Letter 116: To Auxentius [a childhood friend with whom Synesius was ending a quarrel].
To Auxentius [a childhood friend with whom Synesius was ending a quarrel].
Homer banishes the evils of contention "to the mountains or the waves of the loud-sounding sea" [Iliad 6.347]. But philosophy does better — she dissolves them entirely. I was wrong to let this quarrel between us last as long as it has. Let us put it behind us.
[The letter continues with Synesius making a formal apology and extending the hand of reconciliation, combining Homeric quotation with genuine warmth.]
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