Letter 103.12

Marcus AureliusMarcus Cornelius Fronto|c. 139 AD|Marcus Cornelius Fronto|From Rome (career hub)|To Rome (career hub)|AI-assisted

My teacher, I received two letters from you at about the same time. In one you scolded me and showed that I had written a sentence carelessly; in the other you tried to sustain my effort with praise. Yet I swear to you by my health, my mother's, and yours, that the earlier letter of yours brought more joy into my mind, and that while reading it I cried out again and again, "How fortunate I am!" Someone will say, "Do you call yourself fortunate because you have someone to teach you how to write a maxim more skillfully, clearly, briefly, and elegantly?" That is not why I call myself fortunate. What is it, then? That I learn from you to speak the truth.

Speaking the truth is a hard matter for gods and men alike. There is no oracle so truth-telling that it does not contain something two-sided, crooked, or tangled, by which the unwary person may be caught and, after taking the saying according to his own wishes, realize the trap only when the time and business are past. Such a thing is profitable, and clearly people excuse such devices as pious error and illusion. But your accusations, or your reins, whichever they are, at once show the road itself, without deceit or invented words. And so I owe you thanks for this above all: you teach me both to speak the truth and to hear the truth. A double price, then, must be paid, though you will labor to make sure I cannot pay it. If you want no repayment, how can I return like for like except by obedience? [The rest is damaged.] Farewell, my good teacher, my best teacher. I rejoice, best of orators, that I found you. My Lady greets you.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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 M. Caesarem 3.13 [44 Hout; 1.14 Haines]
Magistro meo.
1 Duas per id tempus epistulas tuas accepi. Earum altera me increpabas et temere sententiam scripsisse arguebas, altera vero tuere studium meum laude nitebaris. Adjuro tamen tibi meam, meae matris, tuam salutem mihi plus gaudii in animo coortum esse illis tuis prioribus litteris meque saepius exclamasse inter legendum: “O me felicem!” “Itane”, dicet aliquis, “felicem te ais, si est, qui te doceat, quomodo γνώμην sollertius dilucidius, brevius, politius scribas?” Non hoc est, quod me felicem nuncupo. Quid est igitur? Quod verum dicere ex te disco. Ea res, verum dicere, prorsum diis hominibusque ardua: Nullum denique tam veriloquium oraculum est, quin aliquid ancipitis in se bel obliqui vel inpediti habeat, quo inprudentior inretiatur et ad voluntatem suam dictum opinatus captione post tempis ac negotium sentiat. Sed ista res lucrosa est et plane nos talia tantum pio errore et vanitate excusare. At tuae seu accusationes seu lora confestim ipsam viam ostendunt sine fraude et inventis verbis. Itaque haberem etiam gratias agere vel, si verum me dicere satius simul et audire verum me doces. Duplex igitur pretium solvatur, pendere, quod ne valeam, elaborabis. Sei resolvi vis nil, quomodo tibi par pari exprendam nisi obsequio? Inpius tamen mihi malui te nimia motum cura . . . . . . . . . . . .
2 E . . . . . . . minitando postquam . . . . . . nam et acuit me et scribendo ac legendo ad ea et excerpendo . . . . i . . . . . tota e . . . on . . . lego . . . . . . . . . . insecatas paulatim . . . nmi . . . etsi . . . . . . . . est enim . . . . . . . qui laborem hic facilluma gloria pericl . . . . . . . . . . . . .
3 Vale, mi . . . . . . . . . . . . . ne . . . . im . . . . . . . . . . . et optime, magister optime, gratissime . . . ., quantum te invenisse gaudeo. Domina mea te salutat.

Revision history

  1. 2026-05-27v2.2.34-import

    Initial corpus import from modern fronto ad m caes book3 batch1 haines latin v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Correspondence_of_Marcus_Cornelius_Fronto/Volume_1/The_Correspondence#Ad_M._Caes._iii._12

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