Ad Quintum Fratrem 2.5
Ad Quintum Fratrem 2.5
Headnote
Cicero to Quintus, written before daylight on 8 April 56 BC at the start of the journey out from Rome that would take him through T. Titius’s house in the Anagnine country to Laterium, then to Arpinum, the Pompeian and the Cuman estates, returning to Rome the day before the Nones of May for Milo’s trial. Section 2 is missing in the manuscript tradition; the letter survives in three sections, the loss falling between the building-site visit (§1) and the building-site account (§3).
The news is the betrothal of Tullia to Furius Crassipes (her second marriage — her first husband, C. Calpurnius Piso Frugi, had died in 57 BC during Cicero’s exile). The betrothal-feast was on 6 April; the engagement formal date was 4 April. Three pieces of public news fill out the body: the senatorial corn-decree of 5 April giving Pompey the cura annonae 40 million sesterces; the same-day contio-like dispute over the Campanian land (the second great political fault-line of 56 BC, which would force the post-Luca about-face); and the casting-out of M. Furius Flaccus from the college of the Capitolini and Mercuriales, with the man lying at each member’s feet in vain. The visit to Pompey in his gardens, after dinner at Crassipes’s, has the practical errand — get Quintus released from Sardinia quickly — and the practical reply: Pompey was to embark for Sardinia on 11 April from Labro or Pisa.
The chronology of the letter is one of its great documentary uses: it is the latest fixed-date letter before the conference at Luca (15–16 April), at which Caesar, Pompey, and Crassus would reset the political terms. Cicero in this letter knows nothing of any such meeting; Pompey is simply “going to Sardinia.” The casual mention of the corn authority and the route via Pisa places Pompey within fifty miles of Luca; the Senate’s recriminations on the Campanian land are the very stalking-horse Caesar would use at Luca to compel the post-Luca compact.
The closing note — “come as soon as possible” (quam primum venias) — belongs to the running theme of Q. fr. book 2: Cicero needing his brother home, the political climate having turned, and the family business (Tullia’s marriage, the boy’s health, Pomponia’s complaints, two house-building sites) all wanting Quintus’s hand on the ground. He would return at midsummer, in time for the post-Luca debate.