Ad Atticum 5.20
Ad Atticum 5.20
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written somewhere in Cilicia — probably at Tarsus, on the way back from Pindenissus to winter quarters at Laodicea — between the twelfth and the fourth days before the Kalends of January (21–29 December) 51 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr. in Cilicia inter a. d. xii et iv K. Ian. a. 703 (51)). The long closing letter of Ad Atticum book 5: the work of an entire proconsular year gathered into one despatch and sent off to the man for whom the whole correspondence is intended as its first audience. The book that began at Brundisium in May with the dread of having to govern at all ends here at Pindenissus in December with the army being demobilised into winter quarters and the writer composing the official letter to the Senate that will follow.
The letter is structurally a composite. The opening section is the bare military headline: the fall of Pindenissus on the morning of the Saturnalia after a fifty-seven day investment, with the jocular aside that its name will mean nothing to Atticus and the self-mocking acknowledgement (en epitome) that this whole campaign cannot be made to sound like Aetolia. Sections 2 to 4 then back-fill the narrative from Iconium through the Amanus to Issus to Pindenissus, turning aside in section 4 to settle the rival Bibulus in a single famous one-liner (coepit loreolam in mustaceo quaerere — “he began to look for his little laurel in a baker’s tart”). The Saturnalia plunder is distributed to the soldiers — the horses kept back — and the slaves auctioned off on the third day of the feast. Section 6 is the great private passage: Cicero on his own integrity in the province, not as continentia but as the deepest personal pleasure he has ever known — “I did not know myself, and did not know well enough what I could do in this line.” The Greek-tag scaffolding (Momus, en epitome, pephusiomai, lampra, aprositon, adorodoketon) is dense, intimate, and confidential: the inside-Atticus voice Cicero uses with no one else. Sections 7 to 10 swing out to Roman news — Caesar’s prospects, the new political shape Atticus has just reported, Quintus the nephew’s coming-of-age toga, the wardship of young Brutus, the household at Ephesus, and the standing business of the boy in the house of Pammenes. The private letter does what the public one will not be able to: ledger the year as a whole.