QFr. is oneFootnote 1 of the most understudied collections among the entire Ciceronian correspondence. The twenty-seven extant letters that compose the three-book collection have been largely considered of secondary importance, and hence studied with a narrowFootnote 2 focus on selected themes or for their contributions to the study of the two major collections, Att. and Fam.
It is now over two decades since BeardFootnote 3 suggested that the books of the collection of Ciceronian letters might have been carefully assembled, by (an) ancient editor(s), to constitute meaningful units. However, it appears that few if any scholars have taken the time to ask whether the three books of QFr. could share, together with Att. and Fam., a similar internal organization. Over two decades later, while the scholarship on Att. and Fam. has flourished,Footnote 4 QFr. is still considered to be lacking in that complexity of topics and structure that scholars recognize in the two major collections.Footnote 5
What would happen if one read through QFr. in light of the findings of the scholarship on Att. and Fam.? How would these results change the relation between Att., QFr. and Fam.? How would this affect our perception of QFr.? The first step towards understanding the uniqueness of QFr. involves a focus on the transmission of the collection in the extant manuscripts alongside Att. and ad Brut. Section 1 argues that the arrangement of the collections in the manuscripts releases the historical and biographical potential of the selected letters. Section 2 analyses the design of the three-book collection: QFr. stands out as a unique example (in the Ciceronian corpus of letters) of a collection in which each of the constituent books features essentially the same narrative pattern. At the same time, each book offers distinct characteristics and effects that set them apart from each other. Moreover, section 2 argues that the twenty-seven letters of QFr. narrate a story about Cicero not necessarily envisaged at the time of the letters’ composition. The letters display the ‘parabola’ of the lives of both Cicero and the Republic, from 60/59 to late 54.Footnote 6
Sections 3 and 4 look more intently at the deliberate structural and thematic links between Att. and QFr. and propose a bivalent reading of QFr. as both a ‘pocket-version’ of Att. and as a ‘supplement’ to the narrative proposed by it. Three crucial questions will be asked: 1) why does QFr. end with a letter dated December 54? 2) Do Cicero's relationships with Quintus as well as with the increasingly powerful Caesar and Pompey play a role in this? 3) To what extent did the narrative pattern in Att. Books 2–4 (June 60–November 54) influence the constitution of QFr. (end 60/January 59–December 54)?
While the role of (an) ancient editor(s)—convincingly demonstrated by WhiteFootnote 7 and widely taken up by others—is crucial and unavoidable in any discussion of the arrangement of letters in the Ciceronian collections and the narratives they constitute, I acknowledge that this topic remains controversial for some readers. Therefore, the analysis conducted here will, where possible, prioritize the examination of emerging narrative patterns within the collection without delving too much into speculation about the process of constructing the Ciceronian collections (although such speculation will be unavoidable at times). I aim to encourage readers to reconsider the distinctive nature of QFr. and, ultimately, emancipate it from its status as a ‘second-string collection’.
1. CICERO'S COLLECTION OF LETTERS TO HIS BROTHER QUINTUS
The collection is, arguably, a product of the post-Republican period of ancient Rome. Although work on assembling letters might have begun soon after Cicero's death in December 43, the process of publication itself may well have gone on for some decades. Allusions by Ovid have been proposed, but none of these constitutes firm evidence.Footnote 8
At any rate, the first certain reference to QFr. as a collection is in Suetonius (Aug. 3.2).Footnote 9 It would be perfectly possible to argue that QFr. was not in circulation until as late as the first or second century c.e. After the constitution of QFr., the collection eventually circulated, at least in Late Antiquity,Footnote 10 alongside ad Brut. and Att. Footnote 11 The decision to transmit these three Ciceronian collections together potentially casts a light on the structural connection that exists between QFr. and Att. (and ad Brut.); it may also suggest that QFr. was constructed originally to work as the microcosm of Att.Footnote 12
The twenty-seven letters that compose QFr. seem to have been originally organized into the form found in most manuscripts: 1.1–4, 2.1–16, 3.1–7. Within the books, the letters (which largely maintain chronological sequence)Footnote 13 document political events of the period between the end of 60/January 59 and December 54, and the effect that those events had on Cicero and his family's lives. In particular, the collection focusses on: the formation of the so-called ‘first triumvirate’ and rise to power of the triumvirs; Cicero's exile in 58 and return in 57; Clodius’ activity against Cicero and fight against Milo; Pompey and Caesar's personal power and the instability of already weak Roman institutions.
QFr., as it stands, is effectively a ‘monologue’—consisting exclusivelyFootnote 14 of Cicero's letters to his younger brother Quintus, a Roman politician and military leader between 66–43.Footnote 15 Cicero certainly addressed more letters to Quintus than are currently extant,Footnote 16 and Quintus wrote back to Cicero;Footnote 17 however, none of these exchanges is found in the collection. For readers committed to the idea of an active role for (an) ancient editor(s) of the correspondence, this might appear intentional: not only does QFr. cover the constricted timeframe 60/59–54, but it also excludes Quintus’ letters (which might have been, in theory, at their disposal)—presumably to enhance Cicero's role as paterfamilias. Letters written by Quintus are extant in Fam. and include those addressed to Tiro (Fam. 16.8, 26, 27) and one addressed to Cicero (Fam. 16.16) about Tiro's manumission.
