Letter 500.4

Marcus Cornelius FrontoMarcus Aurelius|c. 156 AD|Marcus Cornelius Fronto|From Rome (career hub)|To Rome (career hub)|AI-assisted

To my Lord Caesar.

Niger Censorius has met his end. By his will he has left me five-twelfths of his estate [a quincunx, five of the twelve unciae into which a Roman inheritance was divided] — a will in every other respect honorable, but, as far as its wording is concerned, ill-considered, for in it he took counsel of his anger rather than of his own dignity. He went on, indeed, all too harshly against Gavius Maximus, a most distinguished man and one whom I am bound to hold in regard.

For this reason it seemed necessary that I should write to our Lord your Father, and to Gavius Maximus himself, letters of a truly most difficult kind, in which, on the one hand, I could not refrain from rebuking the act of my friend Niger, which I disapproved, and, on the other, I nonetheless wished to keep up, as was only fitting, the duty owed by a friend and an heir. All this I — as in everything else of mine that concerns me — by Hercules, made the attempt also to write to you a fuller letter on the same matter; but, upon turning it all over in my mind, it seemed better to me not to weary you nor to call you away from more pressing concerns.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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 Anton.Pium 4 [164 Hout; 1.260 Haines]
Domino meo Caesari.
1 Niger Censorius diem suum obiit. Quincuncem bonorum suorum nobis reliquit testamento cetera honesto, quod ad verba vero adtinet, inconsiderato, in quo irae magis quam decori suo consuluit. Inclementius enim progressus est in Gavium Maximum clarissimum et nobis observandum virum. 2 Ob eam rem necessarium visum scribere me domino nostro patri tuo et ipsi Gavio Maximo difficillimae quidem rationis epistulas, in quibus et factum Nigri mei, quod inprobabam, non reprehendere nequibam, et tamen amici atque heredis officium, ut par erat, retinere cupiebam. Haec ego te, ut mea omnia cetera, conatus mehercules ad te quoque de eadem re prolixiores litteras scribere; sed recordanti cuncta mihi melius visum non obtundere te neque a potioribus avocare.

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_Pium_4

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