Page:Correspondence of Marcus Cornelius Fronto volume 1 Haines 1919.djvu/181

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M. CORNELIUS FRONTO

Marcus Aurelius to Fronto

143 A.D.

To my master.

From half-past ten till now I have been writing and have also read a good deal of Cato, and I am writing this to you with the same pen, and I greet you and ask you how well you are. Oh, how long it is since I saw you! . . . .


August, 143 A.D.

M. Caesar to the most honourable consul his master.

. . . .[† 1] Three days ago we heard Polemo declaim—that we may have some talk about men also. If you would like to know what I think of him, listen. He seems to me like a hard-working farmer endowed with the utmost shrewdness, who has laid out a large holding with corn-crops only and vines, wherein beyond question the yield is the fairest and the return the richest. But, indeed, nowhere in all that estate is there a fig tree of Pompeii,[1] or a vegetable of Aricia,[2] or a rose of Tarentum, nowhere a pleasant coppice or a thick-set grove, or a shady plane-tree; all for profit rather than for pleasure, such as one would be bound to praise but not disposed to love. In judging a man of such reputation,[3] am I, think you, bold enough in my purpose and rash enough in my judgment? But when I remember that I am writing to you, I feel that I

  1. See Pliny, N.H. xv. 19.
  2. ibid. xix. 41. The cabbage of Aricia (brassica oleracea) is said by Pliny to be the most useful of all, but the argument requires that it should be only for pleasure.
  3. From an interesting anecdote in Philost. (Vit. Soph. p. 231, Kays.) we find that Marcus formed a higher estimate of Polemo in later life.
117

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  1. Six pages are lost from vidi in Ad Caes. ii. 4 above.