Ad Atticum 1.18
Ad Atticum 1.18
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written at Rome on the eleventh day before the Kalends of February (22 January) 60 BC, in the consulship of Metellus Celer and Lucius Afranius. The most candid letter of the post-consular winter and one of the great expressions of Cicero’s domestic loneliness in the corpus. The opening paragraph is a single long sentence of want: “nothing is now so wanting to me as a man with whom I might share, for ever, all the things that affect me with any care”; “those ambitious and painted friendships are kept up in some forensic splendour: they have no domestic fruit.” Quintus is in Asia, Atticus in Epirus, the new consul Metellus is “no man but a shore, and air, and sheer solitude”; Cicero has only Terentia, Tullia, and “honey-sweet Cicero” (his small son Marcus) for company.
The political diagnosis (§2–3) is already the diagnosis of the post-Bona-Dea decade: “Roman matters can stand no longer.” The Clodian acquittal, the alienation of the equestrians from the senate, the new consul Afranius (Pompey’s man) “whom no one but us philosophers could look upon without a sigh,” the failure of any bribery law in the wake of the trial, the new tribune Herennius’s bill to transfer Clodius to the plebs (the procedural prelude to Clodius’s tribunate of 58 BC and Cicero’s exile). The famous tag of §6 is the public man — “can a public man, politikos an\=er, be found anywhere?” Pompey “guards in silence that little painted toga of his”; Crassus says no word against the popular favour; the rest are so foolish that they hope, with the commonwealth lost, that their fish-ponds will at least be safe (the famous piscinarii, the rich senators of the day whose chief political interest was their suburban estates).
One man only “cares, by steadiness and integrity rather than counsel or talent”: Cato, who is at this moment engaged in destroying Cicero’s policy from the opposite flank by harassing the publicans Cicero had saved in December (Att 1.17), and refusing to let the senate transact other business until the publicans’ case is settled. The closing paragraph asks Atticus to come, even into all this trouble, “and to so value our love as to wish to come, even with these troubles.”