Ad Quintum Fratrem 2.8
Ad Quintum Fratrem 2.8
Headnote
Cicero to his brother Quintus, written at Rome in May 55 BC. The lightest letter in the surviving correspondence of this year, and almost wholly affectionate. Quintus has written worrying that his letters are an interruption; Cicero, with mock indignation, lays out a sequence of refusals — “do you, of all people, know what an interruption is, or Statius?” — and insists that nothing pleases him more than Quintus on any subject at all. The unwelcome admission embedded in the playful surface is that twice already Quintus had reasons for staying behind: first young Cicero’s health, then the children at home.
The middle of §2 turns to M. Marius, the literary friend who lived near Cicero’s Pompeianum and who is the recipient of Fam. 7.1 a few months later. The recollection of the Asician litter — the eight bearers, the hundred sword-men following, Marius opening the curtains in fright at the unannounced escort — is the kind of memory the brothers shared. Marius is to be brought, the Anician estate prepared, “the garden is at home.” Cicero closes with the Philoctetes comparison: Quintus is too good a citizen, sore at the commonwealth as Philoctetes was sore at the wound he had been given, looking for the very spectacles that pain him.