Letter 104.9

Marcus Cornelius FrontoMarcus Aurelius|c. 145 AD|Marcus Cornelius Fronto|From Rome (career hub)|To Rome (career hub)|AI-assisted

To my Lord.

1. I have received your letter, most elegantly written, in which you say that, over the interval, a longing for letters from me has welled up in you. Socrates' view is therefore true, that pleasures are for the most part bound up with pains, when in prison he reckoned that the pain of the tight-pressing chain was offset by the pleasure of its being loosened. In just the same way, surely, in our own case, as much vexation as absence brings, so much benefit does the longing it provokes bring. For longing arises out of love. And so love has been increased by longing, which is by far the best thing there is in friendship.

2. Then, as to what you ask about my health: I had already written to you before that I was being tormented by a pain in my shoulder, and so violently indeed that I could not manage, by writing, to compose that very letter in which I was telling you of it, but had to make use, contrary to our custom, of [...]

[Four pages are missing.]

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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 4.9 [64 Hout; 1.186 Haines]
Domino meo.
1 Accepi litteras tuas elegantissime scriptas, quibus tu intervallo desiderium mearum obortum tibi esse ais. Est igitur vera Socrati opinio doloribus ferme voluptates conexas esse cum in carcere dolorem constricti vinculi voluptate resoluti conpensaret. Item profecto in nobis, quantum molesiae absentia, tantum commodi adfert desiderium inritatum. Nam desiderium ex amore est. Igitur amor cum desiderio auctus est, quod est in amicitia multo optimum. 2 Tum, quod quaeris de valetudine mea, jam prius scripseram tibi me umeri dolore vexatum ita vehementer quidem, ut illam ipsam epistulam, qua id significabam, scribendo dare operam nequirem, sed uterer contra morem nostrum <...>
<“--quattuor paginae desunt--”>

Revision history

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

    Initial corpus import from modern fronto workflow 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._iv._9

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