Ad Familiares 12.2
Ad Familiares 12.2
Headnote
Cicero to C. Cassius, from Rome between 18 September and 5 October 44 BC — Perseus dateline Scr. Romae inter xiii K. et iii Non. Oct. a. 710 (44). The First Philippic has been delivered (2 September); Antony has answered with the savage senatorial invective of 19 September; Cicero is now writing to Cassius in his province of Syria with the temperature of the city in his hand. The gladiator-metaphor of Fam. 12.22 is here in its full form — Antony is the gladiator hunting for an opening to start the killing — and Cicero gives Cassius the names: Piso, who opened the attacks on 1 August with no one rising to support him; himself, on 2 September; and P. Servilius following. Three consulars who cannot now come to the Senate in safety.
The middle paragraphs are pure Cicero in private vein: a quick catalogue of disappointments. Cassius’s tuus necessarius (his brother-in-law Lepidus) is taken up with his new marriage tie to Antony and is bursting at the applause for the elder Cassius’s ludi Apollinares; the “other in-law” (Servilius Isauricus, or possibly L. Cornelius Lentulus) has been bought off by fresh “memoranda of Caesar”; and worst of all, somebody in the Senate — unnamed, almost certainly Servilius Isauricus — expects his own son to be consul in the year that should have been Cassius and Brutus’s, and openly fawns on Antony to that end. The close pivots back to hope: the consuls-elect, Pansa and Hirtius; Cotta gone to ground in fatal despair; L. Caesar ill, Sulpicius absent. The counsellors of the public deliberation are few. “All hope is in you,” Cicero writes, in a sentence that he had already written in May (Fam. 12.1) and would write again before the year was out.