Ad Atticum 10.2
Ad Atticum 10.2
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written from Arcanum, the country place of his brother Quintus, on the day after the Nones of April 49 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr.\ in Arcano Quinti fratris postr.\ Non.\ Apr.\ a.\ 705 (49)). Cephalio has brought Atticus’s letter on the Nones, and Cicero — who had been bound for Minturnae and meant to press on from there — has halted instead at his brother’s estate. He wants “something more certain” before he moves, and to be in “a more out-of-the-way spot” while business that does not require him goes forward.
The Greek tag [Greek: lalageusa] — “chattering” — evokes the swallow whose return marks the season for action, a tag familiar from Pindaric and later Greek lyric; the spring is here, the spirit burns, but “there is nothing — not what, not where.” The single sentence catches the whole disposition of these April letters: the time has come and there is still no plan, no destination. Section 2 hands the business over to fortune (“the matters are past unravelling”), and turns at the close to a domestic complaint: Dionysius, the tutor who had quarrelled with him and gone over to others, is now reported by Tullia to be on his way — and Cicero does not want him as a witness to such trouble, nor does he want Atticus to fall out with the man on his account.