Ad Atticum 2.12
Ad Atticum 2.12
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written on the road at the Tres Tabernae station thirteen days before the Kalends of May (19 April) 59 BC. The letter is dominated by the news that Publius Clodius is now openly canvassing for the tribunate of the plebs “as a most bitter enemy of Caesar.” The opening declaration — “Do those men deny that Publius has been made a plebeian? This indeed is kingship, and is in no way to be borne” — registers the moment Caesar denied involvement in Clodius’s transfer to the plebs.
The body of the letter is one of the corpus’s finest scenes: Cicero coming up out of the side road from Antium onto the Appian Way at the Cerialia, met simultaneously by his friend Curio (with the news from Rome) and by Atticus’s letter-carrier (with the same news in writing). Cicero embraces Curio, dismisses him quickly, and runs to read the letters — “where are those who say that the living voice is best?” The list of what Atticus’s letter contained — “the daily ruminations, the ox-eyed lady’s cymbals, the standard-bearer Athenio, the letters sent to Gnaeus, the talk of Theophanes and Memmius” — is the structure of the political news of late April 59, delivered in Greek shorthand for the friend.