Letter 11025: Ad easdem de itinere suo

Venantius FortunatusUnknown|c. 600 AD|Venantius Fortunatus
friendshiptravel mobility

To Agnes and Radegund — About His Journey

The moments of human life are rolled around in countless accidents, and our shifting life goes its way on an unsteady foot. The very mind, wavering anxiously over future things, does not know what the coming light will bring.

For when I had departed from you, Eomundus — who loves me — received me with the goodness he always shows. Then hurrying away quickly, I was carried to the court of Cariacus; from there I was conveyed to the place of Tincillac. From here the holy bishop Domitian [Domitian, bishop of Angers or possibly Verdun] seized me and carried me to the feast of holy Albin [Saint Albinus, bishop of Angers, whose feast was March 1] — and from there I was brought back, running, along the same road.

Then across the plain, from the direction of the setting sun, I was hurried by that holy man to the monastery of Reomaus [the monastery of Moutier-Saint-Jean in Burgundy] — and from Reomaus, returning by the same road, here I am with you.

So it was: a journey of churches, monasteries, episcopal seats, and holy feast days, each stage proposed by some friend or bishop who could not bear to let Fortunatus pass without pulling him in for another celebration.

A man travels from place to place in Gaul, and the same story happens everywhere: there is always a holy man at the next stop who insists that you must stay for this feast, see this relic, meet this abbot. The roads of Gaul are lined with sanctity, and it is very hard to hurry.

I am glad to be back with you. The road taught me, as it always does, that there is no place in Gaul quite like Poitiers, and no company quite like yours.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.

Latin / Greek Original

XXV
Ad easdem de itinere suo
Casibus innumeris hominum momenta rotantur
instabilique gradu pendula vita meat.
ipsa futurarum titubans mens anxia rerum
Ventura ignorat quid sibi lux pariat.
nam me digressum a vobis Eomundus amator
illa suscepit qua bonitate solet.
hinc citus excurrens Cariacae devehor aulae;
Tincillacensi perferor inde loco.
hinc sacer antistes rapuit me Domitianus,
ad sancti Albini gaudia festa trahens.
inde relaxatus, per plura pericula fessum
puppe sub exigua fluctus et imber agit,
quo gravis incumbens Aquilo subverterat amnem
et male curvatos extulit unda sinus;
nec sua commotos capiebant litora fluctus:
invadunt terras aequora fusa novas.
pascua rura nemus segetes vibuma salictum
viribus iratis una rapina tenet.
huc mihi commisso per confraga murmura ponti
flatibus horrificis laxa fremebat hiems
surgebatque cadens per aquosa cacumina puppis,
ascendens liquidas monte vagante vias;
quo rate suspensa modo nubila nauta tenebat,
gurgite subducto rursus ad arva redit.
fluctibus infestis pelagi spumante procella
assidue rapidas prora bibebat aquas;
aequora lambebant inimica pace carinam,
tristius amplexu nos nocitura suo.
sed mora nulla vetat varias memorare querellas:
post referenda simul murmura corde tego.
hoc mihi praecipue divina potentia praestet,
ut cito felices vos revidere queam.

Revision history

  1. 2026-03-20v2.1.0-import

    Initial corpus import from Unspecified import source.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://data.mgh.de/openmgh/bsb00000790.zip

Related Letters

Gregory the Great (Wisigothic)Theudericusc. 601 · gregory great #13054

Most serene King Theudericus, I write to express my genuine admiration for the piety and prudence you have shown in...

Gregory the Great (Wisigothic)Fortunatusc. 596 · gregory great #10026

Gregory to Fortunatus, bishop of Naples.

Pope Gregory the GreatPeterc. 598 · gregory great #8001

On receiving the letters of your Fraternity we returned great thanks to Almighty God, that you had been so good as to refresh us with the news of the gathering in of many souls. And accordingly let your Fraternity strive anxiously to bring to perfection, with the help of the Lord, the work which you have begun. And with regard to those who have ...

Pope Gregory the GreatDominicusc. 602 · gregory great #12001

How abundant is the charity of your heart you show by its interpreter — your tongue, while so seasoning the words of your epistles with its sweetness that all you write is pleasant and delightful. Hence it comes that we embrace your Fraternity in the arms of love, though unable to do so in the body. For it is the office of charity to supply to s...

Pope Gregory the GreatEulogius, of Alexandriac. 596 · gregory great #7040

Gregory to Eulogius, Bishop of Alexandria. Your most sweet Holiness has spoken much in your letter to me about the chair of Saint Peter, Prince of the apostles, saying that he himself now sits on it in the persons of his successors. And indeed I acknowledge myself to be unworthy, not only in the dignity of such as preside, but even in the number...