1.1 The contents of the collection
In order to help the reader appreciate the design of the collection, it may be helpful to offer a brief review of the contents of the three books.Footnote 18
Book 1: four letters (among which the first is the longest of the collection: 521 lines)Footnote 19 that cover the period between the end of 60/January 59 and August 58. The first two letters, written from Rome, contain Cicero's advice to Quintus (who was going into his third year as governor of Asia) on how to govern his province. Their main themes (summarized in 1.1.18) are: 1) the maintenance of Quintus’ own integrity and self-restraint (1.1.4–9), especially in relation to his irritability (1.1.37–40, 1.2.7–9); 2) the surveillance of his subordinates, from his staff to his slaves (1.1.10–14, 1.1.17, 1.2.3); 3) a cautious selectivity as regards close friendships (1.1.15); 4) the importance of mildness of manner in delivering judgement (1.1.19, 1.2.4–6) and impartiality in dispensation of justice (1.1.20–1, 1.2.10–11). Letters 3–4 offer a rather different narrative: they are written from Thessalonica at the time of Cicero's exile.
Sixteen letters are included in Book 2. These focus on the events of mid December 57–August 54, and are mainly written from Rome (except for 2.6, written en route to Anagnia; 2.9 from Tusculum; 2.13 from Cumae/Pompeii). In these letters, Cicero, who has just returned to Rome from exile, reports on the Senate's agenda to Quintus. Reports of the Senate's meetings include news on: 1) Clodius’ activity (Clodius’ indictment and obstructionism: 2.1, 2.2; his conflict with Milo: 2.3, 2.5 and with Sestius: 2.4); 2) the restoration of Ptolemy XII Auletes (2.2) and the conflict between Lentulus and Pompey (2.2, 2.4); 3) the increasing anxiety about the frictions between Caesar and Pompey (2.1, 2.3–4, 2.5–16).
Book 3 contains seven lettersFootnote 20 written between September–December 54 from Rome and his villas (3.1 from Arpinium and Rome; 3.5 from Tusculum). Here Cicero, who has been appointed Pompey's legate in Spain, informs his brother (still in Gallia, under Caesar's command) on 1) Gabinius’ case (3.1–4); 2) his own decision to withdraw from politics to focus on his literary works (3.5–6, 3.7).
2. A STORY OF DECLINE
The twenty-seven letters of QFr. create a narrative of Cicero's private life and career, not necessarily envisaged by their author at the time of their original composition. By reading the letters of QFr. in the manuscript's order, the reader can follow Cicero movingFootnote 21 in Book 1 from a still solid social and political position (1.1–2) to exile (1.3–4); in Book 2 from political reinstatement (2.1–3) to political disillusionment and fears for the future of the state (2.4–16); and in Book 3 from increasing political disenchantment (3.1–4) to the decision to withdraw from political concerns and focus on literary works (3.5–7).
The order of the books of the collection (as also the repetition of keywords within the letters and their length)Footnote 22 sustains a particular storyline about Cicero (and the Republic):Footnote 23 Books 1 and 2 open with an initial image of optimism but move towards the end to a position of decided pessimism. Similarly, Book 3, which opens with a comparatively positive portrait of Cicero but closes on an image of despair and angst, becomes increasingly bitter as the end approaches. This is a uniqueFootnote 24 feature of QFr. Among the Ciceronian letter collections: three consecutive books with essentially the same narrative pattern (starting with a portrayal of a more enthusiastic and politically engaged Cicero and ending with an unengaged and disillusioned one),Footnote 25 but where each book creates a distinct narrative effect that distinguishes it from the others.
2.1 Book 1: spes, amicitia, gloria
Written at the time of Quintus’ proconsulate in Asia, QFr. 1.1–2 offer Cicero's (probably unsolicited) adviceFootnote 26 to Quintus (who had been forced to continue his role of governor of Asia for a third year). These two letters were not conceived as a collected series by their author; however, serendipity aside, whoever put together Cicero's correspondence may well have decided to juxtapose them for their intrinsic links.Footnote 27 Together the two letters offer the first stage of a narrative of Cicero's life and career: Cicero speaks with the prestige of an ex-consul in his role as Quintus’ adviser. This image of prestige and pre-eminence is only too visible from the letters’ constitutive elements, mainly the date of sending and their length. The two letters were dispatched from Rome, the centre of public and political life,Footnote 28 between the end of 60/January 59 and December—periods of strenuous political and social activity. This image of political and social resonance is also emphasized by the total length of the two letters: 871 lines for Book 1Footnote 29 of which 711 belong to 1.1–2 (521 lines for letter 1Footnote 30 and 190 for letter 2).Footnote 31
Pre-eminence and prestige are also visible in Cicero's role as Quintus’ adviserFootnote 32—a role inherited after their father died in 64.Footnote 33 In advising his younger brother, Cicero reunites two positions (on which he bases his supremacy): that of experienced politician and saviour of the Republic (even if he has not yet held a proconsulship) and that of the elder brother of Quintus, now paterfamilias.
