Page:Correspondence of Marcus Cornelius Fronto volume 1 Haines 1919.djvu/243

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M. CORNELIUS FRONTO

M. Aurelius to Fronto

? 144–145 A.D.

Hail, most reverend master.

1. We are well. By a satisfactory arrangement of meals I worked from three o'clock a.m. till eight. For the next hour I paced about in slippers most contentedly before my bedroom. Then putting on my boots and donning my cloak—for we had been told to come in that dress—I went off to pay my respects to my Lord.

2. We set out for the chase[1] and did doughty deeds. We did hear say that boars had been bagged, for we were not lucky enough to see any. However, we climbed quite a steep hill; then in the afternoon we came home. I to my books: so taking off my boots and doffing my dress I passed nearly two hours on my couch, reading Cato's speech On the property of Pulchra,[2] and another in which he impeached a tribune. Ho, you cry to your boy, go as fast as you can and fetch me those speeches from the libraries of Apollo![3] It is no use your sending, for those volumes, among others, have followed me here. So you must get round the librarian of Tiberius's library:[4] a little douceur will be necessary, in which he and I can go shares when I come back to town. Well, these speeches read, I wrote a little wretched stuff, fit to be dedicated to the deities of water and fire: truly to-day I have been unlucky in my writing, the lucubration of a sportsman or a vintager, such as

  1. Marcus was fond of hunting; see Capit. iv. 9. Coins also shew this; see Cohen, 408, and a beautiful medallion in Grueber.
  2. Nothing more is known of this speech.
  3. Built by Augustus; see Hor. Od. i. 31; Ep. i. 3. 17.
  4. In the Palace of Tiberius.
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