Letter 38: I asked what our fine Iphicrates has been up to, and I heard that he causes no trouble to any human being, but is...

LibaniusIphicrates|c. 317 AD|Libanius
barbarian invasionfriendshipillnesstravel mobility

**To Iphicrates.**

I asked what our fine Iphicrates was up to, and I heard that he causes no man any grief, but causes the wild beasts a great deal — and that by the very same means he grieves those creatures he delights Artemis, for we are not unaware of those things by which the poets say the goddess takes pleasure.

I asked again whether he made mention of me among his friends, as one does of a friend, and I learned that in his gatherings, though he is always saying something, this is one thing he does not say.

Seeking, then, the reason you have fallen into this silence toward us — after all those abundant praises you once scattered across the world — I discovered that back then you were deceived by youth and took a jackdaw for a swan, but that old age has taught you to regard the jackdaw as what it is: a jackdaw. Well, *we* at any rate regarded you as a swan then, and still do now.

Related Letters