Ad Familiares 3.7
Ad Familiares 3.7
Headnote
Cicero to Appius Claudius Pulcher, his predecessor as governor of Cilicia, written hastily from Laodicea around the Ides of February 50 BC (Perseus dateline: Scr. Laudiceae circiter Id. Febr. a. 704 (50)). The Apamean ambassadors had brought Cicero a long letter of complaint from Appius: that Cicero had stopped the Apameans’ building work with one of his letters, that he had forbidden them to collect their tributes before he could investigate, and — in a private aside relayed by Lentulus’s freedman Pausanias — that Cicero had snubbed his predecessor by failing to come out to meet him on the road into Iconium.
Cicero replies in three movements. He defends the order about the tributes as fair (and as exactly what the Apameans themselves were asking for); he gives the practical narrative of the missed meeting at Iconium, where he had sent both Varro and Lepta out to intercept Appius on the two roads, only for Appius to slip past; and he refuses, in the most studied way, Appius’s recital of how every Claudius and Lentulus came out to meet every other Claudius and Lentulus. “Do you suppose any Appietas or Lentulitas weighs with me more than the ornaments of virtue?” is the centre of the letter — a Stoic point made politely. Cicero closes with a Greek tag from the Iliad (Achilles to the embassy), and signs off with the assurance that the goodwill he has shown is “taken up on settled judgment” and will be maintained as long as Appius wishes. The dossier of patching-up in the Cilicia handover.