Ad Atticum 2.14
Ad Atticum 2.14
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written at Formiae around the fourth day before the Kalends of May (28 April) 59 BC. Two short pieces. §1 anticipates Atticus’s coming report on Bibulus’s edict, on Clodia’s conversation, and on the wanton dinner-party — “so come in such a way as to thirsting ears.” Cicero remarks that what he most fears is that “Sampsiceramus” (Pompey), feeling himself beaten in the daily talk and seeing how easily the triumvirate’s acts could be reversed, “may begin to rush.”
§2 is the comic account of Cicero’s country house at Formiae as a basilica: the throng of locals, the inevitable Gaius Arrius (next neighbour, now mess-mate, who refuses to go to Rome “that he may philosophize all day with me”), Sebosus from the other side. The wishful joke that some passer-by might buy the Formian estate from him while these visitors hold him captive — and the reluctant promise that, even so, he will give his pains and not spare labour to the writing work Atticus has been urging.