Letter 31: If cities have souls — and they must, with their divine guardians and spirits — then you can be sure those spirits...
To Aurelian.
If cities have souls — and they must, with their divine guardians and spirits — then you can be sure those spirits are grateful to you and remember the good you did for all nations during your great administration [as Praetorian Prefect]. Believe me, those powers stand beside you always, as advocates and allies, begging the universal God to grant you a fitting reward for imitating Him to the best of your ability.
Doing good is the one trait that God and human beings share. Imitation creates a kinship between the imitator and the imitated. So consider that by your commitment to righteousness, you have established an intimacy with God himself.
Hold on to that thought. Cherish the hopes that belong to a spirit like yours — you whom I honor above all other men. Yours is a rank held by you alone, or shared with very few. Give my warmest regards to your son Taurus, the hope of the Empire. It gives me great pleasure to send them through a father as revered as yourself.
Human translation - Livius.org
Latin / Greek Original
Original text not yet available in this corpus.
This letter still needs a Latin or Greek source-text backfill. The source link, when available, is preserved so the text can be checked and added later.
View sourceRevision history
- 2026-03-20v2.1.0-import
Initial corpus import from Livius.org.
Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: project source import
Related Letters
I believe your divine soul was sent into this world for the common good of humanity — and you should be grateful to...
Providence has not yet turned its attention to the Romans — but it will, someday.
I've been writing frequently these past days, but no amount of letters can satisfy the heart of someone who truly cares.
Concerning an active life of good works.
You ask why the law entrusted its sacrifices to blood, when blood seems repulsive rather than holy.