Ad Atticum 13.10
Ad Atticum 13.10
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written from the Tusculanum between the fourteenth and the eleventh day before the Kalends of Quintilis 709 AUC — 18 to 21 June 45 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr.\ in Tusculano inter a.\ d.\ xiiii et xi K.\ Quint.\ a.\ 709 (45)). The news that frames the letter is the killing of M.~Claudius Marcellus at Piraeus, struck down at the end of May by his client P.~Magius Chilo. Marcellus had been pardoned by Caesar through Cicero’s intervention the previous autumn (Pro Marcello) and was returning to Italy; his death thins the senior Republican consulars yet further. Atticus has written to grieve, and to count Cicero as the last consular still standing.
The texture is again thick with Greek — [Greek: para ten historian], “against the historical record,” a pointed correction of Atticus’ counting (Servius Sulpicius Rufus is also still a consular); [Greek: koinotera] and [Greek: politikotera] for the kind of more public, more political composition Dolabella has been pressing for. Section 3 sets the departure for Arpinum at the eleventh before the Kalends (21 June), reports the arrival of Spinther bearing Brutus’ letter that exonerates Caesar in Marcellus’ death, and turns over the puzzle of Magius’ amentia — the killer was insolvent, Cicero had stood guarantor for him, and a refused request to Marcellus seems to be what tipped him. The text breaks at †aut erat†: the manuscript reading is corrupt and editors have variously emended.