Letter 10.16

Marcus Tullius CiceroLucius Munatius Plancus|c. 43 BC|Cicero|From Rome|To Gaul|AI-assisted

I have never, in living memory, seen anything more glorious, more welcome, or more perfectly timed than your letter, Plancus. It was delivered to Cornutus in a crowded Senate just after he had read a very cold and wavering letter from Lepidus. Yours was read immediately afterward, and not without loud applause. It was deeply welcome for the facts themselves, and for the zeal and services to the republic that it showed; but it was also weighty in its language and judgment.

The Senate began demanding that Cornutus put a motion at once about your letter. He said he wanted time to consider. When the whole Senate shouted him down, five tribunes of the plebs brought the matter forward. Servilius, when asked his opinion, postponed the issue. I then gave the opinion to which every single senator agreed. You will learn what it was from the decree itself.

As for you, though you do not lack judgment, indeed you have more than enough, you must hold this attitude: refer nothing back here, and do not think that in events so sudden and so urgent you must ask the Senate for advice. Be your own Senate. Follow wherever the republic's interest leads you. See to it that we hear you have already done something brilliant before we had even imagined it was about to happen.

I promise you this: whatever you do, the Senate will approve it not merely as loyally done, but as wisely done.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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

XVI. Scr. Romae mense Iunio (circ. Nonas) a.u.c. 711. CICERO PLANCO.

Nihil post hominum memoriam gloriosius, nihil gratius, ne tempore quidem ipso opportunius accidere vidi quam tuas, Plance, litteras; redditae sunt enim frequenti senatu Cornuto, cum is frigidas sane et inconstantes recitasset litteras Lepidi; sub eas statim recitatae sunt tuae, non sine magnis quidem clamoribus; cum rebus enim ipsis essent et studiis beneficiisque in rem publicam gratissimae, tum erant gravissimis verbis ac sententiis. Flagitare senatus institit Cornutum, ut referret statim de tuis litteris; ille se considerare velle. Cum ei magnum convicium fieret cuncto a senatu, quinque tribuni plebi rettulerunt. Servilius rogatus rem distulit; ego eam sententiam dixi, cui sunt assensi omnes ad unum: ea quae fuerit, ex senatus consulto cognosces. Tu. quamquam consilio non eges vel abundas potius, tamen hoc animo esse debes, ut nihil huc reiicias neve in rebus tam subitis tamque angustis a senatu consilium petendum putes, ipse tibi sis senatus, quocumque te ratio rei publicae ducet, sequare, cures, ut ante factum aliquid a te egregium audiamus, quam futurum putarimus. Illud tibi promitto, quidquid erit a te factum, id senatum non modo ut fideliter, sed etiam ut sapienter factum comprobaturum.

Revision history

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

    Initial corpus import from modern cicero familiares book10 batch3 topostext latin v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/fam10.shtml

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