ROME (SEPTEMBER)
I AM afraid you may think me remiss in my attentions to you,which,in view of our close union resulting from many mutual services and kindred tastes,ought never to be lacking.In spite of that I fear you do find me wanting in the matter of writing.The fact is,I would have sent you a letter long ago and on frequent occasions,had I not,from expecting day after day to have sonic better news for you,wished to fill my letter with congratulation rather than with exhortations to courage.As it is,I shall shortly,Ihope,have to congratulate you:and so I put off that subject for a letter to another time.But imi this letter I think that your courage--which I am told and hope is not at all shaken--ought to be repeatedly braced by the authority of a man,who,if not the wisest in the world,is yet the most devoted to you:and that not with such words as I should use to console one utterly crushed and bereft of all hope of restoration,but as to one of whose rehabilitation I have no more doubt than I remember that you had of mine.For when those men had driven me from the Republic,who thought that it could not fall while I was on my feet,I remember hearing from many visitors from Asia,in which country you then were,that you were emphatic as to my glorious and rapid restoration.If that system,so to speak,of Tuscan augury which you had inherited from your noble and excellent father did not deceive you,neither will our power of divination deceive me;which I have acquired from the writings and maxims of the greatest savants,and,as you know,by a very diligent study of their teaching,as well as by an extensive experience in managing public business,and from the great vicissitudes of fortune which I have encountered.And this divination I am the more inclined to trust,from the fact that it never once deceived me in the late troubles,in spite of their obscurity and confusion.I would have told you what events Iforetold,were I not afraid to be thought to be making up a story after the event Yet,after all,I have numberless witnesses to the fact that I warned Pompey not to form a union with Caesar,and afterwards not to sever it.By this union I saw that the power of the senate would be broken,by its severance a civil war be provoked.