Ad Familiares 14.2
Ad Familiares 14.2
Headnote
Cicero to Terentia, Tullia, and the boy Marcus, written from Thessalonica on the third day before the Nones of October (5 October) 58 BC — the second surviving letter to the family from exile, after the Brundisium letter Fam. 14.4 of late April. The opening half is the bearing-up of his own grief through Tullia’s husband Piso, and the calculation about the new tribunes (Pompey willing, Crassus to be feared still). §2 carries one of the most painful incidents of the surviving correspondence: Cicero has just learned, through a letter from P. Valerius, that Terentia had been hauled from the precinct of Vesta to the bankers’ Tabula Valeria in the Forum — a public humiliation, possibly to make her account for property forfeit under the Clodian law. The line is Cicero’s: “you, my light, my heart’s longing, the one to whom all used to look for help.” §3 is the tug between his fear that Terentia will throw the last of her own dos into the cost of recovering the Palatine house, and his recognition that “everything is in you.” He begs her to spare her health.