Ad Familiares 12.30
Ad Familiares 12.30
Headnote
Cicero to Q. Cornificius, proconsul of Africa Vetus, from Rome a little after 9 June 43 BC — Perseus dateline Scr. Romae paulo post v Id. Iun. a. 711 (43). A long reply in mixed mood — affectionate, ironic, harried. Cornificius had reproached Cicero for sending no letter that was not carried by a litigant; Cicero answers with a half-amused defence (“which of your people ever told me there was someone, that I did not entrust him with a letter?”) before turning serious: the load on him has grown heavier, not lighter, since the supposed victory — the war “beaten down and almost done away with” has risen afresh. Chaerippus’s recent visit has carried Cornificius’s whole vultus to him, face and voice both. Practical business follows: Cicero cannot help with the African command’s military expenses because both consuls are dead and the treasury is being scraped bare to pay the legions promised their bonuses (a tributum will be needed); he yields nothing on P. Lucceius’s case but the arbiters’ oath blocks postponement; and he gently corrects Cornificius for stripping his own legates of their lictors in order to make a parallel humiliation feel less pointed — “men worthy of honour were not to be compared with men worthy of disgrace.” The letter closes on the register of dignitas: his own is no dearer to him than Cornificius’s.