Letter 8.8

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

Although I have political news to write to you, I have nothing that I think will please you more than this: Gaius Sempronius Rufus, your honey and delight, has been convicted of malicious prosecution to thunderous applause.

You ask, in what case? After the Roman Games, he brought a charge under the Plautian law on violence against Marcus Tuccius, his own accuser. His plan was this: he saw that if no extraordinary defendant were added, he himself would have to plead his case this year, and he had no doubt what the outcome would be. He preferred to confer this little favor on no one rather than on his own accuser. So he came down without any supporting prosecutor and indicted Tuccius.

As soon as I heard, I ran to the defendant's benches without being called. I stood up and said not one word about the case. I worked through Sempronius's whole character so thoroughly that I even brought in Vestorius and told the story of how, as a favor to you, he had given up anything Vestorius held by his wrongdoing.

Another great contest now occupies the forum. Marcus Servilius, after upsetting everything in his usual way, had left nothing that he would not sell to somebody and had been handed over to us under the greatest scandal. Laterensis the praetor refused, when Pausanias demanded it and we were defending Servilius, to receive a charge asking where the money had gone. Then Quintus Pilius, a close connection of our Atticus, brought a charge of extortion against him. Talk immediately rose high, and people began speaking hotly of conviction.

Driven by that wind, the younger Appius came forward to say that money from his father's property had reached Servilius, and claimed that 81,000 sesterces had been deposited for the sake of a collusive prosecution. You are amazed at the madness? You would be more amazed if you had heard his pleading and his confessions - utterly foolish about himself, shameful about his father.

He sent the matter to the same jurors who had assessed the damages. When the votes were equal, Laterensis, not knowing the laws, announced what each order of jurors had decided and at the end, as praetors usually do, said, "I will not collect it." After he left, and Servilius began to be treated as acquitted, Laterensis read the 101st clause of the law, which said: "Whatever the majority of those jurors has judged, let it be lawful and valid." He did not enter an acquittal in the records; he wrote out the judgments of the separate orders.

When Appius applied again, Laterensis consulted Lucius Lollius and said he would enter the record. So now Servilius, neither acquitted nor condemned, wounded in reputation, will be handed over to Pilius for extortion. For in the preliminary contest Appius, though he had sworn there was collusion, did not dare compete with Pilius and yielded to him. Appius himself has been charged with extortion by the Servilii, and besides that with violence by a certain emissary of his own, Sextus Tettius. The pair is well matched.

As for public affairs, for many days nothing at all was done because everyone was waiting on the Gallic provinces. At last, after the matter had often been postponed, seriously debated, and Pompey's will clearly seen to lean toward Caesar leaving after March 1, the decree of the senate that I sent you was passed, and the recorded opinions were written out.

I will not copy the formal decree here as ornament; you have the text itself. Its substance was that the new consuls should bring the consular provinces before the senate from March 1, that no other matter should take precedence, that no connected motion should be joined to it, and that the senate should meet even on assembly days for this purpose. It also recorded the senate's view that no one with veto power should block a motion on the republic, and that if anyone did so, the obstruction should be treated as contrary to the republic. Some tribunes vetoed these decrees.

Pompey's remarks were what most gave people confidence. He said he could not settle anything about Caesar's provinces before March 1 without injustice, but after March 1 he would not hesitate. When asked what if someone then vetoed, he said it made no difference whether Caesar himself refused to obey the senate or prepared someone else to prevent the senate from making a decree. Someone else asked, "What if he wants both to be consul and to keep his army?" Pompey answered, with such mildness: "What if my son wants to strike me with a stick?"

With words like these he made people think that he had a real dispute with Caesar. So, as I see it, Caesar now wants to come down to one of two terms: either he remains and is not considered for the consulship this year, or, if he can be elected, he leaves. Curio is preparing to oppose him entirely. What he can accomplish I do not know. I do see this: if his judgment is sound, even if he accomplishes nothing, he cannot fall.

Curio treats me generously and has laid a burden on me by his gift. If he had not given me the African beasts brought for his games, I might have let the matter pass. Now, since I must give games, please make it your concern, as I have always asked, that we get some animals from your region. I also commend Sittius's bond to you. I have sent my freedman Philo and the Greek Diogenes to you with instructions and letters. I want you to take care of them and of the business for which I sent them, for in the letters they will deliver I have written how deeply it matters to me.

