H ow great is your goodwill towards myself I have long known well enough, by Hercules, but what astonishes me . . . .1 best of orators, is that in such a hackneyed and thread-bare subject you can find anything to say that is new and worthy of your abilities. But no doubt the mere wish is an immense help towards what you can do so well. Nothing could be more effective than your thoughts, nothing more complimentary, yet without any sacrifice of good sense, than your expression of them. For I will not be guilty of defrauding you of your legitimate praise for fear of arrogantly praising the praise of myself. You have done your duty pleasingly and in unexceptionable fashion, for which, apart from all question of the subject, you deserve every credit. But as for shewing me your mind, it has not done much in that way, for I knew well enough that you always would put the most favourable construction on every word and act of mine. Farewell, my Fronto, my very dear friend.
That part of your speech, which you most kindly devoted to honouring my Faustina,2 seemed to me as true as it was eloquent. For this is the plain fact: By heaven, I would sooner live with her in Gyara3 than in the palace without her.
143 A.D.
Marcus Caesar to his own consul and master.