Ad Familiares 10.13
Ad Familiares 10.13
Headnote
Cicero to Plancus, written from Rome around 11 May 43 BC — Perseus dateline Scr. Romae circ. v Id. Mai. a. 711 (43). A short covering note for a senatorial decree in Plancus’s honour. News of the victory at Mutina (21 April) has reached the city; Antony has been driven back across the Alps; Plancus, governor of Transalpine Gaul, has put his army in motion and written to the Senate of his loyalty. Cicero, who has been the architect of the senatorial campaign against Antony since the previous September, drafts the motion of thanks himself and reports back to Plancus that it has passed in a full house with overwhelming support.
The second section delivers the political point under the compliment: Plancus must not slacken. The war is not over when Antony is beaten; the war is over when Antony is finished. Cicero reaches for Homer to make the case — Ulysses, not Ajax or Achilles, is the [Greek: ptolipor\=thion], the sacker of cities, because it was Ulysses who delivered the final stroke. The flattery is calculated: Plancus is being told he can be the Ulysses of this war if he closes it now.