The languageFootnote 34 employed in 1.1–2 underpins and substantiates a narrative of Cicero as a powerful man, in contrast with the narrative of decline in 1.3–4 (as we shall see in detail below). The four extant letters of Book 1 are connected by the repetition of three keywords: spes, amicitia, gloria; the linguistic distinctiveness of their use in 1.1–2 as opposed to 1.3–4 plays a crucial role in conveying this narrative of progressive decline.
In 1.1–2, the reiterated use of these keywords conveys an image of Cicero as an optimistic and powerful man, both on the political and on the personal levels. Despite the increasing personal power of the triumvirs,Footnote 35 Cicero appears hopeful and courageous (differently from 1.3–4): he is optimistic that the political circumstances will change, and asserts that he is not afraid of anything—including Clodius’ attacks: equidem cum spe sum maxima tum maiore etiam animo: spe, ut superiores fore nos confidam … sin autem ui agere conabitur, spero fore studiis non solum amicorum sed etiam alienorum ut ui resistamus (1.2.16). Furthermore, the support shown by old friendsFootnote 36 and new acquaintances as well and his closeness to the magistrates on duty make Cicero optimistic about his future. Should Clodius decide to harm him (for his activity against the Catilinarians),Footnote 37 Cicero will be able to count on their endorsement: sin autem ui agere conabitur, spero fore studiis non solum amicorum sed etiam alienorum ut ui resistamus. omnes et se et suos amicos, clientis, libertos, seruos, pecunias denique suas pollicentur … tribuni pl. designati sunt nobis amici, consules se optime ostendunt, praetores habemus amicissimos et acerrimos ciuis, Domitium, Nigidium, Memmium, Lentulum (1.2.16). Finally, Cicero's hunt for gloria as well as his desire to enhance the respectability of his family's name demonstrate Cicero's optimistic vision of their future. Cicero encourages his younger brother to distinguish himself in his province: non te tibi soli gloriam quaerere … sed ea tibi est communicanda mecum, prodenda liberis nostris (1.1.44).Footnote 38
However, as suggested earlier, spes, amicitia and gloria play a distinctive role not only in 1.1–2 but also in 1.3–4, where their recurrence is of substantial importance for its narrative. If in 1.1–2 these terms are the mark of Cicero and his family's actual prestige, in 1.3–4 they become an old and distant memory. The portrait of Cicero as a powerful and pre-eminent man in 1.1–2 offers a sharp contrast with the portrait that emerges from 1.3–4. Written in June/August 58, the letters were all sent from Thessalonica,Footnote 39 where Cicero was in exile. The strikingly different length of the letters reflects this dreadful momentFootnote 40 in Cicero's life: 114 lines for 1.3 and 46 for 1.4, a total of 160 lines as against the 711 of 1.1 and 1.2. Cicero, by his own account, is only a faint memory of the person he used to be: non enim uidisses fratrem tuum, non eum quem reliqueras, non eum quem noras, non eum quem flens flentem, prosequentem proficiscens dimiseras, ne uestigium quidem eius nec simulacrum sed quandam effigiem spirantis mortui (1.3.1). He mourns not only his lost standing and reputation but also that of his family—whose prestige has been significantly reduced after his exile: … ut, qui modo fratre fuerim, liberis, coniuge, copiis, genere ipso pecuniae beatissimus, dignitate, auctoritate, existimatione, gratia non inferior quam qui umquam fuerunt amplissimi, is nunc in hac tam adflicta perditaque fortuna neque me neque meos lugere diutius possim (1.3.6).
In 1.3–4, the keywords spes, amicitia and gloria convey a message of decline, one sharply in contrast with the more emphatic narration proposed (by the same terms) in 1.1–2. In 1.3–4, spes, amicitia and gloria—implied but not directly mentioned—determine a portrait of Cicero as a hopeless and discouraged man who experiences a decrease in his political and social resonance. For example, regarding spes, there is no place for hope in the dark time of the exile (1.3.5 sed ego quid sperem non dispicio),Footnote 41 especially if negative news on his recall from Thessalonica keeps arriving: perspicis profecto ecquaenam nobis spes salutis relinquatur (1.4.2). Cicero wonders why he should feel hope at all, since Clodius’ power is growing—as is that of the triumvirs—and his jealous friends have either deserted or betrayed him: nam quid sperem potentissimo inimico, dominatione obtrectatorum, infidelibus amicis, plurimis inuidis? (1.4.3). In addition, the theme of mors—the very opposite of spes—appears with increasing frequency towards the end of Book 1. The hopeless Cicero, who is everyday more aware of the terrible circumstances in which he and his family find themselves, considers, more than once, the idea of ending his life: lacrimae meorum me ad mortem ire prohibuerunt, quod certe et ad honestatem <tuendam> et ad effugiendos intolerabilis dolores fuit aptissimum (1.4.4).Footnote 42
As for amicitia in these times of need, Cicero's amici, whose loyalty and willingness to help is praised so extensively in 1.1–2, apparently show their true selves: intimus, proximus, familiarissimus quisque aut sibi pertimuit aut mihi inuidit. ita mihi nihil misero praeter fidem amicorum, cautum meum consilium, <de>fuit (1.4.1).Footnote 43 Cicero also gives some specific examples to Quintus of his friends’ volte-face: Hortensius and Q. Arrius, although they pledged support, have now abandoned him: Hortensio credendum sit nescio. me summa simulatione amoris summaque adsiduitate cottidiana sceleratissime insidiosissimeque tractauit adiuncto Q. Arrio. quorum ego consiliis, promissis, praeceptis destitutus in hanc calamitatem incidi (1.3.8). Likewise, the consuls and praetors of 58—after having pledged their support to Cicero (as QFr. 1.2 reveals)Footnote 44—turned their backs on Cicero, once elected: alienatio consulum, etiam praetorum (1.4.4).
