Letter 63: Procopius repays a book loan by securing a possible purchase for Athenodorus.
Procopius of Gaza→Athenodorus, correspondent of Procopius of Gaza|c. 515 AD|Procopius of Gaza|From Gaza, Palaestina Prima|AI-assisted
late antique Greek letters; Athenodorus; book; property; commerce; friendship
The exchange makes book culture and property negotiation parts of the same friendship economy.
When I received the book, I naturally thanked you, and I congratulated myself for having been fortunate enough to win such people as friends. Let envy not strike me with a rough stone, as Pindar says. I also prayed that Fortune might one day let me repay you with a favor worthy of you.
She has quickly given the opportunity, the kind you wanted and the kind I had long been seeking but only now obtained. I have persuaded the man who owns the whole property to sell you the part you need. If you come to me, you will get the possession sooner, persuading in some things and being persuaded in others about the price, as the law of commerce requires. If not, he will come to you when the proper time calls, as he has promised me.
When I received the book, I naturally thanked you, and I congratulated myself for having been fortunate enough to win such people as friends. Let envy not strike me with a rough stone, as Pindar says. I also prayed that Fortune might one day let me repay you with a favor worthy of you.
She has quickly given the opportunity, the kind you wanted and the kind I had long been seeking but only now obtained. I have persuaded the man who owns the whole property to sell you the part you need. If you come to me, you will get the possession sooner, persuading in some things and being persuaded in others about the price, as the law of commerce requires. If not, he will come to you when the proper time calls, as he has promised me.
AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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.