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

VIII. Scr. Romae ineunte mense Octobri a.u.c. 703. CAELIUS CICERONI SAL.

Etsi, de re publica quae tibi scribam, habeo, tamen nihil, quod magis gavisurum te putem, habeo quam hoc: scito C. Sempronium Rufum, mel ac delicias tuas, calumniam maximo plausu tulisse. Quaeris: "qua in causa?" M. Tuccium, accusatorem suum, post ludos Romanos reum lege Plotia de vi recit hoc consilio, quod videbat, si extraordinarius reus nemo accessisset, sibi hoc anno causam esse dicendam; dubium porro illi non erat, quid futurum esset. Nemini hoc deferre munusculum maluit quam suo accusatori: itaque sine ullo subscriptore descendit et Tuccium reum fecit. At ego, simulatque audivi, invocatus ad subsellia rei occurro; surgo neque verbum de re facio: totum Sempronium usque eo perago, ut Vestorium quoque interponam et illam fabulam narrem, quemadmodum tibi pro beneficio dederit, si quid iniuria ipsius esset, ut Vestorius teneret. Haec quoque magna nunc contentio forum tenet: M. Servilius postquam, ut coeperat, omnibus in rebus turbarat nec, quod non venderet cuipiam, reliquerat maximaque nobis traditus erat invidia, neque Laterensis praetor postulante Pausania, nobis patronis, QUO EA PECUNIA PERVENISSET, recipere voluit, Q. Pilius, necessarius Attici nostri, de repetundis eum postulavit: magno illico fama surrexit et de damnatione ferventer loqui est coeptum. Quo vento proiicitur Appius minor, ut indicaret pecuniam ex bonis patris pervenisse ad Servilium praevaricationisque causa diceret depositum HS. LXXXI. Admiraris amentiam: immo, si actionem stultissimasque de se, nefarias de patre confessiones audisses. Mittit in consilium eosdem illos, qui lites aestimarant iudices. Cum aequo numero sententiae fuissent, Laterensis leges ignorans pronuntiavit, quid singuli ordines iudicassent, et ad extremum, ut solent, NON REDIGAM. Postquam discessit et pro absoluto Servilius haberi coeptus est legisque unum et centesimum caput legit, in quo ita erat: QUOD EORVM IVDICVM MAIOR PARS IVDICARIT, ID IVS RATVMQVE ESTO, in tabulas absolutum non rettulit, ordinum iudicia perscripsit; postulante rursus Appio cum L. Lollio transegit et se relaturum dixit. Sic nunc neque absolutus neque damnatus Servilius de repetundis saucius Pilio tradetur; nam de divinatione Appius, cum calumniam iurasset, contendere ausus non est Pilioque cessit, et ipse de pecuniis repetundis a Serviliis est postulatus et praeterea de vi reus a quodam suo emissario, Sex. Tettio, factus. Recte hoc par habet. Quod ad rem publicam pertinet, omnino multis diebus exspectatione Galliarum actum nihil est; aliquando tamen saepe re dilata et graviter acta et plane perspecta Cn. Pompeii voluntate in eam partem, ut eum decedere post Kalendas Martias placeret, senatus consultum, quod tibi misi, factum est auctoritatesque perscriptae. S. C. AUCTORITATESQ. Pr.[idie] Kal. Octobres in aede Apollinis scrib. affuerunt L. Domitius Cn. f. Fab. Ahenobarbus, Q. Caecilius Q. f. Fab. Metellus Pius Scipio, L. Villius L. F. Pom. Annalis, C. Septimius T. f. Quirina, C. Lucilius C. f. Pup. Hirrus, C. Scribonius C. f. Pop. Curio, L. Ateius L. f. An. Capito, M. Eppius M. f. Ter. Quod M. Marcellus cos. v.[erba] f.[ecit] de provinciis consularibus, d. e. r. i. c., uti L. Paullus C. Marcellus coss., cum magistratum inissent, ex Kal. Mart., quae in suo magistratu futurae essent, de consularibus provinciis ad senatum referrent, neve quid prius ex Kal. Mart. ad senatum referrent, neve quid coniunctim de ea re referretur a consulibus, utique eius rei causa per dies comitiales senatum haberent senatusque cons. facerent, et, cum de ea re ad senatum referretur a consulibus, qui eorum in CCC. iudicibus essent, ses adducere liceret; si quid de ea re ad populum plebemve lato opus esset, uti Ser. Sulpicius M. Marcellus coss., praetores tribunique pl., quibus eorum videretur, ad populum