Ad Familiares 4.4
Ad Familiares 4.4
Headnote
Cicero to Servius Sulpicius Rufus, in Achaia, written at Rome at the very end of September or the beginning of October 46 BC — Perseus dateline: Romae ex. m. Sept. aut in. Oct. a. 708 (46). This is the second of Cicero’s surviving letters to Sulpicius from the autumn of 46 (after 4.3 in August) and together with 4.7 it sits at the centre of the Marcellus business. M. Marcellus, Sulpicius’s consular colleague of 51 BC, had been in self-imposed exile at Mytilene since Pharsalus; in a Senate session of September, on a motion that began with L. Piso’s reference to Marcellus and culminated in C. Marcellus prostrating himself at Caesar’s feet, Caesar unexpectedly restored him. Cicero’s response, delivered when his turn came to speak, was the speech we now read as Pro Marcello — his first public oratory after a near two-year silence.
The letter opens with a piece of literary banter — Sulpicius has excused his repetitive letters as “poverty of style,” paupertate orationis, and joked that Cicero has “riches of style”; Cicero will not let either compliment stand, and the exchange runs into two Greek tags playing on eir\=oneia. The political body of the letter is the account of Marcellus’s restoration: “that day seemed to me so beautiful that I felt I was seeing some image, as it were, of a state coming back to life” — speciem aliquam viderer videre quasi reviviscentis rei publicae — the famous line that records the moment, and the moment that gave Cicero the warrant to break his silence. The closing sections balance two ironies. Cicero has parted with his “honorable leisure” and fears he may now be drawn into speaking on other matters too; and his advice to Sulpicius, who is asking whether to stay in Achaia or come home, is that he should stay — not because Rome is intolerable, but because at Rome only one’s own family can give pleasure, and of the public business one would rather hear than see.