Letter 39: I am well aware that writing now is an implicit admission that I was wrong not to write before.
**To Leontius** (358/359)
That writing to you now amounts to an indictment of myself for not having written sooner — for if I do the right thing by writing now, then I was doing wrong by not writing before — I am well aware. But judging it better late than never, I send greetings to a fellow student who has forgotten his companion. Or perhaps I am wrong in this assumption, and you remember me perfectly well but hold back because your fledglings have gone off to other teachers?
But, my dear friend, do not let that be an obstacle, and do not think so little of what I have to offer, nor count another's loss as mine. For it is quite possible for them to fly off elsewhere while we still hold fast to one another. Indeed, I consider the excellent Philagrius a friend, and I call him one — a man who has made decisions about his sons that he will never have cause to regret.
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The excellent Julianus seems to get some good for his private affairs out of the general condition of things. Everything nowadays is full of taxes demanded and called in, and he too is vehemently dunned and indicted. Only it is a question not of arrears of rates and taxes, but of letters.
The reverence I owe your holy way of life and the affection I bear you personally have joined forces to compel this...
Hilary, bishop of Rome, to Leontius, most beloved brother.
I received your earlier letter with more pleasure than you can imagine.
Herodotus said that men's ears are less trustworthy than their eyes.