Letter XIII · C. R. Haines (1919) · Loeb Classical Library

Letter XIII: Marcus Cornelius Fronto to Marcus Aurelius

. . . . unless speech is graced by dignity of language, it becomes downright impudent and indecent. In fine you too, when you have had to speak in the Senate or harangue the people, have never used a far-fetched word,1 never an unintelligible or unusual figure, as knowing that a Caesar's eloquence should be like the clarion not like the clarionet, in which there is less resonance and more difficulty.

Marcus Aurelius to Fronto

? 140–143 A.D.

Hail, my best of masters.2

1 cp. Thoughts, viii. 30, and below, Ad Ant. i. 1.
2 This would seem to be an early letter, in spite of its position in the Codex.
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