Nicene and Post-Nicene Fathers: Series II/Volume VIII/The Letters/Letter 349
Appearance
Letter CCCXLIX.
Libanius to Basil.
Will you not give over, Basil, packing this sacred haunt of the Muses with Cappadocians, and these redolent of the frost[1] and snow and all Cappadocia’s good things? They have almost made me a Cappadocian too, always chanting their “I salute you.”
I must endure, since it is Basil who commands. Know, however, that I am making a careful study of the manners and customs of the country, and that I mean to metamorphose the men into the nobility and the harmony of my Calliope, that they may seem to you to be turned from pigeons into doves.
Footnotes
[edit]- ↑ γριτή, an unknown word. Perhaps akin to κρίοτη. cf. Duncange s.v.