Ad Familiares 12.23
Ad Familiares 12.23
Headnote
Cicero to Q. Cornificius (governor of Africa Vetus), from Rome a little after 9 October 44 BC — Perseus dateline Scr. Romae paulo post vii id. Oct. a. 710 (44). Cornificius’s agent Tratorius has been in Rome and has briefed Cicero on the troubles of the African province; in return Cicero sends back the news that matters most — Octavian’s first move into open politics, and Antonius’s departure for Brundisium to court the four Macedonian legions.
The letter is precious as a snapshot of Cicero’s mind in the weeks before the First Philippic’s open break. The young Caesar is sized up with cautious enthusiasm (“there is nothing one cannot expect him to do for the sake of praise and glory”) — still optimism, before the discounts of 43 BC. Antonius, called by the heavy irony “our familiar friend,” is already isolated and dangerous. Cicero ends, characteristically, with a recommendation to philosophy as the armor for what is coming — and with the line he repeats throughout this sequence, that to bear an evil well is not to leave it unavenged.