Ad Familiares 13.7
Ad Familiares 13.7
Headnote
Cicero to Gaius Cluvius, written from Rome not before mid-October 45 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr.\ Romae non ante med.\ m.\ Oct.\ a.\ 708 [709] (45)). Cluvius, on his way to Gaul on a Caesarian land commission, had stopped at Cicero’s house before leaving and heard him out on the matter; this letter is the follow-up in writing, after the question had come to a head in his absence.
At stake is the public revenue of the township of Atella in Campania, which drew its income from tax-paying land held in Cisalpine Gaul. If that land was reallocated to Caesarian veterans, Atella’s exchequer would collapse. Cicero, with characteristic delicacy, is careful to define what he is and is not asking: he acknowledges that Cluvius has a commission from Caesar, not a free hand (negotium datum esse a C. Caesare, non iudicium), and so does not ask him to decide the question in Atella’s favour — only to keep it intact and reserved for Caesar himself, against whom Cicero feels he has a real chance. The leverage he cites is precedent: Cluvius has already done the same for the men of Rhegium, on grounds of personal connection, and the same favour ought to flow to those whose connection runs through Cicero. The signature feature of the letter is its closing tricolon of insurance — if Caesar grants, Cluvius will have earned the credit; if Caesar denies, the effort still counts as service rendered.