Ad Atticum 1.20
Ad Atticum 1.20
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written at Rome shortly after 12 May 60 BC (“the fourth day before the Ides of May,” the date Cicero gives himself as the day of his return from the Pompeian villa). The letter answers Atticus’s of the Ides of February, three months in transit. Atticus, returning from Epirus, has expressed himself with measured kindness about the Quintus–Pomponia quarrel; Cicero in §1 closes the topic for the time being and asks for it to wait till they meet. The body of the letter is the famous account of his political position at the moment when the First Triumvirate is about to crystallize: Pompey is being courted by Cicero (“the man of the highest fortune, authority, favour”), and Cicero claims to have turned Pompey from the hope of the wicked toward Cicero’s own line. “We must not give up the standing of our dignity, nor must we go inside another’s defences without our own forces.” §3 is the famous Sparta-tag from Euripides (Telephus, fr. 723 N2) — “the Sparta which has fallen to my lot” — claimed as his consular party without retainer or following: “I hold this aristocratic course, since the death of Catulus, with no defence and with no following.” Quintus’s son Catulus had died in early 60 BC; with him gone, the only senior conservative leader of weight is now Cicero himself. The remaining paragraphs are domestic shop: Atticus’s Sicyonian creditor business; the new consuls (Metellus Celer “outstanding,” Afranius the “Aulus’s son” a “black eye of our Magnus”); the finished Greek poem on the consulship sent off; the acquisition of the books left by Servius Claudius (the scholar of Plautus, dead earlier in the year), with the characteristic plea to Atticus to “strive through friends, clients, guests, freedmen and slaves” to see that not a scrap perishes.