Letter 64

Quintus Aurelius SymmachusUnknown|c. 394 AD|symmachus

Take heart — be patient with the duty that's been imposed on you. It often happens that proven merit is called back for a second round of service.

Consider: do you think Atilius [a Roman exemplar of civic duty, who left his plow for public office] was happy to trade his fasces for the plow and halt his panting oxen in the middle of sowing, a rustic magistrate? Any man of solid worth gets claimed for the public good.

Set aside for now those pleasant daydreams of your happy retirement — the estate rich with autumn's bounty, sunny in winter, first to coax roses from the earth in spring, cool with shade and stream in summer heat. But why do I stray from the point? In treating your complaints I've only stirred up fresh longing. Be who you are — patient in every burden — and discharge the service owed to the emperors, who have weighed your merit more than your wishes.

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

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