Letter · 27 July 45 BC · Asturae

Ad Atticum 12.9

Ad Atticum 12.9

Headnote

Cicero to Atticus, written from Astura on the sixth day before the Kalends of Sextilis 709 AUC — 27 July 45 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr.\ Asturae vi K.\ Sext.\ a.\ 709 (45)). A single short section, written late in the day with sleep coming on. Cicero is still at the seaside villa to which he had retreated after the death of his daughter Tullia in February; the silence of the place is what he wants, and what holds him there. “Nothing is more agreeable than this solitude — if only the son of Amyntas had not broken in for a little.”

The interloper is some chatterbox visitor; “son of Amyntas” — the father of Philip of Macedon and so of Alexander — is a sly sneer at the pretensions of whoever it was. Cicero glosses the visit in Greek: \=o aperantologias a\=edous, “oh, the unending, tedious chatter.” The villa, the shore, the sea-view and the surrounding hills he loves: the rest he does not.

I would be here happily, and more so every day, were it not for the reason I wrote you in my last letter. Nothing is more agreeable than this solitude — if only the son of Amyntas had not broken in for a little. Oh, what aperantologias aēdous — what unending, tedious chatter! For the rest, do not suppose anything more lovely can be made: the villa, the shore, the prospect of the sea, these hills, the whole of it. But this is not worth a longer letter, nor had I anything to write, and sleep was pressing.
ne ego essem hic libenter atque id cotidie magis, ni esset ea causa quam tibi superioribus litteris scripsi. nihil hac solitudine iucundius, nisi paulum interpellasset Amyntae filius. ὢ ἀπεραντολογίας ἀηδοῦσ! cetera noli putare amabiliora fieri posse villa, litore, prospectu maris, tumulis his rebus omnibus. sed neque haec digna longioribus litteris nec erat quod scriberem, et somnus urgebat.

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Ad Atticum 12.9

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