Ad Familiares 13.29
Ad Familiares 13.29
Headnote
Cicero to Lucius Munatius Plancus, written from Rome late in 47 BC or at the beginning of 46 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr. Romae vel ex. a. 707 (47) vel in. a. 708 (46)). Plancus, son of Cicero’s old friend Lucius Munatius Plancus the elder, was at this date a partisan of Caesar’s — he would shortly be governor of one of the Gauls — though the suppleness of allegiance that defines his later career is already visible in the way Cicero approaches him here: as a younger man with influence at Caesar’s ear, and one whose patronage Cicero is prepared to draw on.
This is no formulaic commendaticia but a sustained letter of recommendation, framed by an unusually long personal preamble about the inherited tie between the two families and their shared literary interests. The beneficiary is Gaius Ateius Capito, a close friend who stood by Cicero through the political reversals of the 50s and the civil war, and what Cicero is asking for is substantive: that Plancus, using Caesar’s favour, secure for Capito the inheritance of his kinsman Titus Antistius. The body of the letter is a careful exoneration of Antistius’s conduct in Macedonia — caught by Pompey’s arrival as quaestor, he had no real choice; he kept aloof from the camp, hid himself in the interior, was treated mildly by Caesar after Pharsalus, and died of illness on his way back to Rome. Sect.~7 contains Cicero’s own discreet but pointed self-defence about his conduct during the war: that he behaved more moderately on Pompey’s side than anyone else thanks largely to Capito’s counsel, a remark that also serves the recommendation. The closing tier-marker — “in such terms as I could press no other claim with greater care or greater earnestness” — is among the warmest formulae of the genre.