Sixth Philippic
Philippica VI
Headnote
The popular counterpart to the Fifth Philippic, delivered to the people in the Forum on 4 January 43 BC, three days after the great senatorial debate of the Kalends. The Senate had met on 1 January under the new consuls Aulus Hirtius and Gaius Vibius Pansa, in the temple of Concord, to take up the war against Antony. Cicero (Philippic 5) had argued for an immediate declaration of a tumultus, with iustitium and saga and a levy — the full apparatus of war — against Antony at Mutina. Quintus Fufius Calenus, the consular father-in-law of Pansa, had moved instead that legates be sent. The debate ran for three days; today, on 4 January, the Senate had at last carried the legation, sending Servius Sulpicius Rufus, Lucius Calpurnius Piso, and Lucius Marcius Philippus to Antony with the terms Antony was to obey: quit Mutina, quit Gaul, withdraw to within two hundred miles of Rome, submit himself to the will of the Senate and the Roman people. Cicero had lost his motion. The Sixth Philippic is the speech he gave the same day, in the Forum, to report to the people what had been decided and to explain why they should nevertheless not lose heart.
The shape is short — nineteen sections — and divided into three unequal parts. §1–9 are the report and the case against the legation: the matter has been decided, but less severely than was fitting, the war is delayed but not its cause removed (§1); the legation is in substance a notice of war, like the embassy the Senate once sent to Hannibal not to attack Saguntum (§4, 6); Antony will not obey, for he has never obeyed his own judgment, let alone anyone else’s (§4–5); the brigand- gladiator language of the Fourth Philippic is renewed (gladiator, §3; importunissima belua, §7); Decimus Brutus, the consul-elect now penned in Mutina, is the test — a Brutus born for liberty and not for his own leisure (§8–9). §10–15 turn aside into the catalogue of Lucius Antonius’s statues — the murmillo brother who is the Africanus of the Antonine inner circle — a sustained set-piece of public ridicule: the gilded equestrian statue erected by the thirty- five tribes inscribed To their patron from the thirty- five tribes (§12); the Forum statue, in front of the temple of Castor, beside that of Quintus Tremulus who conquered the Hernici (§13); the equestrian-order statue with its inscription to their patron (§13); the military-tribunes’ statue, set up by men who had served twice in Caesar’s army and to whom Antony had divided up the Semurium estate (§14); and the palmaris statue, the consummate one, by the moneylenders of the Middle Janus, inscribed To Lucius Antonius, from the Middle Janus, their patron (§15). Each is named by name, each ridiculed. The Trebellius section (§11) is the bridge: a man who took fides as his cognomen and lives by defrauding his creditors. §16–19 close with the hortatory turn: wait a few days for the legates to come back; when they bring back the inevitable report of Antony’s refusal, the case for war will be made for us; meanwhile the unanimity of the people, the Senate, the orders, the colonies, all Italy, is so great that no hour more can be delayed. The final word is libertas: Other nations can bear slavery; liberty belongs to the Roman people by right.
The register is the register of the contio: shorter periods than the senatorial debate, named persons named, jokes told (the Trebellius O fides!, the imagined moneylender of the Middle Janus, the Mylasa murmillo cutting his friend’s throat), the structural drumbeat of Quirites sustained through almost every section. The speech runs throughout on the tension between what Cicero proposed in the Senate and what the Senate carried: minus severe quam decuit, non tamen omnino dissolute (§1) is the controlled, slightly bitter judgment that opens the speech and is restated at §7 (non omnino dissolutum est quod decrevit senatus: habet atrocitatis aliquid legatio: utinam nihil haberet morae). Cicero is making the best of a compromise he opposed; the report to the people is also a holding action — a few days only, the cloaks will be put on, the war will come, and meanwhile the man being notified is precisely the man who will not be notified.
The legation in fact returned almost at once. Servius Sulpicius Rufus, the great jurist, died on the road; Piso and Philippus reached Antony and were rebuffed — Antony added his own counter-demands (consular province of Further Gaul, the veteran lands, immunity for his acts) and refused the Senate’s terms. By 2 February the legates were back; on 3 February the Senate, addressed by Cicero in the Eighth Philippic, finally decreed tumultus. The drum-rhythm Cicero set going in this contio — a few days, then the cloaks — played out exactly as he had told the people it would.