9 surviving letters between Eusebius and Libanius, spanning c. 320–357.
Having come to know Parthenius better than before, I love him more than before.
Your letter was full of the wisdom I expected, and I was glad to receive it -- glad both for what you said about our...
I will not pretend that things are as they were.
You wrote what a father naturally would, but your letter has not made me any better.
We take refuge at the same Athena on the same kind of business.
I have written to you before and I greet you again now.
I hear you praise me and never stop doing so, and it seems to me you are doing what is both just and in your own...
If I desired only a small thing from your letters, I would have tried once, and failing, stopped immediately.
I myself fell ill during the summer; Albanius during the autumn.