Ad Atticum 9.9
Ad Atticum 9.9
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written from the Formian villa on the seventeenth day before the Kalends of April 49 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr.\ in Formiano xvi K.\ Apr.\ a.\ 705 (49)); the date the letter is sent off is given in the body as the Liberalia (17 March), which agrees. Three of Atticus’s letters had reached Formiae the day after the Ides, and Cicero answers them one by one, oldest first. This is also the day on which, unbeknownst to Cicero at the moment of writing, Pompey was preparing to sail from Brundisium: by the next morning the war would have crossed into a new phase.
Section 1 takes up the eldest of Atticus’s three letters — Formiae as the best place to remain, the Upper Sea route, and the question whether Cicero can refrain from touching public affairs with Caesar’s goodwill. The philosophical asides (sophisteu\=o, theseis) catch his routine of turning over set propositions on the road from town to country. Section 2 moves to the second letter: Clodia’s troop-numbers were double the truth, the ships were not destroyed, Lentulus the consul was right in spirit but wrong in judgment to scatter the senatorial party, and a famine-war is now certain — a catalogue of the eastern fleet (Alexandria, Tyre, Cyprus, Rhodes, and the rest) being assembled to cut off Italy’s grain. The section ends in a fastidious resolution about how he should bear himself when meeting Caesar: with weight, not cringing. Section 3 is the third letter: a long, sharp reading of Caesar’s request for Cicero’s consilium, gratia, dignitas, ope omnium rerum — with the legal point, drawn from the De Republica, that consuls cannot lawfully be elected by a praetor. Caesar will press for a senatorial decree to that effect; Cicero will not be one of those who give it. Section 4 closes on the miscellany of the Lanuvine villa once owned by Phamea, the hoped-for visit of Trebatius, and the gathering tempest. The closing tag, “Given on the Liberalia” (D. Liberalibus), fixes the dispatch date.