This lecture by Jacob Grimm, translated for the first time into Spanish, shares with Cicero's classic text an optimistic and serenely joyful vision of old age. The two authors faced with the pain of a recent loss, Cicero that of his beloved daughter and Grimm that of his brother, are able to overcome to talk to us about the advantages of reaching an age when we can enjoy the pleasures of life in a calmer and less demanding way. The satisfaction of a full life, the ability to appreciate the day to day, the walks, the readings or the work in the garden, become at the hand of the great Roman philosopher and the German philologist a courageous and calm panegyric of that stage of life.
Translated from Latin: VICENTE CRISTÓBAL
Translated from German: ERNESTO CALABUIG