In terms of gloria, letters 3–4 show the consequences of Cicero's search for personal and political honour (a leitmotiv of 1.1–2).Footnote 45 Back in 63, Cicero could not have imagined that exile and political and social isolation would follow upon his decision to condemn the Catilinarians to death without the prouocatio ad populum; or, if he did foresee this coming, he was confident of receiving aid from friends or returning to Rome with greater prestige (as QFr. 1.1–2 show). However, in late 58, after having spent a few months in exile in Thessalonica, Cicero realizes that his drive for glory and prestige has led himself and his family to ruin: in plane occidimus, me miserum! ego omnibus meis exitio fuero, quibus ante dedecori non eram (1.4.5).Footnote 46 In 1.3–4, gloria (like spes in 1.1–2) is replaced by darker and gloomier terms. In Cicero's letters from exile, there is no space for gloria; not only gloria does disappear from the vocabulary of letters 3 and 4,Footnote 47 but it is even replaced by the language of dolor: calamitas (1.3.1, 3, 4, 8; 1.4.5), fletus (1.3.1 twice, 3), lacrima (1.3.2, 3, 10; 1.4.4), lamentatio (1.3.4), luctus (1.3.1, 6), maeror (1.3.1, 10), metus (1.3.1) and solitudo (1.3.1; 1.4.5) are some of the words Cicero employs to describe his and his family's current state.
2.2 Book 2: activity and inactivity
The sixteen letters of Book 2 belong to December 57–late August 54, a period of political transformation and turmoil in Rome, and track the events that lead to, and postdate, the triumvirs’ meeting at Lucca in April 56. Particular attention is given both to the increasing political tensions caused by the frictions between Pompey, Caesar and their supporters and to their sociopolitical consequences. The letters of Book 2 (as well as those of Book 3) repeat the narrative about Cicero already observed in Book 1:Footnote 48 they start on a markedly more forceful note (Cicero's return from exile and reinstatement in his social position)Footnote 49 and end on a disillusioned one (the loss of his social standing and political power after the Lucca congress in 56).Footnote 50 However, Book 2 also constitutes a ‘natural’ continuation of the narrative that emerges from Book 1,Footnote 51 since they take the reader forward in time and offer a portrait of Cicero that ‘evolves’ from that found in Book 1.
Book 2 opens with a letter written by Cicero in mid December 57, roughly one year and four months after the last letter (early August 58) of the previous book. The discouraged Cicero, anxious to be recalled to Rome from exile, must have written letters to his brother to put in a good word for his return or to be informed on the eventsFootnote 52—as he does with Atticus and Terentia.Footnote 53 However, there is no trace of them in this collection; yet Book 2 opens on a more enthusiastic note, reminiscent of the start of Book 1.
The absence (or deliberate exclusion) of the letters, from early August 58 to mid December 57, ‘speeds up’ the narration of Cicero's exile and presents the next stage of Cicero's career: his reinstatement in Roman social and political life. This image of an influential Cicero is on full display in the first three letters of Book 2. Cicero appears restored to his ancient prestige (2.3.7): he takes active part in the meetings of the Senate (of which he gives a full report to his brother Quintus, who was still in Sardinia as Pompey's legate); he is also engaged with the defence of clients (2.3.5–6).
As in Book 1,Footnote 54 the language of the letters of Book 2 plays a key role in suggesting a narrative of Cicero's progressive loss of prestige. Differently from the previous book, this narrative is not conveyed here by spes, amicus and gloria but rather by references to Cicero's activity/inactivity in the Senate and by the use of literary allusions/quotations to encrypt messages.
In the first three letters (2.1–3), Cicero appears well (re)integrated into the Roman political (and social) scene: he enthusiastically participates in the meeting of the Senate,Footnote 55 where laudatory words are pronounced about him (2.1.3, 2.3.3). This portrait of Cicero is confirmed by the clear presence of language implying senatorial activity. Cicero employs twenty-five times (within a total number of 176 lines)Footnote 56 vocabulary that hints at his presence and action in the Senate's gatherings; recurrent words are senatus (used fifteen times in reference to Senate's meetings to which he took part: 2.1.1–2, 2.2.3, 2.3.2–5), sententia (five times in reference to pronouncements proposed in the Senate he did/did not support: 2.1.1–3) and rogare (five times, alluding to his participation to those meetings: 2.1.1–3, 2.3.1).
