Letter 2.11

Marcus Tullius CiceroMarcus Caelius Rufus|c. 50 BC|Cicero|From Rome|To Rome|AI-assisted

Would you ever have thought it possible that words could fail me - not only those grand oratorical words of yours, but even my own light everyday language? Yet they do fail me, and for this reason: I am wonderfully anxious about what will be decreed concerning the provinces.

A strange longing for Rome holds me, an incredible longing for my people, and especially for you. I am also tired of the province: perhaps because I seem to have gained such a reputation that I should fear a change of fortune rather than seek any addition to it; perhaps because the whole business is beneath my powers, since I can and usually do bear greater burdens in the republic; perhaps because the fear of a great war hangs over us, and I seem likely to escape it if I leave on the appointed day.

As for the panthers, I have carefully set the usual hunters to work under my orders. But there is a remarkable scarcity of them, and the ones that exist are said to complain bitterly that in my province no traps are being set for anyone except them. So they are reportedly planning to leave our province for Caria. Still, the work is being pressed diligently, especially by Patiscus. Whatever there is will be yours; but I frankly do not know what there will be.

By Hercules, your aedileship is a great concern to me. The day itself reminded me, since I write this on the very day of the Megalensia [a Roman festival with public games].

Please write to me in the fullest detail about the whole condition of the republic. What I learn from you I will regard as the most reliable information I have.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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

XI. M. CICERO IMP. S. D. M. CAELIO AEDILI CURULI Laodiceae; prid. Non. Apr. 50

Putaresne umquam accidere posse ut mihi verba deessent, neque solum ista vestra oratoria sed haec etiam levia nostratia? Desunt autem propter hanc causam quod mirifice sum sollicitus quidnam de provinciis decernatur. Mirum me desiderium tenet urbis, incredibile meorum atque in primis tui, satietas autem provinciae, vel quia videmur eam famam consecuti ut non tam accessio quaerenda quam fortuna metuenda sit vel quia totum negotium non est dignum viribus nostris, qui maiora onera in re publica sustinere et possim et soleam, vel quia belli magni timor impendet, quod videmur effugere si ad constitutam diem decedemus. De pantheris per eos qui venari solent agitur mandatu meo diligenter. Sed mira paucitas est, et eas quae sunt valde aiunt queri quod nihil cuiquam insidiarum in mea provincia nisi sibi fiat. Itaque constituisse dicuntur in Cariam ex nostra provincia decedere. Sed tamen sedulo fit et in primis a Patisco. Quicquid erit, tibi erit; sed quid esset plane nesciebamus. Mihi mehercule magnae curae est aedilitas tua. Ipse dies me admonebat; scripsi enim haec ipsis Megalensibus. Tu velim ad me de omni rei publicae statu quam diligentissime perscribas; ea enim certissima putabo quae ex te cognoro.

Revision history

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

    Initial corpus import from modern cicero familiares book2 batch1 source aligned v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/fam2.shtml

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