Ad Atticum 4.15
Ad Atticum 4.15
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written from Rome on the sixth day before the Kalends of Sextilis — 27 July 54 BC. Atticus is in the East on the journey to Asia that 4.14 had assumed; Cicero, back in town after a circuit out to Reate and the Velinus drainage country, is writing the long Roman bulletin Atticus had asked for. The first three sections handle private business — the manumission of Eutychides, paralleled to Atticus’s earlier freeing of Dionysius; a tease about Atticus lingering in Greek company; the working explanation for why earlier letters never arrived. Then, at section 4, the dispatch from the Forum begins.
The middle and back half of the letter is one of the sharpest contemporary pictures we have of the 54 BC consular campaign collapsing into open corruption: Sufenas and Cato acquitted, Procilius condemned, and a jury of “thrice-honoured Areopagites” who care, in Cicero’s accounting, about nothing except domestic murder. Memmius has Caesar’s money behind him; the sitting consuls have secretly cut Domitius into the same syndicate (Cicero will not put the terms in writing); Pompey backs Scaurus but no one knows whether sincerely; Messalla is sinking under the consuls’ combine. The Homeric tag sēma de toi ere\=o (“and I will tell you the sign,” from Iliad 23.326) introduces, with mock grandeur, the index of corruption that interest rates have gone from 4 to 8 percent in a fortnight as cash is hoovered up for bribes. The closing sections itemize Cicero’s own defense work — Messius now, Drusus and Scaurus next — and end with the standing anxiety: Quintus is now somewhere in Britain with Caesar’s army, and the household waits for word.