Ad Familiares 16.22
Ad Familiares 16.22
Headnote
Cicero from Astura to Tiro in Rome, two days before Fam. 16.17 from the same villa. The Perseus dateline is vi K. Sext. 709 (27 July 45 BC). Tiro has again been left in town, ill, on copying and household errands.
The first section is the familiar Tiro-letter braid: anxious solicitude for his health (“you are with me, if you take care of yourself”), instructions for the copyists on a difficult passage in the Cato (a now-lost laudatio of the younger Cato), and a quick word about who should and should not be invited to dinner. The second section is the snobbery of a man surrounded by inferior versions of his own type: this Demetrius is no Demetrius of Phaleron — the great Peripatetic — but at best a Billienus, an obscurer figure of no consequence. Cicero appoints Tiro as his proxy to manage him, and signs off with the unembarrassed plea that runs through this whole cluster: take care of yourself; you can do me no greater favor.