Letter 174

Marcus Tullius CiceroTitus Pomponius Atticus|c. 49 BC|Cicero|From Rome|To Rome/Athens|AI-assisted

[1] On the day before the Ides, while we were at dinner, and indeed at night, Statius brought me a short letter from you. As to your question about Lucius Torquatus, not only Lucius but Aulus too has set off, [...] the other [set off] some time ago. As to what you write about the demonstration of the people of Reate, I am distressed that the seed-sowing of a proscription is going on in Sabine territory. We too had heard that many senators are at Rome. Can you tell me at all why they have left town? [2] In these parts the opinion is, by conjecture rather than on any report or letter, that Caesar will be at Formiae on the eleventh day before the Kalends of April [March 22]. Here I could wish I had that Minerva of Homer's, disguised as Mentor, so that I might say to her, 'Mentor, pos t' ar' io, pos t' ar prosptuxomai auton?' ['Mentor, how am I to go, how am I to greet him?'—Odyssey 3.22, Telemachus' question on how to approach Nestor]. I have never pondered any matter more difficult; yet ponder it I do, and I will not be unprepared—so far as one can be in such troubles. But take care to keep well. For I think yesterday was your birthday.

AI-assisted translation - This translation was produced with AI assistance and has not been peer-reviewed. See the 19th-century translation or original Latin/Greek below for scholarly use.

Latin / Greek Original

[1] cenantibus ii Idus nobis ac noctu quidem Statius a te epistulam brevem attulit. de L. Torquato quod quaeris, non modo Lucius sed etiam Aulus profectus est, . . . alter multos. de Reatinorum corona quod scribis, moleste fero in agro Sabino sementem fieri proscriptionis. senatores multos esse Romae nos quoque audieramus. ecquid potes dicere cur exierint? [2] in his locis opinio est coniectura magis quam nuntio aut litteris Caesarem Formiis a. d. xi Kal. Aprilis fore. hic ego vellem habere Homeri illam Minervam simulatam Mentori cui dicerem, Mentor, pos t' ar' io, pos t' ar prosptuxomai auton; nullam rem umquam difficiliorem cogitavi, sed cogito tamen nec ero, ut in malis, imparatus. sed cura ut valeas. puto enim diem tuum heri fuisse.

Revision history

  1. 2026-05-27v2.2.34-import

    Initial corpus import from modern cicero atticus workflow v1.

    Fields: letter text, metadata, source links. Source: https://www.thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/att9.shtml

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