Ad Familiares 3.5
Ad Familiares 3.5
Headnote
Cicero to Appius Claudius Pulcher, written from Tralles on the 27th of July 51 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr. Trallibus a. d. vi K. Sext. a. 703). Cicero is on the inland road from Ephesus into his province of Cilicia; Appius, the outgoing proconsul, is somewhere ahead of him — the question of where exactly is the running anxiety of these months. The letter answers one Cicero received at Tralles from L. Lucilius, an envoy of Appius’s, and is the next move in the wary, choreographed handover begun at Brundisium in 3.4.
The substance is mostly itinerary — where Cicero will be when, what he is doing at Laodicea (the public-money exchange), when he expects to reach the army near Iconium — but the diplomacy is visible at every joint. Cicero recalls how he had first agreed, through Phania, to come round the maritime side of the province for Appius’s convenience, then was redirected through L. Clodius at Corcyra to Laodicea, and now finds that Appius’s plan has changed again. The pointed sentence is the closing one of section 4: “on our affairs I shall send you nothing by letter until I have despaired of being able to deal with you face to face.” The two men are circling each other; Cicero does not want the handover transacted in writing, where it leaves a record, and he is increasingly aware that Appius does not want to be met. The matter of Scaevola, whom Appius claims to have left in charge during his absence, closes the letter on a small note of incredulity: Cicero saw Scaevola for three days at Ephesus and Scaevola said nothing of any such charge.