Ad Familiares 13.18
Ad Familiares 13.18
Headnote
Cicero to Servius Sulpicius Rufus, proconsul of Achaia, written from Rome around the beginning of November 46 BC (the manuscript dateline: Scr. Romae, ut videtur, a. 708 (46)). Part of the running Servius sequence (Fam.\ 13.17–28); but unlike the formulaic recommendations of that sheaf, this letter is purely about Atticus and his property interests in Epirus. Servius has written to Atticus on his own initiative, offering his help with the management of those affairs in the province; Atticus has just shown the letter to Cicero, and Cicero, visibly delighted, writes back at once. The piece is therefore the rare specimen in the sheaf that conducts no commendation business but acknowledges and reinforces a favour already volunteered.
The structural play of the letter is the self-conscious pivot in the second paragraph. Cicero begins by listing the things he will not do — he will not ask Servius to act with redoubled zeal, and he will not thank him for what he has already done unprompted — and then announces, on the strength of their old friendship, that he will do both anyway. The closing formula collapses the favour to Atticus into a personal favour to Cicero himself: whatever Servius binds Atticus by, he binds Cicero by as well. The first paragraph also preserves a textual crux (the daggered phrase quod tamen dubium nobis quin ita futurum fuerit non erat), where the manuscript reading is suspect; the rendering here follows the sense common in the editors and treats the parenthesis as a corroborative aside.