Ad Familiares 7.33
Ad Familiares 7.33
Headnote
Cicero to P. Volumnius Eutrapelus, written from the Tusculan villa about the middle of Quintilis (July) 46 BC — shortly after Cicero’s return to public life in Caesar’s Rome and in the midst of the rhetorical declamations he was holding for Hirtius, Dolabella, and the young Cassius. The Perseus dateline gives in Tusculano circ. med. m. Quint. a. 708 (46), which matches the meta entry’s month-precision date.
Volumnius Eutrapelus — the cognomen means “the witty one” — was the literary and convivial friend in whose company Cicero had been used to test out new compositions. The letter is built on the metaphor of practice-arms: even when Cicero produces something worthy of his name, he groans that he is now “practising weapons on a feathered body, not on an armed one,” a line quoted from Accius’s tragedy Philoctetes. The substantive note, half private, half political, is the resolution to retire altogether from Forum and Senate as soon as Caesar permits, and to bury himself in literature with Volumnius and a small circle of like minds. The Greek tag at the centre of section 2 (Emeisi) is corrupt in the manuscripts and resists confident restoration; it is here marked as such rather than restored by conjecture.