Just as in Book 1,Footnote 57 a portrait of disillusionment and loss in Cicero's prestige follows (and undercuts) the one of pre-eminence. Letters 2.4–16Footnote 58 show how Cicero progressively lost his social standing and political power, especially after the Lucca congress in 56. The language of activity now registers a significantly weaker presence; it is used only twenty-two times across the much larger total of 447 lines: a reduction of over sixty per cent. In 2.4–16, senatus appears sixteen times and mostly concerns Cicero's disappointmentFootnote 59 with the actual state of politics and his decision to withdraw from the Senate (2.5.3, 2.7.1–2, 2.16.2) to devote himself to literature (2.9.1, 2.9.3, 2.12.4, 2.13.1). The lower presence of sententia (six times: 2.5.4, 2.8.3, 2.13.1, 2.14.5, 2.16.3) and the absence of rogare (not registered at all) underline the decrease in prestige in Cicero's life and career; as Cicero points out, his speeches now aim to win agreement from others rather than from himself (2.14.5).
Letters 2.4–16 (mid March 56–late August 54) offer the reader a strikingly different scene from that of 2.1–3; in this respect, they contribute to a repetition of the macro-narrative arc of Book 1.Footnote 60 The upcoming meeting of the triumvirs in Lucca and the growth of their personal power (2.8.3) had a strong impactFootnote 61 on the lives of Cicero and his family. This atmosphere of uncertainty and instability is visible not only from Cicero's choice of vocabulary (which emphasizes his political inactivity and despair) but also from the increasingly obscure topics of the letters and the need for secrecy. The image of a politically active Cicero (emphasized, in 2.1–3, by the language of senatorial activity) is here replaced with that of a politically inactive man. Cicero appears less interested in discussing the daily reports from the Senate's meetings (which occupy a large part in 2.1–3), as suggested already by the reduced presence of senatus, sententia and rogare.Footnote 62 Instead, his correspondence with his brother Quintus is filled with updates on the building of their houses (2.4.2, 2.6.3, 2.9.3) and on Quintus Junior's education (2.4.2, 2.6.2), news that does not have a place within the narrative for 2.1–3. Such news, however, emphasizes the image of a man in retreat from the public domain. Cicero's dissatisfaction with the political scenario is highlighted even more emphatically by increasing references to his decision to leave Rome to spend time in his uillae (2.6.4, 2.13.1)Footnote 63 to devote himself to otium.Footnote 64
Cicero's decision to withhold from his letters information that could harm himself and his family as well as his invitation to Quintus to do the same are also paradigmatic of the storyline of 2.4–16. Cicero writes to Quintus, a few days before his departure for Gaul as Caesar's legate: is dies quo tu es profectus nihil mihi ad scribendum argumenti sane dabat. sed quem ad modum coram cum sumus sermo nobis deesse non solet, sic epistulae nostrae debent interdum alucinari (2.10.1).Footnote 65 The need for secrecy is also visible from the increasing use, in 2.4–16, of literary allusions and quotations; not only do they offer consolation during challenging timesFootnote 66 but they also conceal Cicero's and Quintus’ real thoughts (about the current political situation and the future of the Republic).Footnote 67
The last three letters of Book 2 anticipate the gloomy narrative of Book 3. They focus on the importance of political flexibility and moderation (especially in a period that saw the triumvirs becoming increasingly powerful),Footnote 68 as displayed by Cicero's invitations to moderation (mollis, 2.14.4; neque perturbatus nec iratus alicui, 2.15.1; ne cuius animum offendamus, 2.16.1).Footnote 69 They also reveal Cicero's anxiety for the future: erat non nulla spes comitiorum sed incerta, erat aliqua suspicio dictaturae, ne ea quidem certa, summum otium forense sed senescentis magis ciuitatis quam acquiescentis, sententia autem nostra in senatu eius modi magis ut alii nobis adsentiantur quam nosmet ipsi (2.14.5). Cicero's apprehension about the future is also evident from his persistent enquiry about what the upcoming year of 53 will bring (2.15.2, 2.16.4). As we shall see, this feeling will intensify further in Book 3.
2.3 Book 3: activity (but primarily) inactivity
The sevenFootnote 70 letters that comprise Book 3—again all written by Cicero to his brother Quintus—are mostly written from Rome (after Cicero had been appointed Pompey's legate in Spain)Footnote 71 to Gaul, where, between 54 and 52, Quintus was Caesar's legate. The letters mostly concern: Cicero's news on the building of their houses (3.1.1–6, 21–3; 3.3.1); Quintus’ son (3.1.7, 14, 19; 3.3.4); their literary progress (3.5.1, 3.6.3, 3.7.6); reflections on the progressive loss of freedom and the necessity of showing support to both Caesar and Pompey (3.1.9, 3.4.2–3, 3.5.2); and Cicero's perception of the growing twilight of the Roman Republic (3.1.10, 3.2.2, 3.3.1, 3.4.1, 3.7).
