Letter 73: Andronicus the poet [a contemporary poet praised by Libanius] won over the cities as far as Ethiopia, as one might...

LibaniusThemistius|c. 321 AD|Libanius
grief deathimperial politics

**To Themistius** (359)

Andronicus the poet so disposed toward himself the cities as far as Ethiopia, as one might expect of an Andronicus pouring forth such honey. And yet the grief over his mother and the suffering of his city prevented him from displaying all the treasures of his soul; still, through what he was able to show, he gave people grounds to imagine what remained unseen.

He delighted us no less through his praises than through his verses — the praises he lavished on you, saying that the emperor honors you with everything at his disposal, yet that nothing has yet been found that comes close to matching your worth.

When I urged him not to refuse the governorships being offered to him, since it was possible to hold office and compose poetry at the same time, he replied: "No — I intend to go and give myself to Themistius as his student, for I consider that a finer thing than governing many."

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