Letter 7.19

Marcus Tullius CiceroGaius Trebatius Testa|c. 49 BC|Cicero|From Rome|To Gaul|AI-assisted

See how much you count with me - and rightly, since I do not surpass you in affection. What I almost refused you when you were present, or at least had not given you, I could not bear to owe you when you were absent.

So, as soon as I began sailing from Velia, prompted by that city which loves you so warmly, I began writing out Aristotle's Topics. I send you the book, written at Rhegium, in as clear a form as the subject allowed. If some parts seem rather obscure, you should remember that no art can be grasped from books without an interpreter and some practice.

You need not go far for an example. Can your civil law be learned from books? Although there are many of them, it still requires a teacher and practical use. Still, if you read attentively and often, you will master everything by yourself at least well enough to understand it. But for the topical arguments themselves to occur to you when a question is proposed, you will gain that only through practice. I will keep you to that practice, if I return safely and find things safe there.

July 28, Rhegium.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed.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

XIX. Scr. Regii V. Kal. Sextili. a.u.c. 710. CICERO TREBATIO SAL.

Vide, quanti apud me sis; etsi iure id quidem, non enim te amore vinco; verumtamen, quod praesenti tibi prope subnegaram, non tribueram certe, id absenti debere non potui; itaque, ut primum Velia navigare coepi, institui Topica Aristotela conscribere ab ipsa urbe commonitus amantissima tui: eum librum tibi misi Regio scriptum, quam planissime res illa scribi potuit; sin tibi quaedam videbuntur obscuriora, cogitare debebis nullam artem litteris sine interprete et sine aliqua exercitatione percipi posse. Non longe abieris: num ius civile vestrum ex libris cognosci potest? qui quamquam plurimi sunt, doctorem tamen usumque desiderant: quamquam tu, si attente leges, si saepius, per te omnia consequere ut certe intelligas; ut vero etiam ipsi tibi loci proposita quaestione occurrant, exercitatione consequere, in qua quidem nos te continebimus, si et salvi redierimus et salva ista offenderimus. V. Kal. Sextil. Regio.

Revision history

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

    Initial corpus import from modern cicero familiares book7 batch1 source aligned v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/fam7.shtml

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