Ad Quintum Fratrem 1.2
Ad Quintum Fratrem 1.2
Headnote
Cicero to his brother Quintus, written at Rome between 27 October and 10 December 59 BC. Quintus is at the close of his proconsulship of Asia (the great instructional letter Q. fr. 1.1 of late 60 / early 59 BC opens this same governorship; this letter closes it). Statius, Quintus’s freedman whose manumission has been so much complained of in the contemporary Atticus letters, has just arrived at Rome. §1–3 take up Statius: his coming would have been disastrous had it coincided with Quintus’s, but coming alone it has at least let the Roman gossip exhaust itself before Quintus appears. Cicero is candid: even granting Statius’s fidelity, the appearance of so favoured a freedman has fed every detractor of Quintus, and what was before merely hostility to Quintus’s strictness has, since the manumission, not lacked talkers.
The body of the letter §4–14 is the brother-praetor’s catalogue of Quintus’s mistakes in the conduct of his governorship — written in the brother’s voice, not the consular’s: candid, often sharp, always loving. §4–5 on Cicero’s having patiently soothed all the Greek complainants from Hermippus of Dionysopolis to Nymphon of Colophon, against the Zeuxis-of-Blaundus matter where Quintus’s strictness had run to attempted entrapment (“two Mysians sewn up in a sack at Smyrna”). §6–9 on the angry letters: the Catienus letter (“the cross he sets up for himself, from which I had previously dragged him down”), the Fabius letter (“burn the kidnapper and his chick alive”), all written for “salt and humour” but read in cold ink as monstrous. The model of restraint is the Cyrus of Xenophon and Agesilaus, “those kings under whose supreme command no one ever heard a sharper word.” §10–11 on the Flavius–Fundanius case: Quintus’s edict ordering the heir Flavius not to diminish the estate before Fundanius is paid is unjust as a matter of law and will cost Cicero a friendship; Pompey and Caesar both commended Flavius. §12 reads as the centre of the piece: Cicero apologizes for his earlier angry letter on Hermias, written under the spell of Diodotus, Lucullus’s freedman.
§15–16 are the political coda. The spectacular incident: the young M. Cato, attempting to indict Gabinius for bribery, found the praetors inaccessible for days; he mounted the Rostra and called Pompey a private dictator. He was within an inch of being killed. “From this you can see the condition of the whole commonwealth.” Yet §16 is unexpectedly hopeful: the friendly tribunes-elect, the well-intentioned consuls, the keen praetors-elect (Domitius, Nigidius, Memmius, Lentulus); the old manus bonorum on fire with zeal. The hope of §16 will collapse with Clodius’s tribunate of 58 BC; the next surviving letter (Att. 3.1) is from the road into exile.