Ad Quintum Fratrem 1.4
Ad Quintum Fratrem 1.4
Headnote
Cicero to his brother Quintus, written from Thessalonica around the Nones of August 58 BC. Now that Quintus is at Rome and exposed to the full reach of his brother’s enemies, the letter shifts from the lament of Q. fr. 1.3 to the strategic reckoning. §1 is the careful self-defence: Cicero asks Quintus not to read his ruin as wickedness or crime, but as the failure of his too cautious counsel — since each of those nearest him, closest, most familiar, “either was afraid for himself or envied me.”
§3 names the new tribunician college that will take office on 10 December: Sestius, Curius, Milo, Fadius, Fabricius are or are hoped to be friendly. But Clodius, even as a private citizen once his year ends, will have the same crowd to call out at the public meetings; and an intercessor (a tribunician veto) will be procured. §4 is Cicero’s bitterest summing-up of the spring of 58 — the things that were not put to him as he set out: “Pompey’s sudden defection, the alienation of the consuls, even of the praetors, the fear of the tax-farmers, arms.” He had been told instead that he should be returning within three days at the head of the highest glory. The letter closes with the bargain again — “I shall hold on to life so long as I think it of consequence to you” — and the warning that, with Quintus exposed too, the fight will be by lawsuits, not swords.