Ad Familiares 7.17
Ad Familiares 7.17
Headnote
Cicero to C. Trebatius Testa, the young jurist whom Cicero had talked Caesar into taking onto his staff in Gaul the previous year. The earlier letters in the series (Fam.\ 7.6–7.8 above) are mostly teasing: Trebatius is homesick, he despises the perquisites of his post, he has been bolting for home with no plunder to show. By the autumn of 54 something in his tone has finally changed — some firm resolve, as Cicero puts it — and the letter shifts gear. The teasing is briefer and the counsel becomes serious: stick with Caesar, do not let this man slip, no better moment for your career will come again.
The little flourish at the close — “This,” as you people are accustomed to write in your books, “was also the view of Q.\ Cornelius” — is Cicero parodying the citation-formula of the republican jurists, by which a responsum was buttressed with the agreement of a senior authority. He is treating his own advice to Trebatius as a piece of legal opinion, and signing it with a mock concurrence. Q.\ Cornelius (Maximus) was one of the jurists in whose school Trebatius had been trained.