Letter · April 52 BC · Romae

Ad Familiares 13.3

Ad Familiares 13.3

Headnote

Cicero to C. Memmius, written from Rome around April 52 BC or shortly after (the manuscripts: Scr. Romae, ut videtur, post m. Apr. 702 aut in. a. 703). The addressee is the same C. Memmius addressed in Fam. 13.1 and 13.2, and the form is the small letter of recommendation that runs through the early part of Book 13. Here Cicero commends one A. Fufius, otherwise unknown, on whose behalf Memmius has apparently already given him a face-to-face undertaking.

The letter is a single sentence in Latin, a miniature in the form. The leverage Cicero applies is not pressure but courtesy: Memmius has already promised, so all Cicero asks is that the promise be honoured ut mihi coram recepisti (“in the way you assured me in person”). The closing turn — Fufius will bind himself to Memmius for life through his officium and observantia — locates the favour in the ordinary economy of Roman patronage: a service done now produces a client permanently attached to the patron. The brevity is the register; longer recommendations in the same book (Fam. 13.5–6, 13.13) show what Cicero produces when the case needs argument rather than reminder.

A. Fufius, one of my closest friends, a man most devoted and most attentive to me, learned and altogether worthy of your friendship, I should like you to treat in the way you assured me in person you would. It will be as welcome to me as anything that could possibly be more welcome; and in him besides — given his perfect dutifulness and devoted attention — you will have bound a man to you for life.
A. Fufium, unum ex meis intimis observantissimum studiosissimumque nostri, eruditum hominem et summa humanitate tuaque amicitia dignissimum, velim ita tractes ut mihi coram recepisti. tam gratum mihi id erit quam quod gratissimum; ipsum praeterea summo officio et summa observantia tibi in perpetuum devinxeris.

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Ad Familiares 13.3

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