plebemve ferrent; quod ii non tulissent, uti, quicumque deinceps essent, ad populum plebemve ferrent. I.N. [Intercessit nemo.] Pr. Kal. Octobres in aede Apollinis scrib. affuerunt L. Domitius Cn. f. Fab. Ahenobarbus, Q. Caecilius Q. f. Fab. Metellus Pius Scipio, L. Villius L. f. Pom. Annalis, C. Septimius T. f. Quirina, C. Lucilius C. f. Pup. Hirrus, C. Scribonius C. f. Pop. Curio, L. Ateius L. f. An. Capito, M. Eppius M. f. Terentina. Quod M. Marcellus cos. v. f. de provinciis, d. e. r. i. c., senatum existimare neminem eorum, qui potestatem habent intercedendi impediendi, moram afferre oportere, quo minus de. r. p. p. r. q. [re publica populi Romani quam primum -- per Loeb] ad senatum referri senatique consultum fieri possit: qui impedierit prohibuerit, eum senatum existimare contra rem publicam fecisse; si quis huic s. c. intercesserit, senatui placere auctoritatem perscribi et de ea re ad senatum populumque referri. Huic s. c. intercessit C. Caelius, L. Vinicius, P. Cornelius, C. Vibius Pansa, tribuni pl. Item senatui placere de militibus, qui in exercitu C. Caesaris sunt, qui eorum stipendia emerita aut causas, quibus de causis missi fieri debeant, habeant, ad hunc ordinem referri, ut eorum ratio habeatur causaeque cognoscantur; si quis huic s. c. intercessisset, senatui placere auctoritatem perscribi et de ea re ad hunc ordinem referri. Huic s. c. intercessit C. Caelius, C. Pansa, tribuni pl. Itemque senatui placere in Ciliciam provinciam, in VIII reliquas provincias, quas praetorii pro praetore obtin[er]ent, eos, qui praetores fuerunt neque in provincias cum imperio iverunt, quos eorum ex s. c. cum imperio in provincias pro praetore mitti oporteret, eos sortito in provincias mitti placere; si ex eo numero, quos ex s. c. in provincias ire oporteret, ad numerum non essent, qui in eas provincias proficiscerentur, tum, uti quodque collegium primum praetorum fuisset neque in provincias profecti essent, ita sorte in provincias proficiscerentur; si ii ad numerum non essent, tunc deinceps, proximi cuiusque collegii qui praetores fuissent neque in provincias profecti essent, in sortem coniicerentur, quoad is numerus effectus esset, quem ad numerum in provincias mitti oporteret; si quis huic s. c. intercessisset, auctoritas perscriberetur. Huic s. c. intercessit C. Caelius, C. Pansa, tribuni pl. Illa praeterea Cn. Pompeii sunt animadversa, quae maxime confidentiam attulerunt hominibus, ut diceret se ante Kal. Martias non posse sine iniuria de provinciis Caesaris statuere, post Kal. Martias se non dubitaturum; cum interrogaretur, "si qui tum intercederent," dixit hoc nihil interesse, utrum Caesar senatui dicto audiens futurus non esset an pararet, qui senatum decernere non pateretur; "quid, si," inquit alius, "et consul esse et exercitum habere volet?" at ille quam clementer: "quid, si filius meus fustum mihi impingere volet?" His vocibus, ut existimarent homines Pompeio cum Caesare esse negotium, effecit; itaque iam, ut video, alteram utram ad condicionem descendere vult Caesar, ut aut maneat neque hoc anno sua ratio habeatur aut, si designari poterit, decedat. Curio se contra eum totum parat: quid assequi possit, nescio; illud video, bene sentientem, etsi nihil effecerit, cadere non posse. Me tractat liberaliter Curio et mihi suo munere negotium imposuit; nam, si mihi non dedisset eas, quae ad ludos ei advectae erant Africanae, potuit supersedere; nunc, quoniam dare necesse est, velim tibi curae sit, quod a te semper petii, ut aliquid istinc bestiarum habeamus. Sittianamque syngrapham tibi commendo; libertum Philonem istuc misi et Diogenem Graecum, quibus mandata et litteras ad te dedi: eos tibi et rem, de qua misi, velim curae habeas; nam, quam vehementer ad me pertineat, in iis, quas tibi illi reddent, litteris perscripsi.

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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