If I possessed the same vigor which I formerly had and were not utterly spent with years, Isocrates was 98 years of age at this time and died soon after writing this letter. I should not be speaking with you by letter, but in your presence should myself be spurring and summoning you to undertake these tasks. But even as it is, I do exhort you, as best I can, not to put these matters aside until you bring them to a successful conclusion. To have an insatiate desire for anything else in the world is ignoble—for moderation is generally esteemed—but to set the heart upon a glory that is great and honorable, and never to be satiated with it, befits those men who have far excelled all others. Cf. Isoc. 5.135 . And that is true of you.