Letter 12010: Arrears in public accounts should be compared to an illness — they weigh you down and debilitate, unless they are...
X.
DIVERSIS CANCELLARIIS PROVINCIARUM SENATOR PPO.
[1] Rationum publicarum reliquiae infaustae sunt aegritudini comparandae, quae gravant, debilitant, nisi sub celeritate discedant. reatus quidam est esse sub debito nec liber potest veraciter dici, qui probatur obnoxius reperiri. prudens se ipse compellit: minus cautus est, qui urgetur ab altero. nam quid egit totius anni suscepta compulsio? summa futurae indictionis et quantitas exigatur. [2] Parcendo non parcitis: exonerando praegravatis et dum venales moras quaeritis, tributi onera duplicatis. relinquite tandem crudelem misericordiam, beneficia tota detestatione fellita. gravius percutit qui blandiendo grassatur et sub indulgentia laedit, qui consuetis temporibus exigere tributa distulerit. et ideo desinite aliquando possessorum damna mercari, quia totum constricti per incommoda redditis quod iniquis dilationibus abstulistis. post ista enim non vos credatis verbis iterum commoneri, sed inremissibili exactione compelli. [3] Quapropter si ad illum diem arcario nostro, quae de provinciis sollemniter postulantur, dispunctis rationibus non aut per te intuleris aut destinaveris quantitatem, degeniatus in provincia velociter reddis quae te male distulisse cognoscis, quia nimis iniquum est, ut assis publicus sub tua neglegentia iaceat et arcarius mutuatam pecuniam publicis utilitatibus incessanter expendat.
Related Letters
Gregory to Eusebius of Thessalonica, Urbitius of Dyracchium, Constantius ofMediolanum (Milan), Andrew of Nicopolis, John of Corinth, John of Prima Justiniana, John Cretensi Scoritano, John of Larissa, Marinianus of Ravenna, Januarius of Caralis (Cagliari) in Sardinia, and all the bishops of Sicily. I have taken care to transmit to your Fraternit...
We owe all the more to God the greater the gifts we receive beyond other mortals.
When I consider the depth of Your Wisdom, most merciful Emperor, I do not believe that a man looking out for his own...
Part of the papal correspondence surrounding the Acacian Schism (484-519), the major breach between Rome and...
**From:** Ennodius, Bishop of Pavia