Letter 82: It seems you fill the senate [of Constantinople] with new members not only through your own efforts but even in your...
**To Themistius** (359)
So it seems you fill the senate with senators not only through your own exertions, but even while you sleep the net fills itself. For Celsus, the finest man among us here and deserving to be called second only to you among those there, comes of his own accord—a good man to a good council.
Every effort has been made on our part to have the man take charge of affairs here. But he kept saying he was pursuing a post that Themistius had praised. And I am not unaware of the real motive. For while others rush to Constantinople out of longing for the "fishy Bosporus," he cares nothing for the office itself—he simply believes that if he becomes a citizen of your city, he will live in your company. And that means living in wisdom, of which he had no small share at Sicyon and now expects to enjoy still more at your side.
For my part, then, my situation will be the worse for the absence of the man who came to my aid, and I shall grieve at not having near me the one to whom I used to pour out my troubles and so find relief. But let something good come to Celsus, and let my own affairs go however they will. After all, from his good fortune there will be some consolation for my sorrows.
For now, his mother and I and many others are keeping him here, since it is possible for him to do us this kindness before winter and still come to you in time. But this letter about him has gone ahead of him, and upon receiving it you will do what you customarily do—seeing to it that the expense is kept reasonable. For it seemed to us more graceful for him to arrive as one who has already been enrolled as a citizen rather than as one who is yet to become one.
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