Letter 13: I received your letter with great pleasure, and the pleasure was doubled by its length -- for you are one of the few...

LibaniusAristaenetus|c. 315 AD|Libanius
education booksgrief death

**To Zenobius** (352 or 354?)

We resolved to avenge your silence with silence of our own. And yet I knew full well that the punishment fell short of the offense. For it was not an equal thing for me to be deprived of your letters and for you to receive none from us. On the contrary, the finer yours are, the greater my loss exceeds your penalty.

**To Thalassius** (352 or 353)

Admirable enough were the qualities I witnessed in you when we were together, but what I hear of you now approaches philosophy itself: a tongue that speaks freely, a character that loathes villainy, a passion for men of merit, and the courage to reward the worthy while driving out the wicked — and, greatest of all, gold held in contempt, that thing which wields the greatest power among men, yet before you stands defeated.

As for Gorgonius, when I heard this one thing — that he admires you — I was struck with wonder myself. For he would never feel so unless he were a man much like you.

Work then, through him, to secure what I am told is already underway — my recall. For I long to see with my own eyes what I now only hear of.

**To Florentius** (365)

The man who delivers this letter to you is the one who wrote it. For the man who persuaded me to take heart might most justly be said to have composed it himself. I was held back by hesitation, but the excellent Tatianus laid my hand upon the paper, declaring I would not regret having written. You, then, will show whether yielding to his persuasion and writing was better than not daring to write at all.

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