Ad Atticum 9.10
Ad Atticum 9.10
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written from the Formian villa on the fifteenth day before the Kalends of April 49 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr.\ in Formiano xv K.\ Apr.\ a.\ 705 (49)). This is the day after the long letter answering three of Atticus’s together, and the day on which — as it turned out — Pompey was sailing from Brundisium for Epirus, ending the Italian war. Cicero does not yet know it. The letter is a wakeful, semi- private meditation, written “with no theme proposed,” as if to converse with the absent friend; it is among the most personal in the whole correspondence.
Sections 1–3 are the meditation proper. Cicero diagnoses himself as having been amens from the start in not following Pompey to the end like “one common soldier in the ranks” (tamquam unus manipularis). He saw Pompey on 17 January, full of dread, and never liked him after; the famous love-analogy compares Pompey’s flight to a beloved grown filthy, insipid, indecorous, who estranges affection. “Now the love comes back up”; “like that bird, I gaze out upon the sea and long to fly away.” Yet his hesitation was not rashness but reasoned: he ran through the historical exempla — Tarquin, Coriolanus, Themistocles, Hippias, Sulla, Marius, Cinna — and could not see himself leading Getae, Armenians, Colchians against Rome, or starving Italy. The sun has fallen out of the world (the image is Atticus’s own, from some earlier letter); as long as Pompey was in Italy, hope was alive. “These things, these things, have failed me.”
Sections 4–10 are an extraordinary technical move: Cicero unrolls the sealed volume of Atticus’s letters and walks through them in dated order, quoting each in turn, to demonstrate to Atticus — and to himself — that every step he has taken was taken on Atticus’s authority. From 10 K Febr to 7 Id. Mart, eight letters are paraded one by one: Atticus had said Pompey would be acting alogist\=os if he left Italy; that Cicero must then return to the City and not call his stay a foreign tour; that the war was being made aspondos, without truce; that no patriot and statesman (philopatris, politikos) should flee with him; that flight is shameful (Pompey, Cicero remarks, has been “yearning-to-be-a-Sulla, yearning-to- proscribe” for two years past); that if Lepidus and Volcacius remained in Italy, Cicero too should remain — and let himself be beaten in the contest with Pompey rather than reign with Caesar in the coming filth. If Lepidus and Volcacius left, Atticus had thrown up his hands (apor\=o); whatever happened, whatever Cicero did, must be accepted (sterkteon). Section 10 closes on Peducaeus’s parallel approval, on Cicero’s need not for self-justification (adversus me nihil opus est) but for outside witnesses, and on the wakeful consolation of having reread everything Atticus wrote him.