Letter 118: You urged me to remember you when I write.

LibaniusNicentius|c. 325 AD|Libanius
imperial politics

**To Nicentius** (359/60)

You urged me in your letter to remember you. Why, then, did you not also urge me to remember myself? If you consider that superfluous, hold the same opinion regarding the other as well — for I shall forget you only when I forget myself, you who by many noble deeds have fused a memory into our souls that not even a tyrant, had he commanded it, could have had the power to cast out.

But even then you would have been admired in silence — you who did not consider it part of governing to abuse those you governed, who did not tear people apart while collecting taxes, from whom came no blows, no chains, no tears. Rather, there were feasts and festivals and discoveries of new delights, honors for the magistrates and pleasures for the people, and songs from all, each repaying you according to their own art. Indeed, more than one man who had found his own parents harsh at home discovered the governor to be gentler.

These things we remember, these things we long for — and not without expectation. But whoever supposes that Fortune alone made that era so smooth should know that he is paying you a compliment, not a reproach — unless it was also a disgrace for Athena to sail alongside Telemachus and guide his course.

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