Letter 15.5

Marcus Porcius CatoMarcus Tullius Cicero|c. 47 BC|Cicero|From Rome|To Rome|AI-assisted

I gladly do what the republic and our friendship urge me to do: I rejoice that your virtue, integrity, and energy, already known at home in the greatest matters while you were a civilian, have been maintained abroad with the same careful discipline now that you hold military command.

Therefore, what I could conscientiously do, I did in speech and vote. I set out in praise that the province had been defended by your wisdom, that the kingdom of Ariobarzanes and the king himself had been preserved, and that the feelings of the allies had been won back to loyalty to our rule.

I am glad that a thanksgiving was decreed, if you prefer that we thank the gods rather than give you the credit for a success that was in no respect left to chance, but was secured for the republic by your own remarkable prudence and self-control. But if you think a thanksgiving creates a presumption in favor of a triumph, and therefore prefer fortune to receive the credit rather than yourself, remember that a triumph does not always follow a thanksgiving. It is a far brighter honor than a triumph for the senate to declare that a province was retained more by the uprightness and mildness of its governor than by the strength of an army or the favor of heaven. That is what I meant to express by my vote.

I write this at greater length than usual because I want above all for you to think that I have taken pains to convince you of two things: that I wished for you what I believed was most honorable, and that I am glad you obtained what you preferred.

Farewell. Continue to love me, and by the way you conduct your journey home, secure for the allies and the republic the benefits of your integrity and energy.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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

V. Scr. Romae inter Non. Mai. et Non. Iun. a.u.c. 704. M. CATO S. D. M. CICERONI IMP.

Quod et res publica me et nostra amicitia hortatur, libenter facio, ut tuam virtutem, innocentiam, diligentiam, cognitam in maximis rebus domi togati, armati foris pari industria administrari gaudeam: itaque, quod pro meo iudicio facere potui, ut innocentia consilioque tuo defensam provinciam, servatum Ariobarzanis cum ipso rege regnum, sociorum revocatam ad studium imperii nostri voluntatem sententia mea et decreto laudarem, feci. Supplicationem decretam, si tu, qua in re nihil fortuito, sed summa tua ratione et continentia rei publicae provisum est, dis immortalibus gratulari nos quam tibi referre acceptum mavis, gaudeo: quod si triumphi praerogativam putas supplicationem et idcirco casum potius quam te laudari mavis, neque supplicationem sequitur semper triumphus et triumpho multo clarius est senatum iudicare potius mansuetudine et innocentia imperatoris provinciam quam vi militum aut benignitate deorum retentam atque conservatam esse, quod ego mea sententia censebam. Atque haec ego idcirco ad te contra consuetudinem meam pluribus scripsi, ut, quod maxime volo, existimes me laborare, ut tibi persuadeam me et voluisse de tua maiestate, quod amplissimum sum arbitratus, et, quod tu maluisti, factum esse gaudere. Vale et nos dilige et instituto itinere severitatem diligentiamque sociis et rei publicae praesta.

Revision history

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

    Initial corpus import from modern cicero familiares book15 batch1 source aligned v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/fam15.shtml

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