Ad Atticum 9.13
Ad Atticum 9.13
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written from the Formian villa on the ninth day before the Kalends of April 49 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr.\ in Formiano ix K.\ Apr.\ a.\ 705 (49)). Four days after the panic of 9.12, the rafts-at-Brundisium story has been overtaken by a fresh dispatch from Dolabella, dated 13 March from Brundisium: this is Caesar’s [Greek: euh\=emer\’ia] — his “fine day” — and the report is that Pompey is in flight and will sail with the first wind. Cicero opens with the Homeric tag [Greek: ouk \’est’ \’etumos l\’ogos], “the tale is not true” (Stesichorus’s formula known from Plato), and reconstructs the chronology: the day before the Quinquatria there was a great storm-wind, and that, he supposes, is what Pompey rode out. The siege-wall and the rafts were a ghost; Pompey has been at sea since the 17th.
Section 3 is the long, exposed self-defence of Cicero’s relationship to Caesar — partly to Atticus, partly to himself: “I have always cried up his services to me, the more lest he think I was remembering the older grievances”; “he gave me no help when he could, but afterwards was a friend, even very much so”; “therefore I in turn am his friend”; and then the clean accounting: “I do not now know in what way I could help him; nor, if I could, when he is preparing so destructive a war, should I think I ought to.” What he dreads is not Caesar’s [Greek: go\=ete\’ia], his wizardry, but his [Greek: peithan\’ank\=e] — persuasion-that-compels; and the line is sealed with a direct quotation of Plato’s Seventh Letter: “the requests of tyrants are mixed with compulsion.” Section 4 carries a corrupt clause, marked here with daggers as in the standard text. The closing sections record Lentulus Spinther still at Puteoli, [Greek: ad\=emon\^on] (at his wits’ end) and dreading another Corfinium; Balbus’s letter, with its last paragraph in which the financier is now “in agony”; and the verdict from Dolabella that the war will be merum bellum, unmixed. Cicero closes by settling into the desperation itself: “let us stay in that same wretched and despairing mind, since nothing can be more wretched than this.”