Book 3 presents several distinctive features, including a more restricted time span (compared to Books 1 and 2), since all the letters belong to the final four months of 54. The result is the creation of chronological continuity between the last letter of the previous book (2.16, late August 54) and the first letter of Book 3 (September 54).Footnote 72 The presence in Book 3 of only letters from 54 might not be fortuitous, since (if one admits the possibility of editorial intervention) 3.1–7 had to conclude the narrativeFootnote 73 for the year 54 already begun in Book 2. After 2.10–16 (written between early February and late August 54), there follows a set of seven chronologically disposed letters, written between September and December 54 (3.1–7). The set 2.10–3.7 presents a narrative on the tense period that precedes the Civil War,Footnote 74 in which Cicero tries (in vain) to keep a flexible and moderateFootnote 75 political position between the increasingly powerful Pompey and Caesar.
Not only does Book 3 complete the narrative pattern on Cicero's progressive loss of power and personal prestige, in operation since Book 1; it also shares a similar design with the other two books of the collection.Footnote 76 Although they ultimately participate in a narrative of Cicero's loss of prestige, the first four letters of Book 3, like 1.1–2 and 2.1–3, initially convey an image of Cicero redolent of ‘prestige’ and ‘political activity’. Cicero is seen offering patronage to influential Roman aristocrats (3.3.1), both to win electionsFootnote 77 and to support them against prosecution.Footnote 78 As in 2.1–3,Footnote 79 Cicero keeps Quintus informed on the items discussed in the Senate's meetings (3.2.3, 3.3.2). Particular attention is here given to Gabinius’ accusations de repetundis and de maiestate, after his return to Rome from Syria in 54Footnote 80 and the elections to the consulship for 53.Footnote 81
This narrative on Cicero's prestige and public resonance is also confirmed (as in 1.1–2 and 2.1–3) by the average length of the letters of 3.1–4 and by usage of the language of activity. Like each first group of letters of the previous books of the collection,Footnote 82 3.1–4 has, on average, the highest number of lines, when compared to 3.5–7: it totals 411 lines from four letters (c.103 lines each), against the 206 lines of 3.5–7 (c.69 lines each). Nevertheless, the keywords (spes, amicitia, gloria) of Book 1 are almost absent in Book 3. Differently from 1.1–2, here there is no mention of amicitia; the only reference to gloria is in 3.5.3 (nec desidero gloriam), where Cicero states his decision not to hanker after glory anymore; and spes is found only in … ponuntur in spe quam in pecuniis. <qua relicta> reliqua ad iacturam struentur … si … animum tuum ad rationem et ueteris consili nostri et spei, facilius istos militiae labores ceteraque quae te offendunt feres, et tamen cum uoles depones (3.6.1).Footnote 83 Similarly, senatus (3.2.2 consurrexit senatus), sententia (3.4.1 [Gabinius] sententiis condemnatus sit) and rogare (3.3.3 Pompeius uehemens … rogandis) appear only in the first part of the book—with comparatively lower weight (when compared to usage in the previous books) and usually with negative connotations.Footnote 84
A narrative of the decline of Cicero's ‘prestige’ and political ‘pre-eminence’ emerges—as in the previous books of the collection—within the second part of Book 3. In the concluding letters of Book 3 and of the entire collection (3.5–7), particular attention is given to Cicero's decision to withdraw from the political scene and to his search for peace and consolation, as we will see below. Even though Book 3 can be divided into two sections (3.1–4 and 3.5–7)—which together re-enact the narrative on Cicero that characterizes the entire collection—a generalized sense of gloom and despair permeates the whole unit (not just 3.5–7). This feature ensures that the distinction between 3.1–4 and 3.5–7 possesses a different character from its counterparts in Books 1 and 2.
The two sections of Book 3, 3.1–4 and 3.5–7, share (albeit to different degrees) the image of a disillusioned Cicero, who lives in a Rome where the increasing personal power of Pompey and Caesar has irreparably damaged Republican institutions: sed uides nullam esse rem publicam, nullum senatum, nulla iudicia, nullam in ullo nostrum dignitatem (3.4.1).Footnote 85 Although (and especially in 3.1–4) the reader sees Cicero taking part in the Roman political scene—and to that extent a picture of positive activity emerges, his political activity ultimately appears strongly influenced by the power of Pompey and Caesar; Cicero is depicted seeking Caesar's approval before endorsing the election to tribunate of one of his clients (3.1.10) and withdrawing from prosecuting Gabinius (so as not to annoy Pompey: 3.2.2). Moreover, Cicero's reports on the Senate's meetings and political events (which occupy a conspicuous part of 3.1–4) appear increasingly less detailed (when compared to their counterparts in 2.1–3), and often focus on bribery and corruption (3.2.3; 3.3.3). This is caused, on the one hand, by the progressive loss of relevance of the Republican institutions; on the other, by the unreliability of couriersFootnote 86 and the repercussions that one could experience if letters ended up in the wrong hands (3.1.21, 3.6.2, 3.7.3).
