Letter 2

Marcus Tullius CiceroTitus Pomponius Atticus|c. 66 BC|Cicero|From Rome|To Rome/Athens|AI-assisted

Know that, in the consulship of Lucius Julius Caesar and Gaius Marcius Figulus, I have been blessed with a little son, and that Terentia is well. From you, for so long, not a line of writing! I have written to you carefully before about my own affairs. At this time we are thinking of defending Catiline, our rival candidate. We have the jurors we want, with the full goodwill of the prosecutor. I hope that, if he is acquitted, he will be more closely joined to us in the matter of the canvass; but if it should turn out otherwise, we shall bear it with good grace. We have need of your arrival in good time; for there is absolutely a very strong general opinion that your friends, men of noble rank, will be opposed to my candidacy for office. To win over their goodwill toward me, I see that you will be of the greatest use to me. Therefore, in the month of January, as you have determined, see to it that you are at Rome.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.

Latin / Greek Original

L. Iulio Caesare, C. Marcio Figulo consulibus filiolo me auctum scito salva Terentia. Abs te tam diu nihil litterarum! Ego de meis ad te rationibus scripsi antea diligenter. hoc tempore Catilinam, competitorem nostrum, defendere cogitamus. Iudices habemus, quos volumus, summa accusatoris voluntate. Spero, si absolutus erit, coniunctiorem illum nobis fore in ratione petitionis; sin aliter acciderit, humaniter feremus. Tuo adventu nobis opus est maturo; nam prorsus summa hominum est opinio tuos familiares nobiles homines adversarios honori nostro fore. Ad eorum voluntatem mihi conciliandam maximo te mihi usui fore video. Quare Ianuario mense, ut constituisti, cura ut Romae sis.

Revision history

  1. 2026-05-27v2.2.34-import

    Initial corpus import from modern cicero atticus retranslated v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/att1.shtml

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