Letter 57

Quintus Aurelius SymmachusUnknown|c. 391 AD|symmachus

We'd planned to linger in the countryside a while longer, but news of the homeland's troubles changed our plans. In a time of shared crisis, my own comfortable detachment would have looked dishonorable. Besides, my duties as pontiff demand that I be present for the observances of the appointed month. I can't in good conscience leave my fellow priests short-handed when so many of them are neglecting their obligations.

Once upon a time, administering the sacred rites was a simple delegation. Now, to be absent from the altars in Rome is practically a form of political campaigning [i.e., avoiding responsibility].

How long will Etruria keep you? We're starting to resent whatever it is that you prefer to your fellow citizens for so long. However pleasant the countryside may be, a man can't truly enjoy his leisure when he's worried about his absent friends. Farewell.

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

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