Ad Familiares 12.10
Ad Familiares 12.10
Headnote
Cicero to C. Cassius, from Rome around 1 July 43 BC — Perseus dateline Scr. Romae circ. K. Quint. a. 711 (43). Written just after the Senate’s vote of 30 June declaring Lepidus and his followers public enemies, the letter is a status report from Rome to Cassius in the East. The Mutina settlement has collapsed: Lepidus, taking Antonius in after his flight, has reopened a war that was thought finished, and Cicero now hates him more bitterly than he hated Antonius — for Antonius kindled the war “out of a state already in turmoil,” Lepidus “out of peace and victory.” Word from Cassius’s camp on the Nones of May had persuaded everyone that Dolabella was crushed and Cassius on his way back to Italy with an army; Cicero writes to keep that expectation alive, to set out the political stakes, and to fix the rhetorical line — “we shall reckon that we have a state if we have you” — on which the season’s hope is to rest.