Ad M. Brutum 1.10
Ad M. Brutum 1.10
Headnote
Cicero to M. Brutus, from Rome, mid-July 43 BC — Perseus dateline Scr. Romae med. m. Quint. a. 711 (43). One of the longest and most clear-sighted of Cicero’s late letters: a survey of the political collapse already in motion. Antony has been defeated at Mutina in April; both consuls (Hirtius, Pansa) are dead; the Senate’s victory has slipped (“so many faults of Brutus’s followed that in a way the victory slipped out of our hands”); Lepidus has joined the remnant of Antony’s forces and reopened the war; the young Caesar (Octavian), guided so far by Cicero, has been worked on by Caesarian agents and now publicly intends to claim the consulship. Section 3 is the most precise contemporary statement of where the danger is coming from: “power is now lodged in violence and arms,” and “each man demands for himself as much power in the commonwealth as he has strength.”
The structural argument of the letter is the brief Cicero has been making since spring. He himself, having tried to escape Italy in the months after Caesar’s assassination, was called back by Brutus’s edicts and by Brutus’s exhortation in person at Velia. He shook Antony with no guard at his side. He strengthened the guard Octavian’s force offered. Now the guard is at risk of failing: “if the counsels of the impious shall prove stronger than mine, or if the weakness of his age cannot bear the weight of these affairs, every hope is in you.” The closing lines of section 5 are the personal note ordinarily kept off the page: the standing-ground of hope is on Brutus’s parade- ground, not in Rome; and if it should turn out otherwise, “I shall grieve on behalf of the commonwealth, which ought to have been immortal; for myself — how little is left to me?” Within four months the answer to that question would be no time at all.