Letter 134

Synesius of CyrenePylaemenes|c. 406 AD|synesius cyrene
barbarian invasiongrief deathhumorproperty economics

To Pylaemenes.

I received your letter in which you again accuse Fortune of mistreating you. You are wrong, dearest friend — it is not fitting to blame Fortune, but rather to console yourself.

In your difficulties, you can always come to me. You will be in a brother's house. We are not rich, my good friend, but all we have is quite enough for Pylaemenes and for me. If only we lived together, perhaps we would even be wealthy. Other men with resources like mine live in great comfort, but I am a bad manager. Still, my patrimony has held out against absolute neglect and is perfectly capable of supporting a philosopher. Do not imagine that chance brings foresight with it.

Do exactly as I tell you — unless in the meantime you have found Fortune more favorable, or unless you plan to raise the prostrate Heraclea again.

I am not writing to my regular correspondents because of the difficulties of the times [a reference to the siege of Cyrene], but I wrote to all of them recently and gave Diogenes — my cousin — a whole packet of letters with your name on it. He surely went looking for you; if he found you, you should have received it by now.

There are people I particularly ask you to greet for me: the aged Proclus, Trypho who governed our province, and Simplicius — a most worthy man, excellent magistrate, and friend of mine. After delivering his letter, take the opportunity to make his acquaintance. It is a fine thing to spend time with a poet-soldier.

We used to catch ostriches back when peace allowed us the pleasure of hunting, but we have not been hunting for some time now.

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

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