Ad Familiares 6.12
Ad Familiares 6.12
Headnote
Cicero to Ampius Balbus, written at Rome at the end of November 46 BC (works.yaml -0046-11-15 at month-precision; the Perseus dateline reads Romae ex.~m.~Nov.~a.~708 (46), “at the end of the month of November” — a tightening to circa $-0046$-$11$-$28$ is plausible, but month-precision covers it). Titus Ampius Balbus, an old Pompeian who had been tribune in 63 with Cicero and was consequently in exile after Pharsalus, has now had his recall set in motion; Cicero, with the lobbying of Pansa, Hirtius, Balbus, Oppius, Matius, Postumius, and Tillius Cimber, has secured the pardon — the formal diploma (the imperial warrant of safe-conduct and recall) is being held back for tactical reasons, but the substance is done. The letter is a Trebianus-cluster sibling: the news is good, but Balbus is reading it in exile with his wife Eppuleia and his daughter Ampia away from him, and Cicero writes with one eye on the husband and father whose nerves had begun to go before the despatches caught up with him.
No Greek. The roll of Caesar’s intimates in section~2 is a small Who’s Who of the regime at the close of 46: Pansa, Hirtius, the other Balbus (L.~Cornelius), Oppius, Matius, Postumius — with Tillius Cimber, three years later one of the Liberators, here briefly the man who got Balbus his pardon. The nickname tuba belli civilis, “the trumpet of the civil war,” is the live coinage of the moment, and Cicero quotes it exactly. The doctrinal pivot is the Trebianus pivot in another key: the brave-and-wise man’s consciousness of his own conduct (conscientia factorum et consiliorum, recalling Fam.~6.10.4) is now the consolation, and “learning and letters” (doctrina ac litterae) is the single refuge — formerly a pleasure of prosperity, now a means of survival. The closing ring-form (ut ad initium revertar) is Cicero deliberately marking the rhetorical shape: open with the ratified pardon, close with it.