Letter 2036: Although a relaxed penalty is quite enough to encourage the betrayal of a crime -- and it is no small gift of...
XXXVI. EDICTUM. THEODERICUS REX.
[1] Quamvis ad proditionem sceleris relaxata nimis poena sufficiat nec parum sit munus audaciae supplicii declinasse terrorem, addimus tamen praemium, quod habere innocentia solet: non quia commissa placuerint, sed delectat nos munificos esse in amore vindictae. [2] Quapropter praesentis edicti unusquisque auctoritate cognoscat centum se aureos largitate nostra promereri, si prodat qui statuam de Comensi civitate rapuerunt, et de suo facto, quod maxime nocens requirit, indulgentiam se noverit habiturum. damus in aeneo compendio aureum munus: et metalla quam invenire possumus pretiosiora largimur: illud potius hac liberalitate redimentes, ne transeat in usum, quod constat esse prohibitum. [3] Quis ergo tanta stultitiae caecitate damnetur, ut dubitet erumpere, quando et securitatem repperit et praemium confessionis adquirit? si quis autem dissimulandurn forte crediderit eumque aliquo veritatis indicio serenitas nostra detexerit, ultimo se noverit discrimine rapiendum. indignum est enim ut qui respuunt indulgentiam nostram, detectis postea suffragetur humanitas.
Related Letters
There are times when a ruler must speak not to individuals but to all his people at once, and this is such a time.
The voice of pain is always a complaint -- the injured cannot keep silent, and a wounded spirit feeds on outcry.
Part of the papal correspondence surrounding the Acacian Schism (484-519), the major breach between Rome and...
VARIAE, BOOK 5, LETTER 39
VARIAE, BOOK 7, LETTER 13