Letter 10.26

Marcus Tullius CiceroGaius Furnius|c. 43 BC|Cicero|From Rome|To Gaul|AI-assisted

After reading your letter, in which you made clear that either the Narbonese must be abandoned or a dangerous battle must be fought, I feared the first course more; and I am glad it has been avoided. As for what you write about the harmony between Plancus and Brutus, that is where I place my greatest hope of victory. As you say, we shall one day know whose efforts did the most to stir up the loyalty of the Gauls; but believe me, we know it already.

So, after finding your letter extremely pleasant, I was irritated by its ending. You write that if the elections are in August you will hurry back, and if they are already over you will come even sooner, so that you will not be "a fool in danger" any longer. My dear Furnius, how little you understand your own case, you who learn other people's cases so easily! Do you now think of yourself as a candidate, and is this what you are planning: either to run back for the elections, or, if they are already over, to be at home, so that you are not, as you write, the biggest fool alive and in the greatest danger?

I do not think that is truly how you feel, for I know all your impulses toward glory. But if you do feel as you write, I criticize my own judgment about you no less than I criticize you. Will a premature rush toward a very slight and very ordinary magistracy, if you win it in the same way most men do, draw you away from such great glory, for which everyone rightly and sincerely praises you to the skies?

Of course the question is whether you become praetor in this election or the next, not whether you serve the republic in such a way that you are judged most worthy of every honor. Do you not know how high you have climbed, or do you count it as nothing? If you do not know, I forgive you; the fault is ours. But if you do understand it, is any praetorship sweeter to you than duty, which few pursue, or glory, which everyone pursues?

On this point I and Calvisius, a man of great judgment and deeply attached to you, accuse you every day. The elections, however, since you are hanging on them, we are doing what we can to push into January, because we think that useful to the republic for many reasons. So win, and farewell.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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

XXVI. Scr. Romae mense Iunio (post Id.) a.u.c. 711. M. CICERO S. D. C. FURNIO.

Lectis tuis litteris, quibus declarabas aut omittendos Narbonenses aut cum periculo dimicandum, illud magis timui; quod vitatum non moleste fero. Quod de Planci et Bruti concordia scribis, in eo vel maximam spem pono victoriae. De Gallorum studio nos aliquando cognoscemus, ut scribis, cuius id opera maxime excitatum sit; sed iam, mihi crede, cognovimus. Itaque iucudissimis tuis litteris stomachatus sum in extremo; scribis enim, si in Sextilem comitia, cito te, sin iam confecta, citius, ne diutius cum periculo fatuus sis. O mi Furni, quam tu tuam causam non nosti, qui alienas tam facile discas! Tu nunc candidatum te putas et id cogitas, ut aut ad comitia curras aut, si iam confecta, domi tuae sis, ne cum maximo periculo, ut scribis, stultissimus sis? Non arbitror te ita sentire; omnes enim tuos ad laudem impetus novi: quod si, ut scribis, ita sentis, non magis te quam de te iudicium reprehendo meum. Te adipiscendi magistratus levissimi et divulgatissimi, si ita adipiscare, ut plerique, praepropera festinatio abducet a tantis laudibus, quibus te omnes in caelum iure et vere ferunt? Scilicet ad agitur, utrum hac petitione an proxima praetor fias, non ut ita de re publica mereare, omni honore ut dignissimus iudicere. Utrum nescis, quam alte ascenderis, an pro nihilo id putas? si nescis, tibi ignosco, nos in culpa sumus; sin intelligis, ulla tibi est praetura vel officio, quod pauci, vel gloria, quam omnes sequuntur, dulcior? Hac de re et ego et Calvisius, homo magni iudicii tuique amantissimus, te accusamus quotidie. Comitia tamen, quoniam ex iis pendes, quantum facere possumus, quod multis de causis rei publicae arbitramur conducere, in Ianuarium mensem protrudimus. Vince igitur et vale.

Revision history

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

    Initial corpus import from modern cicero familiares book10 batch4 topostext latin v1.

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

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