Ad Atticum 7.16
Ad Atticum 7.16
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written from Cales on the fourth day before the Kalends of February in 49 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr. Calibus iv K. Febr. a. 705 (49)). Cicero is on the road back from the Pompeian headquarters at Capua to his Formian villa, and has stopped at Cales — about midway — where Atticus’s latest letter has just caught him at the ninth hour. He dashes off a short reply on the spot.
Section 2 is the news. Pompey is writing optimistically: a sound army in a few days, and if he himself can reach Picenum, “we shall be returning to Rome.” Labienus, having just deserted Caesar, is at Pompey’s side and tells him Caesar’s forces are weaker than they look; on the strength of that, Cicero notes, Gnaeus noster multo animi plus habet — “our friend Gnaeus has a great deal more spirit.” The consuls have summoned him back to Capua for the Nones (five days off), and he registers his itinerary exactly: out of Capua on the third day before the Kalends, into Cales the same day, letter dispatched at once. The final brisk paragraph is a domestic instruction: Terentia and Tullia, if they have not yet left Rome, should sit tight until they see how matters stand.