" 6 2 " 7 3 " 8 5 " 9 4 "
10 6 " 11 7 " 12 16 " 13 18 " 14 19 " 15 20 " 16 21 " 17 22 " 18 23 " 19
24 " 20 25 Att. II. 1 26 " 2 27 " 3 28 " 4 30 " 5 31 " 6 32 " 7 33 " 8 34 "
9 35 " 10 37 " 11 38 " 12 36 " 13 39 " 14 40 " 15 41 " 16 42 " 17 43 "
18 44 " 19 45 " 20 46 " 21 47 " 22 48 " 23 49 " 24 50 " 25 51 Att. III. 1
58 " 2 56 " 3 55 " 4 57 " 5 59 " 6 60 " 7 62 " 8 63 " 9 64 " 10 66 " 11 67
" 12 68 " 13 70 " 14 69 " 15 72 " 16 73 " 17 74 " 18 75 " 19 76 " 20 77
" 21 79 " 22 80 " 23 82 " 24 84 " 25 85 " 26 86 " 27 87 Att. IV. 1 89 " 2
90 " 3 91 " 4a 100 " 4b 106 " 5 107 " 6 109 " 7 110 " 8a 111 " 8b 117 "
9 121 " 10 120 " 11 123 " 12 124 " 13 129 " 14 137 " 15 143 " 16} 142,
148, 157 " 17} " 18 153
INTRODUCTION
[Sidenote: Ground covered by the Correspondence.]
The correspondence of Cicero, as preserved for us by his freedman Tiro,
does not open till the thirty-ninth year of the orator's life, and is so
strictly contemporary, dealing so exclusively with the affairs of the
moment, that little light is thrown by it on his previous life. It does not
become continuous till the year after his consulship (B.C. 62). There
are no letters in the year of the consulship itself or the year of his
canvass for the consulship (B.C. 64 and 63). It begins in B.C. 68, and
between that date and B.C. 65 there are only eleven letters. We have,
therefore, nothing exactly contemporaneous to help us to form a
judgment on the great event which coloured so much of his after life,
the suppression of the Catilinarian conspiracy and the execution of the
conspirators, in the last month of his consulship. But setting aside the
first eleven letters, we have from that time forward a correspondence
illustrating, as no other document in antiquity does, the hopes and fears,
the doubts and difficulties, of a keen politician living through the most
momentous period of Roman history, the period of the fall of the
Republic, beginning with Pompey's return from the East in B.C. 62,
and ending with the appearance of the young Octavian on the scene and
the formation of the Triumvirate in B.C. 43, of whose victims Cicero
was one of the first and most illustrious. It is by his conduct and
speeches during this period that Cicero's claim to be a statesman and a
patriot must be judged, and by his writings in the same period that his
place in literature must chiefly be assigned. Before B.C. 63 his
biography, if we had it, would be that of the advocate and the official,
no doubt with certain general views on political questions as they
occurred, but not yet committed definitely to a party, or inclined to
regard politics as the absorbing interest of his life. In his early youth his
hero had been his fellow townsman Marius, in whose honour he
composed a poem about the time of taking the toga virilis. But it was as
the successful general, and before the days of the civil war. And though
he served in the army of Sulla in the Marsic war (B.C. 90-88), he
always regarded his cruelties with horror, however much he may have
afterwards approved of certain points of his legislation. It was not till
the consulship that he became definitely a party man[1] and an
Optimate, and even then his feelings were much distracted by a strong
belief--strangely ill-founded--that Pompey would be as successful as a
statesman as he had been fortunate as a general. For him he had also a
warm personal attachment, which never seems to have wholly died out,
in spite of much petulance of language. This partly accounts for the
surrender of B.C. 56, and his acquiescence in the policy of the
triumvirs, an acquiescence never hearty indeed, as far as Cæsar and
Crassus were concerned, but in which he consoled himself with the
belief that nothing very unconstitutional could be done while Pompey
was practically directing
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