Letter 81: As long as your goodwill toward us keeps growing, we'll keep needing to write to you about our friends.
**To Florentius** (359)
So long as your goodwill toward me continues to grow, so too does my obligation to write to you on behalf of my friends. This Macedonius here has long been admired among us for his fairness, his temperance, and the steadfastness of his character. I fault him in one thing only: that after frolicking in the gardens of the Muses, he let himself be carried off into the life he now leads. For though one may grow rich by that path, it is by the other that one wins true distinction.
As things stand, he has hopes of wealth but no wealth yet — though it could come about, should you so wish. It would be unjust, surely, to stand by and watch this man lose even the tribunal, along with the very pursuits for which he abandoned the tribunal in the first place.
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