Ad Atticum 4.16
Ad Atticum 4.16
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written from Rome in late June or early July 54 BC — the Perseus dateline gives “end of June or in Quintilis 700 (54).” Atticus, having left Rome later than planned (as 4.14 already complained), has now sailed across the Adriatic and through Epirus, sent a flurry of short notes back from Buthrotum, and is on his way further east into Asia. Cicero opens by signaling his own pressure of business — the letter is dictated to a secretary — and works methodically through the substantive letter Paccius brought him: the introduction of Paccius into Cicero’s intimate circle on Atticus’s word, and then the long question Atticus has been pressing about De Re Publica.
Sections 2 and 3 are the rarest thing in the correspondence: Cicero on his own compositional method, mid-draft. He explains why Varro cannot simply be inserted as a speaker into a dialogue whose dramatic date is fixed in the previous century (the cast is Africanus, Philus, Laelius, Manilius, with the younger Tubero, Rutilius, Scaevola, and Fannius), and floats the alternative of a dedicatory proem in the manner of Aristotle’s exoteric works. He then defends, against Atticus’s objection, the disappearance of the elder Scaevola after Book 1 by direct appeal to Plato’s handling of Cephalus in the Republic — “our divine Plato.” From section 4 the letter turns to the familiar Roman bulletin: legal news about C. Cato’s serial acquittals, the bringing of Drusus and Scaurus to trial, the shaky senatus consultum on provinces, and the deadlocked consular field — Messalla, Scaurus, Domitius, Memmius — in which Caesar’s soldiers, Pompey’s Gaul, and the threat of pushing the elections into Caesar’s return all already figure as ordinary political currency. The letter closes with a gentle but real scolding for Atticus’s decision to extend the journey to Asia rather than sending agents in his place.