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  • ingly intimate, and his own misfortune affected me as that

of a man most closely united to me by mutual interests and good services of every kind was bound to do. I ask with all my might as a favour from you—with an earnestness indeed and heartfelt anxiety beyond which I cannot go in asking anything—that you would allow a letter from me to add a finishing stroke to what, without anyone's recommendation you would have spontaneously done for a man of such high and noble character, labouring under so heavy a calamity. Let it induce you to be even more zealous in assisting him in whatever ways you may have the power of doing so. If you had been at Rome, we should—as I think —have even secured Aulus Cæcina's recall by your assistance. Of this, after all, I still have a strong hope, relying on the forgiving nature of your colleague[1]. For the present, as in reliance on your sense of justice he has concluded your province to be his safest harbour of refuge, I beg and beseech you again and again to assist him in collecting the remnants of his old business, and to protect and watch over him in all other matters. You can do nothing that will oblige me more.



DV (F XIII, 67)

TO P. SERVILIUS VATIA ISAURICUS (IN ASIA)

Rome


In all my province of Cilicia, to which, as you know, were joined three Asiatic dioceses[2], I was not more intimate with anyone than with Andron, son of Artemon, of Laodicæ, and in that city I regarded him both as a guest and as a man eminently adapted to my way of life and habits. I learnt, indeed, to value him at a much higher rate, after I left the

  1. Cæsar had been a colleague of Servilius's in the consulship of B.C. 49. They were also both members of the college of augurs. See ante p. 108.
  2. Cibyra, Apamea, Synnada. See vol. ii., p. 70.