Letter · 27 June 44 BC · in Tusculano

Ad Atticum 15.22

Ad Atticum 15.22

Headnote

Cicero to Atticus, written at the Tusculan villa on the morning of 27 June 44 BC — Perseus dateline Scr. in Tusculano v K. Quint. mane a. 710 (44). A short, sour note. Cicero is glad young Quintus has finally cleared off (“he will be no trouble”); a smaller fraction of the previous letter’s exasperation, but the same exasperation. He then runs through the political question of Pansa, consul-designate for the next year. Pansa is reported to be talking the right way, but Cicero notes the man’s long association with Hirtius and asks the sceptic’s three questions: when will Pansa even see Brutus and Cassius? When did he become hostile to Antony? Why? “How long shall we be played with?”

The reference to Sextus Pompeius, now active in Spain, is corrected: in the previous letter Cicero had said Sextus was “on his way,” meaning that Sextus was certainly making for war and would not lay down arms, not that he was actually about to arrive. “Our Cytherian here” is Antony — so called from his liaison with the mime-actress Volumnia Cytheris — who Cicero says is convinced only the victor will live. The letter ends abruptly with the expectation of seeing Atticus the same day or the next.

I congratulate us that Quintus the younger has gone. He will be no trouble. That Pansa speaks well, I believe. For I know he has always been joined with Hirtius; that he is on the warmest terms with Brutus and Cassius I take as given — if it suits him (but when will he see them?); that he is hostile to Antony — when, or why? How long shall we be played with? As for myself, I wrote that Sextus was on his way, not because he was already here, but because he was certainly making for that end and would on no account be parted from arms. Certainly, if he carries on, war is prepared. But our Cytherian here says that no one will go on living except the victor. To this what does Pansa say? On which side will he be, if there is war? — and it looks as if there will be. But these things and more in person, today — as you write — or tomorrow.
gratulor nobis Quintum filium exisse. molestus non erit. Pansam bene loqui credo. semper enim coniunctum esse cum Hirtio scio; amicissimum Bruto et Cassio puto, si expediet (sed quando illos videbit?), inimicum Antonio, quando aut cur? quousque ludemur? ego autem scripsi Sextum adventare, non quo iam adesset sed quia certe id ageret ab armisque nullus discederet. certe si pergit, bellum paratum est. hic autem noster Cytherius nisi victorem neminem victurum. quid ad haec Pansa? utrobi erit, si bellum erit? quod videtur fore. sed et haec et alia coram hodie quidem, ut scribis, aut cras.

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Ad Atticum 15.22

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