Ad Atticum 12.1
Ad Atticum 12.1
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written from the Arpinum estate at first light on the eighth day before the Kalends of December — Perseus: in Arpinati viii K.~Dec.~a.~708 (46). The letter is numbered first in book 12 of Ad Atticum but, by the dateline, it is later than 12.2–12.8: those belong to the spring of 46. Cicero is mid-circuit through his estates, plotting his way back to a meeting with Atticus on the 27th: today the Anagninum, tomorrow the Tusculanum.
The substance is unguarded family warmth. He longs to run straight to Tullia’s embrace and to a kiss from Attica, and asks Atticus to keep him posted in the meantime; a courier reaching him in the night with a letter from Atticus complicates the close, because that letter mentions Attica running a slight fever. The mood is sociable and quick. Cicero ends with a small theory of letters: there is something in mere talk [Greek: lesch\=e] that has, even when nothing lies beneath it, a sweetness in the very talking. Read against what is coming — Tullia will be dead within fifteen months — the easy reach for her name in this letter is one of the last unshadowed instances.