Ad Atticum 4.2
Ad Atticum 4.2
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written from Rome in mid-October 57 BC — the report on the success of De Domo Sua. §2–5 is the only ancient narrative we have of the case’s working through the Senate after the speech. The pontiffs delivered, on the day after Cicero spoke, the narrow ruling that he had asked for: that the dedication could be set aside without religious offence, since the dedicator had not been put in charge of the matter by name through people or plebs. Clodius then went to the Forum and declared the opposite at a public meeting Appius had given him. The Senate the next day — with all the pontiffs who were senators present, Marcellinus speaking first, M. Lucullus on behalf of the college (the pontiffs the judges of religion, the Senate of law) — voted in favour of restoration. Serranus vetoed; Cornicinus threw off his toga and threw himself at his son-in-law’s feet (a play borrowed from the January proceedings); a night was granted, and on the next day the senatus consultum passed.
The valuations granted to Cicero by the consuls’ council are visibly grudging — two million sesterces for the Palatine house, five hundred thousand for the Tusculan villa, two hundred and fifty thousand for the Formian. Cicero’s reading: “the same men who had clipped my wings are unwilling that the same wings should grow back” — the optimate consulars led by Hortensius and the rest who had let the Clodian bill stand. §6 reports on the new shape of his year: he has accepted a Pompeian legateship that lets him stand for office or leave Rome at the start of summer, but for the moment will keep himself in the people’s sight. §7 is the domestic strain — the Palatine house being rebuilt, the Formian being repaired, the Tusculan up for sale, friends’ kindness exhausted, and “other things [Greek: more for mysteries]” that he will not entrust to a letter.