Letter 103.6

Marcus Cornelius FrontoMarcus Aurelius|c. 143 AD|Marcus Cornelius Fronto|From Rome (career hub)|To Rome (career hub)|AI-assisted

My lord, I shall act in this matter, and in everything else, according to what I understand you want. I beg and ask you never to keep silent about anything you wish me to do; advise me as fittingly as you are doing now. [The text is damaged.] I would rather take the points in the case one by one, so that we can use Cicero's method. But if we proceed in continuous speeches, even though I shall not step outside the case, I will still have to use a sharper look, a forceful voice, and weighty words. Here and there I will have to show anger with a gesture or a finger, and this man of yours ought to bear that calmly. Yet it is hard to obtain this from him, for he is said to burn with eagerness to plead. I do not blame even that, but I warn you: do not think the very things that belong to the case are being set out too aggressively. You yourself advise that good faith must come first; and if one plays at arms or wrestling, even those playful exercises cannot be carried through without exertion. [The ending is damaged.] I have praised your "countryman" more happily.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.

Latin / Greek Original

ad M. Caesarem 3.6 [39 Hout; 1.68 Haines]
Domino meo.
Ita faciam, domine, quom hoc tum omnia, quod ad . u . m aut te velle intellexero. Alia item omnia faciam, teque oro et quaeso, ne umquam, quod a me fieri volueris, reticeas, sed ut nunc aptissima suadeas. Ita enim . . . . neque umquam fac . . . . . . . . . adversus voluntatem tuam quicquam incipiam. malim etiam nuic . . . . pessiis in causa cuo . . . . . . . . . in causa sunt. Singillatim sunt, ut Ciceronis modum proferamus. Nam cum in tantulum vel consultum cogunt versum, cupio praesertim quom par . . . sed pugna mi . . . . . es hoc modo transigi possit. Quodsi agemus perpetuis orationibus, licet extra causam nihil progrediar, tamen et oculis acrioribus et voce vehementi et verbis gravibus utendum est. Malim autem jam . . . hic digito irato quod alii . . . . hominem tuum laesisse, sed difficile est, ut istud ab eo inpetrari possit: Dicitur enim cupidine agendi flagrare. Nec reprehendo tamen ne hoc quidem, sed vide, moneo, ne tibi ipsa illa, quae in causa sunt, infestius prolata videantur. Verum et ipse suadeas inprimis fidei parendum: Et si armis vel palaestrica ludas, ne has quidem ludicras exercitationes sine contentione confici posse. Fac arbitreris et inedia disertis vel . . . . . tui plus adeo supta. Et ratis . . . . s facundior lucta . . arna laudavi beatius Opicum tuum.

Revision history

  1. 2026-05-27v2.2.34-import

    Initial corpus import from modern fronto ad m caes book3 batch1 haines latin v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Correspondence_of_Marcus_Cornelius_Fronto/Volume_1/The_Correspondence#Ad_M._Caes._iii._6

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