Letter · 27 June 45 BC · in Arpinati

Ad Atticum 13.14

Ad Atticum 13.14

Headnote

Cicero to Atticus, written from his ancestral estate at Arpinum on v K.\ Quint. — 27 June 709 AUC, 45 BC. Cicero has come up from the Tusculanum to put the small properties in order before Caesar’s return makes travel impossible (see 13.9), and the rains, as 13.16 will report, are keeping him indoors. The letter is two short paragraphs: a query whether Atticus approves the plan to dedicate the Academica to Varro (with Atticus himself written in as a third speaker), and a piece of domestic anxiety because Attica has been silent three days.

The register is the unhurried intimacy of two old correspondents at a slow stretch: half writing-room business (nomina iam facta sunt, “the names have been assigned,” i.e. the dramatis personae of the dialogue are set, but the casting can still be changed), half the small confession that with no messenger arrived from Atticus there has been nothing of his own to write either. No Greek phrases in this letter; no cruxes.

I should like you to consider, again and again, whether it suits you that what I have written be sent to Varro. Though indeed it touches you too. For you should know that you have been added to the dialogue as the third party. So let us think it over, I suppose. The names, it is true, have already been assigned; but they can either be brought in or be changed.
illud etiam atque etiam consideres velim, placeatne tibi mitti ad Varronem quod scripsimus. etsi etiam ad te aliquid pertinet. nam scito te ei dialogo adiunctum esse tertium. opinor igitur consideremus. etsi nomina iam facta sunt; sed vel induci vel mutari possunt.
How is our Attica, I beg you? For three days now I have had nothing from you; not surprising. No one had come, and there may not have been a reason. So I had nothing of my own to write either. On the very day I was giving these to Valerius I was looking out for one of my people. If he had come and brought anything from you, I saw that I would not be at a loss for something to write.
quid agit, obsecro te, Attica nostra? nam triduo abs te nullas acceperam; nec mirum. nemo enim venerat nec fortasse causa fuerat. itaque ipse quod scriberem non habebam. quo autem die has Valerio dabam exspectabam aliquem meorum. qui si venisset et a te quid attulisset, videbam non defuturum quod scriberem.

Cite this passage

Ad Atticum 13.14

Pick a format and click Copy. The permalink jumps any reader to this exact section.

Support this project

Free to read here. Buy the ebook to support the work.

Kindle