Letter 13

Quintus Aurelius SymmachusUnknown|c. 371 AD|symmachus

Your daughter's birthday was approaching, and the gifts you'd sent arrived at just the right moment. They were enormously dear and welcome to us. A kindness done for people far away is felt with even greater warmth. We immediately read the letter that accompanied the gifts and began eagerly waiting for you to write that you were setting out on the Appian Way to join us.

But the letter said nothing of the sort. I questioned the messenger: had some sudden crisis upset your plans? He said your resolve was perfectly firm, but you were delaying until the house at Formiae could be stocked with provisions and supplies. That put my mind at ease.

I give you my word: your table and your household staff and your livestock will want for nothing. Consider this letter my written guarantee. My affection seals the promise. I won't let down the people I long to embrace. Farewell.

---

[Second part: Symmachus writing to his father about an inspection]

It was the censors' job to inspect public works they'd commissioned. You asked me to take on that task, and I've done as you asked — partly because I owed you obedience, partly because the assignment suited my own interests.

So here's how much progress has been made in our house: the stairs have been given a marble facing; the upper rooms are being paneled with wall-slabs, fitted so smoothly that the joints look like solid stone. The columns you bought cost no more than if they'd been a gift. They're cut from Bithynian stone, if my eyes serve me right. That's what you need to know for now. Going forward, I'll report whatever further progress I see in the construction.

Modern English rendering for readability. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek for scholarly use.

Related Letters