Ad Atticum 14.18
Ad Atticum 14.18
Headnote
Cicero to Atticus, written at the Pompeian villa on 9 May 44 BC — Perseus dateline Scr. in Pompeiano vii Id. Mai. a. 710 (44). Atticus has been needling Cicero for praising Dolabella’s recent action (the dispersal of the Caesar-cult gathering at the Forum column) too lavishly, and Cicero half concedes the point: the praise was warm because Atticus’s own letters had set the temperature. But Dolabella is now estranged from Atticus on the same financial grounds that have made him Cicero’s bitterest creditor — the dowry of Tullia, owed since the Kalends of January and still unpaid, even after Dolabella has discharged his other enormous debts (through the convenient agency of Faberius, Antony’s secretary, and “aid from Ops,” that is, Caesar’s confiscated treasury). Cicero permits himself the pun opem ab Ope petierit — help sought from Ops, goddess of plenty, by way of her temple where the funds were stored — and signals that he is not quite undone by sending a barbed letter that Dolabella will struggle to face in person.
The rest is briskly elliptical: business with Atticus’s agents (the Albian and Patulcian debts, Eros’s failings, Montanus, Servius’s despair as he leaves for the East), and a political coda. If Brutus will not come to the Senate on the Kalends of June — the meeting Antony is convoking — Cicero cannot see what he is to do in the Forum either. The Ides of March, on the evidence now coming in, did not get the Liberators very far; and Cicero is thinking, more and more, of Greece. He plans to leave Pompeii on 10 May (vi Idus Mai.).