Ad Familiares 4.5
Ad Familiares 4.5
Headnote
Servius Sulpicius Rufus to Cicero, written at Athens about the middle of March 45 BC (Perseus: Athenis circ.~medio m.~Mart.~a.~709 (45)). Tullia, Cicero’s daughter, had died at Tusculum about a month earlier, in mid-February; Cicero’s letter informing his old friend would have reached Servius in Greece a few weeks before this reply was sent back. Servius, a great jurist and a man of austere Stoic temperament, was at the time serving as proconsul of Achaea.
The letter is one of the small masterpieces of the Roman consolatio, and it is meant to be read together with Cicero’s reply (Fam.~4.6). What Servius writes is what he believes Cicero needs to hear rather than what would feel kindest: a sustained argument that Tullia’s death is no greater calamity than the wider losses already borne, that her continued life at this hour had little to offer her, and that the proper office of the philosophical man is to apply to himself the prescriptions he has given to others. The argument turns on the famous passage in §4: returning from Asia and sailing from Aegina toward Megara, Servius looked round at the ruined oppida cadavera of Aegina, Megara, the Piraeus, and Corinth, and saw the corpses of cities laid out in one place — and asked himself by what right “us little men” (nos homunculi), whose lives were always the briefer thing, take the death of one of our own as an outrage.
The voice across the letter is consistent: a jurist-philosopher’s voice, drier and more disciplined than Cicero’s own, with the Stoic premise that grief beyond a certain measure is itself a failure of ratio. The closing line of §6 — that out of all the virtues, this one alone, the bearing of adversity, should not seem to be missing in Cicero — is offered as a challenge as much as a consolation. Cicero’s reply, written a few weeks later at Atticus’s Ficuleanum estate, accepts the philosophical argument but reports, with a candour that goes against everything Servius has said, that the consolation has not yet reached the wound.