Letter 100

Synesius of CyrenePylaemenes|c. 402 AD|synesius cyrene
diplomaticeducation booksfriendshipimperial politicsproperty economics

To Pylaemenes.

Here at last is that Anastasius [one of my dearest friends and an important courtier in Constantinople, tutor to the children of Emperor Arcadius] about whom I have spoken so often. If I were introducing you to him, I would praise you exactly as I am now praising him. You are both neighbors in my heart and have been for a long time. Let your meeting, then, be an act of recognition. Embrace each other, and see in it a way of doing me some good.

Leisure is the greatest good — a good that, like fertile soil, brings all noble things to the philosopher's soul. I will enjoy such leisure when I succeed in freeing myself from entanglement in Roman political life — which means being released from these accursed civic duties.

As far as the Emperor is concerned, I am free of them. But I would rightly blame myself if I profited from my own lobbying. So I will make my case indirectly. For my pen serves as ambassador once more, and no follower of Pythagoras — who defined a friend as "a second self" — will contradict me.

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

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