Ad Atticum 8.14
Ad Atticum 8.14
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written from the Formian villa on the sixth day before the Nones of March 49 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr.\ in Formiano vi Non.\ Mart.\ a.\ 705 (49)). The daily letters from Formiae continue. Cicero apologises for them in the opening sentence and then justifies them: with a household courier going in any case, he cannot bring himself to send the man empty-handed, and the writing itself is a small rest from the misery. Caesar set out from Corfinium on the Feralia, the same day Pompey left Canusium; the whole contest of this first phase is turning at Brundisium, and Cicero is afraid Caesar will arrive there sooner than he should.
Section 2 is the central confession: labare meum consilium illud quod satis iam fixum videbatur — the plan, which had seemed by now fairly fixed, is tottering. The man-by-man case for crossing the sea with the senatorial leadership does not hold; the auctores Atticus has been citing are not heroes of the state, and Cicero cannot pretend they are. What holds him is one man — Pompey — whose companion in flight he seems bound to be. Section 3 returns to ordinary intelligence-gathering: Domitius’s whereabouts (still unknown; even Lepidus does not know), Domitius’s son (also unknown), and a disagreeable money matter — a quite large sum Domitius had at Corfinium has not been returned. The manuscript carries a couple of obeli in these sentences; the sense is recoverable, the wording is not.