Letter 81

Quintus Aurelius SymmachusUnknown|c. 399 AD|symmachus

Of all the ... literary men, you were the last whose approval of my speech I most eagerly desired. It's happened as I wished: I have the witness I wanted. Now I should cry out in the voice of the young man in the comedy [Terence]: "Who is more fortunate than I, more full of charm?"

Unless, of course, your affection for me forced your pen into kindness. It often happens that fondness overrides critical judgment, and we evaluate our friends' words and deeds with the same indulgence we privately extend to our own faults.

But I'd only say that if yours were an isolated opinion. In fact, everyone else who heard my speech agrees with you. Not that your judgment needs confirmation from others — but a verdict from which no one dissents is hard to suspect of bias. Still, I'll keep wondering whether it was your honesty or your love that wrote that letter. Either way, I'm content [Text breaks off in source.]

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

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