Ad Familiares 8.8
Ad Familiares 8.8
Headnote
M. Caelius Rufus to Cicero, written from Rome in the early part of October 51 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr. Romae in. m. Oct. a. 703 (51)). The longest and most substantive of the surviving Caelius newsletters, and the political pivot of book 8. The previous dispatches had reported a year of deadlock — Marcellus’s procrastinations, Pompey’s elusiveness, quorum failures, vetoes signalled but not yet cast. The first two paragraphs continue in the familiar Forum-vignette register (the prosecution of Sempronius Rufus under the calumnia-statute; the strange aborted extortion-trial of M. Servilius, where the praetor Laterensis bungled the count and the defendant ended neither acquitted nor condemned), with Caelius doing what he does best: dramatising himself into the centre of every scene.
Then, in section 4, the letter turns: the provinces have at last been debated, Pompey has shown his hand, and Caelius proudly transcribes for Cicero the full text of the senatus consultum of the day before the Kalends of October — four resolutions in all, with the witnesses listed at the head and the tribunes who interposed listed at the foot. This is the decree that fixes the Ides of March 50 BC as the date for revisiting Caesar’s Gallic command, and it is the first formal step on the road to civil war; Caelius seems to know it. The ledger-prose of the consultum text and the bureaucratic list of attesting senators contrast deliberately with the Forum-narrative voice around them: Caelius is showing Cicero his proper documentary care. Pompey’s two reported vocones in section 9 — that after the Kalends of March he will not hesitate, and that he sees no difference between a Caesar who disobeys the Senate and a Caesar who organises men to prevent the Senate from decreeing — are the most explicit public statement on record that the breach between him and Caesar is now real. The letter closes on Caelius’s standing private request — panthers for his aedilician games — and the Sittian bond Cicero is asked to look after on his behalf.