Letter 10070: A matter of city administration has come to my attention that I believe needs to be addressed promptly; I write to...

Quintus Aurelius SymmachusUnknown|c. 396 AD|Quintus Aurelius Symmachus
barbarian invasioneducation booksfriendshipillnessproperty economics
From: Quintus Aurelius Symmachus, senator and orator
To: [Unknown correspondent]
Date: ~396 AD
Context: Symmachus, Book X, letter 70; personal correspondence from his long career as a senior senator in the late Roman West.

A matter of city administration has come to my attention that I believe needs to be addressed promptly; I write to seek your advice before acting.

The formal part of this letter is straightforward; the personal part is what I actually wanted to say when I sat down to write. The formal part will reach you first.

I find myself, in this season, more conscious than usual of the ways in which we accommodate ourselves to circumstances that we would not have chosen. This is not complaint — or it is complaint in the mode of a man who has learned that complaint without remedy is simply bad style. It is observation. The Rome of our fathers, and certainly the Rome of their fathers, was organized in ways that permitted a different kind of public life than the one we navigate.

We navigate what we have. I intend to continue navigating it as well as my abilities allow.

Your friend and colleague,
Symmachus

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

Related Letters