Letter 401.15

Marcus Cornelius FrontoUnknown|c. 162 AD|Marcus Cornelius Fronto|From Rome (career hub)|AI-assisted

Fronto to Praecilius Pompeianus, greeting.

1. You shall hear the truth from me, my dear Pompeianus, just as the matter stands, and I would have you trust me when I tell you the truth: that speech On Behalf of the Bithynians I took in hand nearly a year ago and set about correcting. To you too, while you were then conducting your affairs at Rome, I made some promise about that speech; and indeed, if I remember rightly, when a conversation had arisen between us about the partitions of speeches [the rhetorical division of an oration into its constituent heads], I said and openly maintained that in that speech I had carefully enough divided up with arguments, and refuted, the conjectural issue which turned upon the charge of murder by commission.

2. Meanwhile a pain of the nerves more violent than usual came upon me, and lingered longer and more troublesomely than usual, and I cannot, while my limbs are racked with torment, give any effort to the writing or reading of letters, nor have I ever dared to demand that of myself. Even when the philosophers, those marvelous men, declare that the wise man, shut up even in the bull of Phalaris [the brazen bull of the tyrant Phalaris of Acragas, in which victims were roasted alive], would nonetheless be happy, I could more readily believe that he would be happy than that he could, all the while he was being scorched in the bronze, compose an exordium [the opening of a speech] or write out his epicheiremes [rhetorical syllogistic arguments].

3. Then, when after a long interval a favorable state of health had been restored to me, I attended rather to other matters; toward that speech my mind was estranged, and I shall not be ashamed to confess my loathing and my quarrel with it
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AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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 amicos 1.15 [180 Hout; 2.88 Haines]
Fronto Praecilio Pompejano salutem.
1 Verum ex me, mi Pompejane, uti res est, audies, velimque te mihi verum dicenti fidem habere: Orationem istam pro Bithynis ante annum fere in manus sumpseram et corrigere institueram. Tibi etiam Romae tunc agenti nonnihil de ista oratione promiseram, et quidem, si recte memini, quom sermo inter nos de partitionibus orationum ortus esset, dixeram et prae me tuleram satis me diligenter in ista oratione conjecturam, quae in crimine mandatae caedis verteretur, divisisse argumentis ac refutasse.
2 Interea nervorum dolor solito vehementior me invasit et diutius ac molestius solito remoratus est, nec possum ego membris cruciantibus operam ullam litteris scribendis legendisve impertire nec umquam istud a me postulare ausus sum. Philosophis etiam, mirificis hominibus, dicentibus sapientem virum etiam in Phalaridis tauro inclusum beatum nihilo minus fore, facilius crediderim beatum eum fore quam posse tantisper amburienti in aheno prohoemium meditari aut epichiremata scribere.
3 Reconciliata deinde mihi longo post tempore commoda valetudine alias egi res potius; adversus istam orationem alienato animo fui nec pudebit me fateri odium ac simultatem
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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_2/The_Correspondence#Ad_Amicos_i._15

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