Ad Familiares 11.21
Ad Familiares 11.21
Headnote
Cicero to D. Junius Brutus Albinus, imperator and consul-elect, from Rome on 4 June 43 BC — Perseus dateline Scr. Romae prid. Non. Iun. a. 711 (43). The political weather has just turned again. On 30 April the senate received the news of Antony’s defeat at Mutina; on 30 May, on Cicero’s motion, Lepidus was declared a public enemy after his junction with Antony in Gaul. The supplicationes for Mutina had been voted, but the honours and the practical follow-on — the planned board of ten to settle veterans’ lands, the four legions Brutus proposed to keep up, the relations between Brutus’s army and Octavian’s — were all live business in early June. Brutus is still in the field, advancing into Cisalpine Gaul to take up the pursuit of Antony; Cicero is in Rome, managing the senate.
The letter is a reply on four fronts. First, a piece of poisonous gossip retailed by one Segulius Labeo — a man Cicero had encountered before — to the effect that the veterans were murmuring against Brutus and Octavian because they had not been placed on the agrarian commission of ten. Cicero, who was on the commission, brushes the gossip aside: it was on his own motion that commanders in the field were exempted from the board, against the opposition of the usual obstructors. Second, Brutus has expressed personal anxiety for Cicero’s safety; Cicero releases him from it with a Stoic dignity he has earned the right to claim. Third, Brutus has urged him to keep his nerve — “do not let fear of fear push you into fear” — and Cicero accepts the counsel while gently turning it round: with Brutus’s resources and his prospective consulship, fear should have no foothold. Fourth, the concrete agenda — the four legions to be kept on the books, the lands to be assigned by Brutus and Octavian jointly — has Cicero’s energetic backing; he has personally beaten off a play by other senators to take the land commission for themselves, and offers to send sensitive matter back by a private courier. The closing date, Pr. Non. Iun., is 4 June.