Letter 6
To Anysius
This Carnas is taking his time about it. Neither of his own free will, nor forced by necessity will he ever become an honest man. However that may be, he must come before us soon, that we may hear what he has to say, and see how he will look us in the face, from whom even against our will he wanted to buy a horse which he had stolen, on the ground that a soldier cannot be horseless. Furthermore, he offers me a purely nominal price for it, and refuse to hand it over to us although we had never handed it over to him. The worst of it is that he seems to be under the impression that the horse belongs to him by right and equity; and all this although he is neither an Agathocles nor a Dionysius, men of whom tyrannical powers have made chartered libertines, but merely a Carnas of Cappharoddis, whom it would not be difficult to bring to account for his conduct before the law. If any one, therefore, brings him before you, let me know, that I may bring from Cyrene witnesses who will confound him.