Letter · 23 February 49 BC · ut Formiano

Ad Atticum 8.7

Ad Atticum 8.7

Headnote

Cicero to Atticus, written from the Formian villa on the seventh day before the Kalends of March 49 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr. ut Formiano vii K. Mart., ut videtur, a. 705 (49)). The same day as Ad Atticum 8.5, but the register has nothing of the domestic about it: this is the moment Cicero stops defending Pompey and starts indicting him. Domitius is shut up at Corfinium with his cohorts and Pompey, despite holding thirty cohorts of his own, is not coming to his relief — and Cicero no longer believes he will. Incredibiliter pertimuit, nihil spectat nisi fugam: “He has lost his nerve to an incredible degree; he looks to nothing but flight.”

The hinge of the letter is section 2. Atticus has cited back to Cicero a saying of his own that he would rather be conquered with Pompey than conquer with Caesar’s men — and Cicero now turns that saying inside out. He would still prefer it: but with that Pompey, who once was or seemed to be, not with this Pompey, who flees before he knows from whom or where, who has handed over the cause, has left his country, is leaving Italy. Si malui, contigit, victus sum: “If that was my preference, it has come to pass: I have been conquered.” The short third section drops back into practicalities — travel funds from Philotimus, the public treasury at Moneta (which is paying no one), or, failing that, the Oppii brothers who lodge with Atticus — but the political decision of section 2 is the news of the letter.

One thing still remains to crown our friend’s total disgrace: that he not come to Domitius’s relief. And yet no one doubts that he will come to the rescue. I do not think so. Will he, then, abandon such a citizen, and the men you know to be with him, when he himself has thirty cohorts at hand? Unless everything deceives me, he will abandon them. He has lost his nerve to an incredible degree; he looks to nothing but flight.
unum etiam restat amico nostro ad omne dedecus ut Domitio non subveniat. at nemo dubitat quin subsidio venturus sit. ego non puto. deseret igitur talem civem et eos quos una scis esse cum habeat praesertim is ipse cohortis triginta? nisi me omnia fallunt, deseret. incredibiliter pertimuit, nihil spectat nisi fugam.
And it is this man — for I see what you are thinking — whom you suppose I ought to accompany. I, for my part, have one to flee from; one to follow I do not have. As for that saying of mine you praise and call memorable — that I would rather be conquered with Pompey than conquer with those men — yes, I would prefer it; but with that Pompey who then was, or who seemed to me to be; with this Pompey, who flees before he knows whom he flees or where, who has handed over our position, who has left his country, who is leaving Italy — if that was my preference, it has come to pass: I have been conquered. As for what remains, I cannot bear the sight of the things I never feared I should see; nor, by Hercules, the sight of this man for whose sake I must do without not only what is mine, but my very self.
quoi tu (video enim quid sentias) me comitem putas debere esse. ego vero quem fugiam habeo, quem sequar non habeo. quod enim tu meum laudas et memorandum dicis, malle quod dixerim me cum Pompeio vinci quam cum istis vincere, ego vero malo sed cum illo Pompeio qui tum erat aut qui mihi esse videbatur, cum hoc vero qui ante fugit quam scit aut quem fugiat aut quo, qui nostra tradidit, qui patriam reliquit, Italiam relinquit, si malui, contigit, victus sum. quod superest, nec ista videre possum quae numquam timui ne viderem nec me hercule istum propter quem mihi non modo meis sed memet ipso carendum est.
To Philotimus I have written about travel funds — either from Moneta (for nobody is paying) or from those Oppii who lodge with you. The rest, as the occasions arise, I shall lay upon you.
ad Philotimum scripsi de viatico sive a Moneta (nemo enim solvit) sive ab Oppiis tuis contubernalibus. cetera apposita tibi mandabo.

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Ad Atticum 8.7

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