QFr. Book 3 not only is the concluding book of the correspondence but also represents the concluding stage of the storyline on Cicero that the collection displays. Thus, the narrative of Cicero's progressive loss of power and prestige, already seen in operation within individual books, is also conveyed by the collection as a whole. The reader of the collection can see how Cicero, in only six years (from 60/59 to 54), progressively lost his socio-political standing and prominence. If in 1.1–2 Cicero appears confident of the possibility of increasing his social and political prestige, in 3.1–7 he is conscious of the loss of his standing. His childhood dream of excelling and outdoing others has perished utterly and his mind is now in chains (3.5.4). Even his relationship with Quintus has changed: if in 1.1–2 he was the one who, from an assumed position of authority, offered guidelines on how to govern a province (rogo: 1.1.4, 1.2.11, 1.2.14; admoneo: 1.2.14; prescribo: 1.1.12; hortor: 1.1.36, 1.1.46),Footnote 87 now he receives directions from Quintus (rogas: 3.1.11, 3.5.4; admones: 3.1.14; iubes: 3.6.3; hortaris: 3.7.6).Footnote 88 Cicero's hope for the future has (gradually) disappeared and is replaced by anxiety (3.4.4 cura; 3.5.4 angor; 3.7.3 sollicitus) and fear (3.6.2–4 timeo; 3.7.3 timoris). The times in which he lives deprive him of his poetical afflatus (3.4.4, 3.5.4). In the end, the choice of withdrawing from politics to focus on his studies (already mentioned in 2.4–16) becomes the only wise alternative (3.5.4–5; 3.7.2) to fill his need for consolation (3.5.4).
3. THE YEAR 54
In contrast to the decades-long story contained in the major collections Att. and Fam., QFr. privileges a shorter narrative about Cicero's life and the Republic.Footnote 89 The storyline narrated by QFr. concludes with 3.7, a letter written in December 54, roughly six years after the first letter of Book 1. The attention given to the year 54 within the collection (almost half of its letters are dated to 54)Footnote 90 and the fact that the narration of QFr. ends ten years before that of Att.Footnote 91 and Fam., when taken together, cast light on the design of the whole correspondence.
The year 54 is a significant end-point for the storyline about Cicero's private and public life, since the narrative stops before two interrelated events can make their appearance: Cicero's rupture with his brother and nephew and Cicero's decision to abandon the policy of the ‘middle way’Footnote 92 and take Pompey's side. The result is a partial narration of the Cicero–Quintus relationship that covers only the years 60/59–54. The overall image of Cicero's relationship with his brother and nephew that emerges from the collection is an image of an affectionate brother and uncle who has the interests of his relatives at heart. The letters included in the collection enhance this image of goodwill between the two brothers (which was not entirely free from rifts)Footnote 93 as well as between uncle and nephew. As it happens, after QFr. 3.7 (December 54), no other extant letter to/from Cicero to/from his brother or nephew has been preserved—although we know that letters continued to be written between the pair.Footnote 94 News of their relationship will only resume in Att. in mid April 49, when Cicero writes to Atticus to complain about his nephew's conduct (Att. 10.4.5).Footnote 95
This is where the two threads of the narration come together. As Att. 10.4.6 suggests, in April 49 and in the middle of the Civil War, Quintus Junior, who had been sent to Rome to negotiate with Caesar, denounced his uncle's plan to leave ItalyFootnote 96 to reach Pompey.Footnote 97 The news of Quintus Junior's ‘betrayal’ upset Cicero, to the point where he addressed to Atticus a set of letters (written between late April and early May 49) blaming his brother's lack of parental skills for Quintus Junior's ill behaviour.Footnote 98 Quintus was appalled by his son's behaviour too (Att. 10.4.6); after their return from Cilicia in late 50,Footnote 99 Quintus father and son seemed to be willing to support Pompey and to loosen the façade of political ‘moderation’ maintained throughout QFr.Footnote 100 Cicero displays a similar behaviour: ego pro Pompeio libenter emori possum, facio pluris omnium hominum neminem (Att. 8.2.4).
Their relationship fell apart completelyFootnote 101 in August 48 (as shown all too clearly by Att. 11.5–11.22 of early November 48–September 47).Footnote 102 After the battle of Pharsalus, while Cicero and his son Marcus decided to return to Italy,Footnote 103 his brother and nephew took refuge and asked for Caesar's pardon.Footnote 104 In Att. 11.9.2 (early January 47) Cicero clearly refers to this event: … ille … neque nunc tam pro se quam contra me laborare dicitur.
