Letter 8.14

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

Taking Arsaces prisoner and storming Seleucia were not worth missing the spectacle of what has happened here. Your eyes would never have hurt again if you had seen Domitius's face when he lost.

It was a great election, and party loyalties showed themselves plainly. Very few followed personal ties and did their duty. So Domitius is now my bitterest enemy; he hates no one even among his own friends as much as he hates me. All the more because he thinks the augurship was unfairly snatched from him, and that I was responsible.

Now he is furious that people rejoiced so much at his pain, and that I alone was more zealous for Antony. For Gnaeus Domitius himself has brought a charge against the young Gnaeus Saturninus, whose earlier life makes him quite unpopular. That trial is now awaited, and with good hope after the acquittal of Sextus Peducaeus.

About the highest affairs of state, I have often written to you that I see no peace for a year. The closer the inevitable conflict comes, the clearer that danger appears. This is the issue over which the men who hold power will fight: Gnaeus Pompey has decided not to allow Gaius Caesar to become consul unless Caesar first hands over his army and provinces; Caesar, for his part, is convinced that he cannot be safe if he leaves his army. Still, he offers this condition: that both men hand over their armies.

So that famous love and unpopular partnership has not slipped into hidden mutual criticism; it is breaking out into war. Nor can I find what plan I should take for my own affairs - and I do not doubt that this same uncertainty will trouble you too. I have both gratitude and close ties with these men; at the same time, I hate the cause, not the men.

This, I think, has not escaped you: in a domestic disagreement, as long as the contest is carried on civilly and without arms, men ought to follow the more honorable side. Once it comes to war and camps, they should follow the stronger side, and decide that the safer course is better.

In this dispute I see that Gnaeus Pompey will have the senate and those who judge public affairs with him. To Caesar will go everyone who lives with fear or with bad hopes. Their armies cannot be compared. Altogether, there is enough time to weigh the forces of both and choose a side.

I almost forgot what most needed writing. You know Appius the censor is doing wonders here: working fiercely over statues and pictures, the amount of land people hold, and debts? He is convinced that the censorship is soap or soda. I think he is wrong. He wants to wash off stains, but he is opening all his own veins and organs.

Run, by gods and men, and come as soon as possible to laugh at these things: a trial under the Scantinian law before Drusus, Appius busying himself with pictures and statues. Believe me, you must hurry.

Our Curio is thought to have acted wisely in what he conceded about Pompey's troop pay. In sum, you ask what I think will happen. Unless one of the two goes to the Parthian war, I see great discord hanging over us, which iron and force will decide. Both are ready in spirit and in resources. If it could happen without danger to you, Fortune was preparing a great and delightful spectacle.

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. Romae mense Septembri. a.u.c. 704. CAELIUS CICERONI SAL.

Tanti non fuit Arsacen capere et Seleuceam expugnare, ut earum rerum, quae hic gestae sunt, spectaculo careres: numquam tibi oculi doluissent, si in repulsa Domitii vultum vidisses. Magna illa comitia fuerunt et plane studia ex partium sensu apparuerunt: perpauci necessitudinem secuti officium praestiterunt. Itaque mihi est Domitius inimicissimus, ut ne familiarem quidem suum quemquam tam oderit quam me, atque eo magis, quod per iniuriam sibi putat ereptum auguratum, cuius ego auctor fuerim. Nunc furit tam gavisos homines suum dolorem unumque me studiosiorem Antonii: nam Cn. Saturninum adolescentem ipse Cn. Domitius reum fecit, sane quam superiore a vita invidiosum; quod iudicium nunc in exspectatione est, etiam in bone spe post Sex. Peducaei absolutionem. De summa re publica saepe tibi scripsi me ad annum pacem non videre, et, quo propius ea contentio, quam fieri necesse est, accedit eo clarius id periculum apparet. Propositum hoc est, de quo, qui rerum potiuntur, sunt dimicaturi, quod Cn. Pompeius constituit non pati C. Caesarem consulem aliter fieri, nisi exercitum et provincias tradiderit, Caesari autem persuasum est se salvum esse non posse, si ab exercitu recesserit; fert illam tamen condicionem, ut ambo exercitus tradant. Sic illi amores et invidiosa coniunctio non ad occultam recidit obtrectationem, sed ad bellum se erumpit. Neque, mearum rerum quid consilii capiam, reperio—quod non dubito quin te quoque haec deliberatio sit perturbatura—; nam mihi cum hominibus his et gratia et necessitudo; tum causam illam, non homines odi. Illud te non arbitror fugere, quin homines in dissensione domestica debeant, quamdiu civiliter sine armis certetur, honestiorem sequi partem, ubi ad bellum et castra ventum sit, firmiorem, et id melius statuere, quod tutius sit. In hac discordia video Cn. Pompeium senatum quique res iudicant secum habiturum, ad Caesarem omnes, qui cum timore aut mala spe vivant, accessuros; exercitum conferendum non esse. Omnino satis spatii est ad considerandas utriusque copias et eligendam partem. Prope oblitus sum, quod maxime fuit scribendum: scis Appium censorem hic ostenta facere: de signis et tabulis, de agri modo, de aere alieno acerrime agere? persuasum est ei censuram lomentum aut nitrum esse: errare mihi videtur; nam sordes eluere vult, venas sibi omnes et viscera aperit. Curre, per deos atque homines! et quam primum haec risum veni, legis Scantiniae iudicium apud Drusum fieri, Appium de tabulis et signis agere; crede mihi, est properandum. Curio noster sapienter id, quod remisit de stipendio Pompeii, fecisse existimatur. Ad summam, quaeris, quid putem futurum: si alteruter eorum ad Parthicum bellum non eat, video magnas impendere discordias, quas ferrum et vis iudicabit; uterque et animo et copiis est paratus. Si sine suo periculo fieri posset, magnum et iucundum tibi Fortuna spectaculum parabat.

Revision history

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

    Initial corpus import from modern cicero familiares book8 batch1 source aligned v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/fam8.shtml

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