Library Giant editions of books titled The Stoic and Epicurean Philosophers and The English Philosophers From Bacon to Mill. I thought all of those men wrote like angels by comparison with Hegel, who didn’t. Between now and when they nail down the coffin lid I just might pick up a pen and essay one of those texts, perhaps the work of a slave, Epictetus, by contrast with the arguably similar opinions of an emperor.

    After all that underwriting and formal type, you’ve earned a little overwriting and informality.

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    1. Thank you Jerome, for reading and for your kind words. I can recommend picking up a good book, to copy some text with a fountain pen as a calming and satisfying exercise. It certainly beats writing “The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog.” In hindsight I did make this rather hard for myself thinking I could emulate those with amazing typewriter font calligraphy that I had envied on instagram. If I were to tackle something like this again, I would stick to my usual slanting, overwriting hand. Also, as others have pointed out to me, the memory exercise of copying out groups of words, has benefits for cognitive function, which would be welcome!

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  6. There is little I can say other it’s outstanding. A stand-alone project.

    I was in the forth grade when I saw my first ball point in a Southern Cal store demo. I learned to write with a dip and write. The current fountain pen crusade weakened my resistance. I finally caved and bought one. Sorry to say, I still like my Box Round Stic best.

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    1. Thank you for visiting the blog and for your kind comments. As for the Round Stic, there is no shame in using these: whatever gets the job done. I am awash in beautiful pens yet I spent this afternoon writing work notes with a single use Pilot V Pen.

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  7. There is something about this style of writing that is talking to me and wow is all I can say. I have just came cross the idea of Stoicism and of Marcus Aurelius and pondering on where this has been all my life, it’s simply amazing I can hardly wait to get started using the tools I currently have. thank you, it was meant to be for sure and New Year will begin with practice and a lot of it..

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    1. Hi Rhonda. Thank you for visiting the blog. I can certainly recommend reading Marcus Aurelius’ Meditations. If you are planning to transcribe the whole text, this is quite an undertaking! Whether you wish to read the book first before you start copying, is up to you. I just went straight in, without much in the way of practising my penmanship for this style of handwriting, thinking I could practice as I went along. Good luck and enjoy the book!

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