Letter 6.2

Marcus Tullius CiceroAulus Manlius Torquatus|c. 48 BC|Cicero|From Rome|To Rome|Human translated

I ask you not to think that I write to you less often than I used to from any forgetfulness of you, but either because of the severity of my illness, from which I now seem to be somewhat recovering, or because I am away from the city, so that I cannot know who is setting out for where you are. I would therefore have you consider it settled that I hold you in remembrance with the deepest goodwill, and that all your affairs are no less a concern to me than my own. As to the fact that your case has been subject to greater uncertainty than people either wished or expected, believe me, given the evils of the times, there is nothing for you to take badly. For it is inevitable either that the republic be oppressed by perpetual arms, or that when these are laid aside it recover at some point, or that it perish utterly. If arms prevail, you need fear neither those by whom you are received nor those whom you aided. If the state recovers, whether through terms of peace, or exhaustion of arms, or the removal of arms by victory, you will be free to enjoy both your dignity and your fortunes. But if everything perishes entirely and that end comes which the most prudent Marcus Antonius was already fearing when he suspected that such great evils were at hand -- that consolation is wretched indeed, especially for such a citizen and man, but yet it is necessary: that no one should especially grieve at what befalls everyone. If you attend, as you do, to the force contained in these few words -- for more should not be entrusted to a letter -- you will surely understand, even without my writing, that you have something to hope for, nothing to fear in this or any condition of the republic; and if everything perishes, since you would not wish to survive the republic even if you could, you must bear your fortune, especially since it is free from blame. But enough of this. I would like you to write and tell me what you are doing and where you will be, so that I may know where to write or where to come.

Human translation - ToposText / Shuckburgh

Latin / Greek Original

II. Scr. Asturae mense Iunio aut Quinctili a.u.c. 709. M. CICERO S. D. A. TORQUATO

Peto a te, ne me putes oblivione tui rarius ad te scribere, quam solebam, sed aut gravitate valetudinis, qua tamen iam paullum videor levari, aut quod absim ab urbe, ut, qui ad te proficiscantur, scire non possim; quare velim ita statutum habeas, me tui memoriam cum summa benevolentia tenere tuasque omnes res non minori mihi curae quam meas esse. Quod maiore in varietate versata est adhuc tua causa, quam homines aut volebant aut opinabantur, mihi crede, non est pro malis temporum, quod moleste feras; necesse est enim aut armis urgeri rem publicam sempiternis aut iis positis recreari aliquando aut funditus interire: si arma valebunt, nec eos, a quibus reciperis, vereri debes nec eos, quos adiuvisti; si armis aut condicione positis aut defetigatione abiectis aut victoria detractis civitas respiraverit, et dignitate tua frui tibi et fortunis licebit; sin omnino interierint omnia fueritque is exitus, quem vir prudentissimus, M. Antonius, iam tum timebat, cum tantum instare malorum suspicabatur, misera est illa quidem consolatio, tali praesertim civi et viro, sed tamen necessaria, nihil esse praecipue cuiquam dolendum in eo, quod accidat universis. Quae vis insit in his paucis verbis—plura enim committenda epistulae non erant—, si attendes, quod facis, profecto etiam sine meis litteris intelliges te aliquid habere, quod speres, nihil, quod aut hoc aut aliquo rei publicae statu timeas; omnia si intererint, cum superstitem te esse rei publicae ne si liceat quidem velis, ferendam esse fortunam, praesertim quae absit a culpa. Sed haec hactenus: tu velim scribas ad me, quid agas et ubi futurus sis, ut aut quo scribam aut quo veniam scire possim.

Revision history

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

    Initial corpus import from ToposText / Shuckburgh.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/fam6.shtml

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