Letter · 46 BC · in Tusculano

Ad Atticum 12.11

Ad Atticum 12.11

Headnote

Cicero to Atticus, written from the Tusculan villa late in 46 BC — Perseus: in Tusculano m.~interc.~post.~a.~708 (46), that is, during the second intercalary month inserted into that year. The letter is a short, businesslike reply touching three matters: an item of bad news about one Seius; the question of a possible new marriage for Cicero, who had divorced Terentia earlier in the year; and, in a postscript opened after the letter had been sealed, a word about Attica’s health.

The marriage talk is the substance. Atticus had evidently sounded Cicero on candidates: Pompeia, the daughter of Pompeius Magnus, is firmly declined again; and the other woman — Atticus will know who — Cicero finds repulsive on sight. Postumia, the wife of the jurist Servius Sulpicius Rufus, has been making the rounds at Caesonius’s house in the role of go-between. The whole exchange is conducted in the dry shorthand of two old friends who do not need to spell anything out, and the philosophical opener — everything human must be reckoned bearable — is the mood-music for what follows, not a separate consolation.

Bad news about Seius. But everything human must be reckoned bearable. What, after all, are we ourselves, or how long are we going to be troubling ourselves with these matters? Let us look to what concerns us more — not by much — namely, what we are to do about the Senate. And, not to leave anything out: Caesonius has sent me a letter saying that Sulpicius’s Postumia came to him. About Pompeius Magnus’s daughter I have already written back that at present I am giving it no thought; but as for that other woman you write of — you know her, I think: I have seen nothing more repulsive. But I shall be with you. We can talk it over face to face, then. After I had sealed this letter, I received yours. I am glad to hear of Attica’s good cheer. In her little upsets I share her feeling sumpaschō.
male de Seio. sed omnia humana tolerabilia ducenda. ipsi enim quid sumus aut quam diu haec curaturi sumus? ea videamus quae ad nos magis pertinent, nec tamen multo, quid agamus de senatu. et ut ne quid praetermittam, Caesonius ad me litteras misit Postumiam Sulpici domum ad se venisse. de Pompei Magni filia tibi rescripsi nihil me hoc tempore cogitare; alteram vero illam quam tu scribis, puto, nosti: nihil vidi foedius. sed adsum. coram igitur. obsignata epistula accepi tuas. Atticae hilaritatem libenter audio. commotiunculis συμπάσχω.

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Ad Atticum 12.11

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