Letter 26
145–147 A.D. To my master. As far as I am concerned, the writing is finished—so send me something else to write—but my secretary was not at hand to copy out what I wrote. However, what I wrote was not to my mind, as I was hurried, and your being poorly took a good deal out of me. But I will ask your indulgence tomorrow, when I send it. Farewell, my sweetest of masters. The Lady my mother sends you greeting. Let me have the name of the people's tribune against whom Acilius the censor, of whom I wrote, set a mark.
Latin / Greek Original
Original text not yet available in this corpus.
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- 2026-03-20v2.1.0-import
Initial corpus import from Haines public-domain edition.
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._v._26