But why does the collection's narrative not include Cicero's and Quintus’ correspondence (if it was accessible) of 53–52?Footnote 105 The answer to this question is challenging. During the period 53–52, Cicero and Quintus presumably continued to exchange letters to inform each other on, for example, Quintus’ activities in Gaul as Caesar's legate (Fam. 1.9.21). Cicero must have written to his brother about his defence speeches, especially the one in favour of Gabinius (that Cicero had mentioned extensively in the previous letters).Footnote 106 Cicero must have mentioned the events that led to Clodius’ death in 52 (Quintus must have wanted to know, also considering that he was threatened with death by Clodius’ supporters while defending his brother: Sest. 76), or to his encounter with Caesar in Ravenna, after his return from Gaul in 52 (Att. 7.1.4). Nevertheless, one probable explanation for these presumed omissions can be found in a comparison between QFr. and Att. Like QFr., the (almost) chronological narration in Att. contains a gapFootnote 107 between Book 4 and Book 5: no letter written between late 54 and early 51 is included in the collection. Book 4 ends with a letter of November 54 (only one month before the end of QFr.); the narrative resumes in early May 51, with the first letter of Book 5. These parallels should prompt us to examine whether QFr. was intended to function as a miniature version of Att.
4. QFR.: A MICROCOSM OF ATT.?
It can be argued that the selection and organization of letters in Att. might have played a role in shaping the formation of QFr. If we take seriously the fact that the first definite reference to Att. is in Seneca and that the first certain evidence for the circulation of QFr. is in Suetonius, we might hypothesize that QFr. was arranged after Att., between the first and the second centuries c.e.Footnote 108 One might consequently assert that the release of Att. had an impact on the construction of QFr. Footnote 109—since it adheres to the structural principles of Att., in terms of inclusion of letters mainly from/to a single addresser/addresseeFootnote 110 and their shared organization by internal chronology.Footnote 111
By seemingly adhering to the structural principles of Att. while favouring a narrative confined to the shorter span of the years 60/59–54, the ancient editor(s) of QFr.—it could be argued—might have been aiming to craft a scaled-down version of the narrative of Att. This argument may not convince those who remain somewhat sceptical of the role of the ancient editor(s); but it is worth considering the evidence in its favour. In particular, QFr. arguably re-enacts and supplements Att. Books 2–4:
QFr. follows the exact chronological arch narrated by Att. Books 2–4, from late 60 to the year 54–where QFr. ends, while Att. Book 4 pauses and then restarts several years later with 5.1, from May 51.Footnote 113 It also aligns with Att. Books 2–4 in prioritizing letters addressed to a single recipient.Footnote 114
QFr. repeats some of the crucial themes of Att. Books 2–4. This was perhaps inevitable in a series of letters covering the same period; even so, the congruence is both extensive and eye-catching. Both Att. Books 2–4 and QFr. show Cicero's attempts to cope with the political instability (caused by the onset of the ‘first triumvirate’ in 59) and the sharpening of the rivalry between Pompey and Caesar after Crassus’ death; they also show the resulting loss of freedom which Cicero experienced and which encouraged him to spend time in his villas and to commit to literary otium. In addition, like Att. Books 2–4, QFr. provides (although in the scaled-down version of letters 1.3–4) a narrative of the events related to Cicero's exile, from Clodius’ threats to his exile in Thessalonica and his return to Rome. Their resemblance could be interpreted as intentional: one might tentatively propose that the ancient editor(s) of QFr. attempted to replicate the narrative of Att. Books 2–4, presenting the reader with a ‘pocket version’ of Att. focussing specifically on the years 60/59–54. The hypothesis that QFr. operates as a microcosm of Att. and re-enacts the narrative of Att. Books 2–4 finds further proof in the overall number of lines in QFr. and in Att.Footnote 115 The total number of lines of QFr. (2,111) is only about fourteen per cent of the 14,513 lines that make up the sixteen books of Att. However, Att. Books 2–4 total 2,545 lines, a number appreciably close to that of QFr. (2,111).
QFr. was not simply intended to re-enact Att. Books 2–4. Rather, it might have been deliberately structured around 60/59–54 to supplement the narrative of Att. The same reasoning applies to ad Brut., whose twenty-six letters, all dated to April–July 43 seem to continue the narrative of Att., which ends in November 44. By reading the letters in the order displayed by the table, there emerges a linear narrative of events from November 68 to December 54—that also supplements the wider narrative presented by Att.—since QFr. adds information not included in the former (such as news on Quintus’ government of Asia and more generally on his relationship with his brother before they fell apart).
This might find confirmation from the analysis of the position that QFr. occupies in the majority of the manuscripts, descended from Petrarch's manuscript, which present the late antique circulation of the three collections together. As previously noted,Footnote 116 in MSS M and R that recreate the content and order of the Verona manuscript QFr. precedes Att. One could conclude that the scribes of the Verona manuscript had noticed that QFr. (60/59–54), as well as ad Brut. (April–July 43), integrated/continued the narration of Att. (68–44) and, for this reason, had arranged the correspondences together.
In conclusion, QFr. emerges as a meticulously constructed collection that warrants scrutiny on a par with both Att. and Fam. QFr. could potentially be seen as the result of a meticulous editorial effort, strategically mirroring the trajectory of Cicero's life (and of the Republic) through the deliberate adoption of the narrative pattern observed in Att. Books 2–4. However, the extent of this editorial effort remains a subject open to further debate and discussion.