Letter 14.14

Marcus Tullius CiceroTerentia|c. 53 BC|Cicero|From Rome|To Rome|AI-assisted

If you are well, we are well. It is now for you to decide, not only for me, what you ought to do. If Caesar is going to come to Rome peaceably, you can stay at home safely for the present. But if that madman is going to give the city over to plunder, I fear even Dolabella himself may not be able to help us enough.

I also fear that we may be cut off, so that when you want to leave, you will not be allowed. One question remains, which you yourselves will consider best: are women like you staying at Rome? If not, you must consider whether you can honorably remain there. As things now stand, provided only that I am allowed to hold these places, you will be able to stay very comfortably either with me or on our estates. Another thing to fear is that before long there may be famine in the city.

Please consider these matters with Pomponius, with Camillus, and with anyone else you think suitable. Above all, be brave. Labienus has improved the situation; Piso also helps by leaving the city and condemning his son-in-law's crime. My dearest souls, write to me as often as possible, both what you are doing and what is happening there. Quintus, his son, and Rufus send greetings. 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AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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

XIV. Scr. Minturnis VIII. Kalendas Februarias a.u.c. 705. TULLIUS TERENTIAE ET PATER TULLIAE, DUABUS ANIMIS SUIS, ET CICERO MATRI OPTIMAE, SUAVISSIMAE SORORI S. P. D.

Si vos valetis, nos valemus. Vestrum iam consilium est, non solum meum, quid sit vobis faciendum. Si ille Romam modeste venturus est , recte in praesentia domi esse potestis; sin homo amens diripiendam urbem daturus est, vereor, ut Dolabella ipse satis nobis prodesse possit. Etiam illud metuo, ne iam intercludamur, ut, cum velitis exire, non liceat. Reliquum est, quod ipsae optime considerabitis, vestri similes feminae sintne Romae; si enim non sunt, videndum est, ut honeste vos esse possitis. Quomodo quidem nunc se res habet, modo ut haec nobis loca tenere liceat, bellissime vel mecum vel in nostris praediis esse poteritis. Etiam illud verendum est, ne brevi tempore fames in urbe sit. His de rebus velim cum Pomponio, cum Camillo, cum quibus vobis videbitur, consideretis, ad summam animo forti sitis: Labienus rem meliorem fecit; adiuvat etiam Piso, quod ab urbe discedit et sceleris condemnat generum suum. Vos, meae carissimae animae, quam saepissime ad me scribite, et vos quid agatis et quid istic agatur. Quintus pater et filius et Rufus vobis s. d. Valete. VIII Kal. Minturnis.

Revision history

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

    Initial corpus import from modern cicero familiares cleanup batch1 topostext latin v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/fam14.shtml

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