Ad Familiares 6.10
Ad Familiares 6.10
Headnote
Cicero to Trebianus, written at Rome about August 46 BC (works.yaml -0046-08-15 at month-precision; the Perseus dateline reads Romae circ.~m.~Sext.~a.~708 (46) — “around the month of Sextilis”). Trebianus, a Roman of some standing whose name surfaces only in this short cluster of letters (Fam.~6.10–11), had stayed in arms with the Pompeians longer than most — the line “your decision, or rather the chance that kept you in arms in the civil war so long” implies he had not laid them down at any of the conventional moments — and was now in exile, with his fortune and standing under cloud. The case is not desperate; Caesar has not refused him, and intermediaries are in play. This is the first of the two surviving letters, the second (Fam.~6.11) celebrating his recall a little less than a year later.
The register is the Trebianus-counterpart of the Caecina note of December (Fam.~6.5): a short, working letter that catalogues the legwork Cicero is doing on the case (Postumulenus, Sestius, Atticus, the freedman Theudas) and lifts Trebianus’s spirits with a Stoic-consolatio note that the philosophical resources of his studies are now repaying him. No Greek. The doctrinal pivot is the standard one of the cluster — the conscientia factorum et consiliorum (the consciousness of having acted and counselled rightly) carries the philosophical freight, with the assurance that “the nature of things” and “the tilt of the times” will not let so bitter an injustice cling to so good a cause for long. The closing tricolon — great-spirited, fortune-governed-by-the-times, our-counsels-will- provide — is the standing reassurance of Book~6.