Letter · 10 February 49 BC · in Formiano

Ad Atticum 7.24

Ad Atticum 7.24

Headnote

Cicero to Atticus, written from the Formian villa on the fourth day before the Ides of February 49 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr. in Formiano iv Id. Febr. a. 705 (49)). A single short paragraph, the morning after Ad Atticum 7.23, walking back the rumour Philotimus had sent. Cassius has had a letter from his friend Lucretius at Capua relaying news from Domitius’s camp: Vibullius is hurrying with a handful of men to Pompey, Caesar is hot on his heels, Domitius does not have three thousand soldiers, the consuls have left Capua.

The arithmetic is the whole letter. “I have no doubt that Gnaeus is in flight; may he only get away” — modo effugiat — is a short prayer between two clauses. The last sentence is the decision the previous day’s news had already made: ego a consilio fugiendi, ut tu censes, absum, “As for me, I am keeping my distance from the plan of flight, as you advise.” He is still on the coast, still at Formiae, still — for now — not on a ship.

Philotimus’s letter did not delight me very much, but those who were in these parts it delighted greatly. Then, the next day, a letter for Cassius arrived at Capua from Lucretius, a friend of his: that Nigidius had come from Domitius to Capua, and that he was saying Vibullius with a few soldiers was hurrying from Picenum to Gnaeus, that Caesar was hot on his heels, and that Domitius had not three thousand soldiers. He wrote also that the consuls had left Capua. I have no doubt that Gnaeus is in flight; may he only get away. As for me, I am keeping my distance from the plan of flight, as you advise.
Philotimi litterae me quidem non nimis sed eos qui in his locis erant admodum delectarunt. ecce postridie Cassio litterae Capua a Lucretio, familiari eius, Nigidium a Domitio Capuam venisse. eum dicere Vibullium cum paucis militibus e Piceno currere ad Gnaeum, confestim insequi Caesarem, Domitium non habere militum iii milia. idem scripsit Capua consules discessisse. non dubito quin Gnaeus in fuga sit; modo effugiat. ego a consilio fugiendi, ut tu censes, absum.

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Ad Atticum 7.24

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